Handy To Know

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WebersHome

Senior Member
Dec 9, 2014
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#61
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The New Man

The term "in Christ" is widely misunderstood. In a nutshell; everyone starts
out born in Adam; in order to get one's self in Christ; it's necessary to
undergo yet another birth as per John 3:3-8.

John 3:7 . . Don't be surprised at my statement that you must be born again.

Note that another birth isn't optional; it's a must.

2Cor 5:17 . .Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old
has gone, the new has come.

The koiné Greek word for "creation" is ktisis (ktis'-is).

Ktisis makes its first appearance in the New Testament at Mark 10:6 where
it refers to intelligent design and the source of the current cosmos with all of
its forms of life, matter, and energy.

Ktisis is a subtle word. It implies that the current cosmos is an original
rather than a copy; viz: the creation spoken of in 2Cor 5:17 is an original
too, i.e. the first ever of its kind; unique. In other words: the new h.sapiens
isn't a renovation of the first version.

"old" is from the koiné Greek word archaios (ar-khah'-yos) which basically
means the first and/or primeval. In other words: the old man is the Adam
version of h.sapiens, i.e. a terrestrial human race as per Gen 2:7.

Natural-born humans are classified as "in Adam" which makes sense seeing
as how Adam is their progenitor.

Just as Adam was the progenitor of the now-obsolete human race; so Christ
is the progenitor of the never-to-be-obsolete human race; viz: the new Man;
which is a race of heavenly people that has some pretty amazing
advantages.

In Adam all are reckoned joint principals in his disobedience.
In Christ all are reckoned joint principals in his obedience.

In Adam all are adjudged unrighteous.
In Christ all are adjudged righteous.

In Adam all are capable of sin.
In Christ all are incapable of sin.

In Adam all have the human nature.
In Christ all have the divine nature.

In Adam all have natural life.
In Christ all have eternal life.

In Adam all are made to die.
In Christ, all are made to live.

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WebersHome

Senior Member
Dec 9, 2014
1,940
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#62
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Hope Defined

1Pet 3:15b . . Be ready always to give an answer to every man that asks
you a reason of the hope that is in you.

The koiné Greek word for "hope" in that passage, and in others (e.g. Rom
8:23-25) is elpis (el-pece') which means expectation; viz: elpis isn't wishful
thinking, nor crossing your fingers, nor is it a blend of longing, insecurity,
and doubt; no, elpis is a confident kind of hope that looks forward to
something that it fully expects to obtain; ergo: elpis is an anticipating hope;
viz: it doesn't pray for the best, while in the back of its mind dreading the
worst.

The Bible says that elpis is a "calling"

Eph 4:5 . .you were called to one hope when you were called

When people aren't 110% sure what the afterlife has in store for them-- if
there is even the slightest possibility of disappointment --they can't possibly
comply with Peter's instructions for the simple reason that the hope that is in
them, if any, is the wrong kind of hope.

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WebersHome

Senior Member
Dec 9, 2014
1,940
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#63
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Abraham And The Stars

Gen 15:4-5 . .The word of The Lord came to him in reply: That one shall
not be your heir; none but your very own issue shall be your heir. He took
him outside and said: Look toward heaven and count the stars, if you are
able to count them. And He added: So shall your offspring be.

In Abraham's day, prior to the invention of optics, the only stars that people
could see with their own eyes were those in our home galaxy; the Milky
Way; which consists of an estimated 100-400 billion stars. But many of
those estimated billions of stars appear to the naked eye not as stars but as
glowing clouds; viz: they cannot be individually distinguished by the naked
eye so those didn't matter to Abraham when it came to actually tallying the
heavens.

The entire global sky contains roughly five or six thousand stars visible to
the naked eye. However, we can't see all those stars at once; only the ones
when the sky is dark. So then; in Abraham's day, he could see at most three
thousand discernable stars from dark till dawn. God had said "if you are able
to count them". Well; even at only three thousand, the task would be
difficult.

FYI: Abraham's posterity exceeded three thousand long ago. By the time of
the Exodus, they numbered above six hundred thousand. (Ex 12:37)

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