Hi 'WaterRock'Now in Luke 21:5-6, was the temple spiritual or literal?
Ummm, what's your own thought-world concerning the term 'spiritual temple'?
If I could know that first, I might be better able to give response to the question you've posed.
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SignUp Now!Hi 'WaterRock'Now in Luke 21:5-6, was the temple spiritual or literal?
I honestly have no idea what label people might be using to categorize my understanding of the Bible ... nor, frankly, do I care.
I'm not a theologian. I don't pretend to be anything of a Bible scholar. I'm jus' a plain ordinary child of God enjoying an extraordinary experience.
I simply awaken in the morning and go along my happy way with thoughts concerning the abundance of God's mercy, loving kindness and the "rich inheritance of the saints".
Hi! 'Christ4Life'You know enough to support what your experiences are with scripture. So plain you might describe yourself as being, but, I do believe you are far more than that. :thumbsup:
This of cause doesn't even begin to take into account that as a Believer you are specially chosen, Child of the Most High! It would be like saying Jesus was just a rabbi, and the Apostles were just plain everyday folks as wellYes, they enjoyed life, fellowship, God's Grace, but plain is not a word I would ever describe a citizen in the Heavenly Kingdom of God.
Also, you know one does not have to be a Bible Scholar to be a theologian. That we can reason together about God, His Holy Word fits the bill of theologian quite nicely.
Though as you well know, at times we have to pigeonwhole what is communicated. It has more to do with the world we live in and the roaring lion seeking whom to devourer. Caution, could also be a theme of the NT.
A multitude of occurrences with Godly experiences arrive on many a door step, whether sought out or not. All part of growing in Him. So if we can rejoice at all times that is awesome. If we can't. We need to learn to.Or at the very least be able to teach, pray, support, cry if need be with those who've yet to grow to a point where the joys are all we see.
YBIC
C4E
Hi! 'Christ4EVER'It's actually Christ4Ever not Life, but I like that also, but Christ4Life might think you're talking to them
My father who didn't even make it to the 6th grade, was Puerto Rican and had an ear for languages. He could speak fluently, German, French, Greek, Italian, Yiddish, and of cause Spanish. Yet he said that English was the most difficult to learn. The reason he said, was because it made no sense. :laugh: Interesting is seeing the differences in the one English word of "love". While in the Greek has finer nuances providing for a greater clarity. Similar to your story on the color blue. Agápē, érōs, philía, and storgē. Conveying so much more in their use in the Greek, but little help in the English.
Communication requires the need to define what is being talked about. Labeling allows for communicating a deep matter without having to explain the subject in any greater detail since the label is understood by both parties. In our case, you do not know the theological term I used so we're at an impasse moving forward. At least to that particular category of thought.
You've caught my interest in your attempt in not labeling and/or categorizing things. The problem I see is that the Bible is full of them. Just saying I believe in Jesus Christ as my Savior, automatically creates an alternative category, that is those who do not believe in Jesus Christ as their Saviors. So....labels of "believer" and "non-believer" have been created. Not altogether useless, and one I hope you don't loathe. :whistle
Knowing someone is an unbeliever then allows the communication to move from that point forward or backwards since the label has created the starting point of the discussion. The same would be the case if they were a believer. Labels provide a point of reference, which I pray people use to further understand something within the Biblical context. With even more prayer, that they are able to convey their communication in a loving manner.
Christians using labels to me isn't the problem. It's usually what the label signifies or better yet the behavior it's identified or associated to it that creates the issues. I can see why you loathe them, yet it should still not take away from their importance or usefulness in communicating with others. Constructing labels and assigning them doesn't necessarily have to make the use of them in conversation negative, positive, or even limiting. Since it's in the Biblical setting that is being talked about here. It really has to do with understanding scripture and being able to communicate in "Love" the point one is trying to make. That is why when I first heard a label placed on the bible as "A letter of love." I kind of liked it. In total context, it communicated it perfectly. Others may not like that label, but hey. they can go out and buy their own label maker (humor)If I had to attempt to label the Bible the only thing I could come up with would be "WOW', and who would understand that? Kinda of what I feel like in trying to describe "God's Heavenly Kingdom".
Nice talking to ya.
YBIC
C4E
I take my hat off and bow to you all for your dedication to the exceptionally worthy cause of propagating our Gospel.
Whew, 'Judge-Not' ... yuh had me agreeing with you wholeheartedly concerning many issues you have been discussing here ... but this particular idea, (in my opinion), is a bit on the wild side.
Ummm, howz 'bout you consider this:
I'm old enough to recall when the Russian astronaut maintained that he had been in heaven but had not met either God nor angels there. As Christians, we know that this good man spoke in error. He made the same mistake those decades ago that many Christians continue to make in this very day. He had confused heaven with the firmament. He hadn't been in heaven at all. No rocket ship can deliver us to Heaven because it's a spiritual dimension.
Let's first try and solve this first question: by what means did the apostle John enter into heaven?
We read in Revelation 4:1 that he saw "in heaven an open door". Then he heard a voice which said "Come up hither". The next verse tells us how the apostle responded to this invitation, "At once I was in the Spirit, and lo, a throne stood in heaven.". John found himself in heaven by means of a spiritual transposition. The only logical conclusion is that we must not imagine heaven as being a 'place somewhere in the universe'. Heaven is not a 'place', but a situation, a spiritual dimension, a transcendent reality.
According to John 14:3, Jesus said "And when I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, that where I am you may be also". The expression "where I am" seems so very strange in this context. So much so, that some translators felt compelled to mistakenly render it as "where I shall be".
Where was Jesus when He spoke these words, "where I am"? On the earth, indeed with his disciples. Nevertheless, at the same time He was "in my Father's house", that is heaven.
We find a similar thought in John 7:34, "You will seek me and not find me; where I am you cannot come". (See verse 36 also). Where was it that Jesus found Himself and where the unbelieving Jews couldn't reach Him? The answer is clear - in heaven!
As long as these Jews remained unbelieving and would not receive His Spirit, the spiritual dimension in which the Lord lived would remain inaccessible to them. Jesus' own testimony, (John 3:13), voices this same thought: "No one has ascended into heaven but he who descended from heaven, the Son of man". Note that the Lord was not speaking of a future event here. He wasn't talking about his Ascension, but rather about something which had already taken place. Insofar as the "Word had become flesh", the Lord was able to descend from heaven. It was by means of His baptism in the Spirit that Jesus entered into heaven.
Don't yuh think that It's remarkable that, in the King James' version, this statement of the Lord is followed by a repetition of the same "... even the Son of man which is in heaven.." It is as if the Lord wanted to lay stress on the fact that He was speaking of a matter which already was a reality to Him. As if He wanted to say: "Just listen! I have already ascended, I am already in heaven". The entire sentence construction is so strange that the R.S.V. just left it out: - and, 'JudgeNot', evidently so have you.
The Bible says, "God ... raised us up with him, and made us sit with him in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus"... (Eph 2:6). Unfortunately, us Christians oftentimes don't seem to be sufficiently conscious of this spiritual reality. Yeah, every now and then our spiritual eyes have become opened to it, by means of a vision, a revelation, or a discernment of spirits. However, it's the Lord's intention that we should continually move about in this heavenly dimension. God earnestly desires that we live in heaven ... in the same way as Jesus lived in heaven during His life on earth. Jesus himself prayed for the realization of this spiritual fact in the lives of his followers saying, "Father, I desire that they also, whom thou hast given me, may be with me where I am (!), to behold my glory which thou hast given me...", (John 17:24).
'JudgeNot', your Post appears to be suggesting that us Christians should refrain from allowing our Savior's prayer to be worked out in our lives. Speaking for myself, I always try to obey this Scriptural advice: "Set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth. For you have died, and your life is hid with Christ in God.", (Col. 3:2-3).
John saw heaven in revelation by a vision -a virtual tour so to speak, of the heavenly throne and later visions of future events of the end time which have not yet occurred .
Astronauts in the second heaven-space-no matter how far out they travel would never find heaven-it is invisible to us being a spiritual realm.
In John 14:3 Jesus is telling us we will be where he is-on earth-that is established by all other scripture relating to the Kingdom of God being on earth.
in Hebrews 11:13 we see that all the great patriarchs have died in faith, but have not received the promises.........."
They have not received the promises of eternal life yet. They are not in heaven.
Where in the Bible does it actually says " We will go to Heaven when we die ".
There are various verses that allude to this if misinterpreted but there are no verses that give us a precise and direct meaning that when we die we go to heaven.
What I mean by God is not trying to save the whole world now is that millions die yearly without even the knowledge of Christ.
All that He does not call now in this present age will have an opportunity for salvation in the future
Jesus and the apostles always compare death to sleep.
The idea that souls go to heaven at death apparently originated in pagan religions, not the bible.
Flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of God-so we are not living in the Kingdom now, not until we are spiritual beings. and that only happens after Jesus second coming and the resurrections from the dead in the future.
We are spiritual beings NOW.
If one doesn't understand the fact that we are created as tripartite creatures---body, soul and spirit---they will never come to grips with the fact that when the body dies (sleeps as the ancients put it), our body remains earthbound, but our soul (mind, will and emotions--the personality of the person) and his spirit, which we have no conscious knowledge of, goes directly to Jesus.
Paul talks about being absent in the body, yet present with the Lord and that is the kingpin of the truth concerning our forever presence with Jesus when we die. Jesus Himself prays to the Father saying in John 7:22-24: "“I have given them the glory you gave me, so they may be one as we are one. 23 I am in them and you are in me. May they experience such perfect unity that the world will know that you sent me and that you love them as much as you love me. 24 Father, I want these whom you have given me to be with me where I am. Then they can see all the glory you gave me because you loved me even before the world began!" Even Solon, the wise king himself, in ancient days spoke the truth when he said, "Yes, remember your Creator now while you are young, before the silver cord of life snaps and the golden bowl is broken. Don’t wait until the water jar is smashed at the spring and the pulley is broken at the well. 7 For then the dust will return to the earth, and the spirit will return to God who gave it." (Ecclesiastes 12:6-7)
There is NO TIME of separation from Jesus Christ for those who are in Christ. Death cannot separate us.
The bible speaks often of the resurrection of the dead. But what is the purpose then of the dead being raised if people go to heaven after death?
Psalms 6:5 says we have no relationship with God after death. And Psalms 115:17 reiterates it.
Our mind, our thoughts, our human spirit is unconscious-asleep as the bible refers to it.
Absent from the body, present with the Lord does not mention heaven
2 Tim 4:6-8 - Paul understood here that he would not receive his reward immediately at death. That would happen at the second coming of Christ.
We will not realize the passage of time from death to the resurrection-it will be like Paul says , in the twinkling of an eye. Instantaneously, even though a hundred years may have gone by.
The resurrection of the dead is the time set apart for them to receive the physical, yet glorified, imperishable bodies they will need to do the work of governing the nations of the world when Jesus returns as King. We will all require the same physical bodies that Jesus has. People in heaven now are there in only their spiritual form, but they will need flesh and bone to be able to function in the earthly Kingdom.
What you are gathering from your offered passages is incorrect. It is only talking about the dead physical body that can no longer, see, nor hear, nor speak, nor praise the Lord.
Yes, when Paul speaks about being absent from the body and present with the Lord, he is talking about the immediate transportation to heaven of our spirits. We will receive our heavenly home immediately upon vacating this flesh. Our spiritual rewards come at the Bema Seat of Christ, however, and that is another topic.
You are also incorrect about us receiving our rewards at Jesus' second coming, for it as that time that we will already have received our new bodies and our rewards, for we will be coming with Jesus, already judged and rewarded and ready to rule and reign with Him.
The allusion to the "twinkling of an eye" is only referring to the nanosecond of time it will take for us all---both dead and alive---to change from our physical flesh (or as in the case of the dead, from dust) to glorified when Jesus shouts for us to "Come!"
Hi! 'Ophel'Some good thoughts there, Itz Me...but the Resurrection is the ACTUAL and LITERAL resurrection of the dead in Christ and the translation of the living in Christ. It is a one-time event. It is malarkey to super-spiritualize it. You just confuse new believers with that.
The dead in Christ literally come out of their graves--both marked and tended graves and unmarked, long gone graves (God knows where their atoms are) and are renewed physically, reunited with their living spirits. It's physical.
@Ophel @Itz Me @judge not
And he said unto Jesus, Lord, remember me when thou comest into thy kingdom. And Jesus said unto him, Verily I say unto thee, To day shalt thou be with me in paradise. Luke 23:42-43 KJV
Now when the thief asked the Lord while on the cross to remember him when He came into His kingdom. Where do believe the kingdom was that the thief was referring to at?
When the Lord said "To day shalt thou be with me in paradise". Where also, is this paradise located and what was the time period for this to happen?
We know that the Lord's resurrection (Bodily) did not happen for 3 days, and the thief stayed in the ground or wherever he happend to be buried, which is more than likely a common grave "potters field" unless family came to claim the body (less likely since he was a thief).
So, where were the spirits of the Lord & thief go after the body died?
If we know where the thief went, then rest assured that we also who believe will get to meet this man on the cross, who identified as a thief, but is a Brother in Christ Jesus!
In love.
YBIC
C4E
The resurrection of the dead is the time set apart for them to receive the physical, yet glorified, imperishable bodies they will need to do the work of governing the nations of the world when Jesus returns as King. We will all require the same physical bodies that Jesus has. People in heaven now are there in only their spiritual form, but they will need flesh and bone to be able to function in the earthly Kingdom.
What you are gathering from your offered passages is incorrect. It is only talking about the dead physical body that can no longer, see, nor hear, nor speak, nor praise the Lord.
Yes, when Paul speaks about being absent from the body and present with the Lord, he is talking about the immediate transportation to heaven of our spirits. We will receive our heavenly home immediately upon vacating this flesh. Our spiritual rewards come at the Bema Seat of Christ, however, and that is another topic.
You are also incorrect about us receiving our rewards at Jesus' second coming, for it as that time that we will already have received our new bodies and our rewards, for we will be coming with Jesus, already judged and rewarded and ready to rule and reign with Him.
The allusion to the "twinkling of an eye" is only referring to the nanosecond of time it will take for us all---both dead and alive---to change from our physical flesh (or as in the case of the dead, from dust) to glorified when Jesus shouts for us to "Come!"
The problem with this assumption is that you have given man's spirit immortality-eternal life- at the time of death yet 1 Cor 15:53 tells us immortality is something we receive or put on at the time of Christ's second coming.
the Bible shows we will not be coming with Jesus at His return to earth but we will be changed, some while still alive and others in Christ who are on earth asleep(dead) then into spiritual immortal beings and meet Him up in the air to return to the earth to reign with Him. this is the very first resurrection of any human being.into a spiritual body. Jesus was the first fruit of that change from human to spiritual.
What happened to all the millions who have died over the thousands of years not even hearing of Jesus or any gospel ?
Are they in heaven or are they asleep still in their graves? What is their fate?
No, God has given us eternal life and it begins at faith. That is not an assumption. It is truth.