Did Jesus Die on The Cross for The Just/Elect/Saved Whose Names Are Written in The Book of Life OR

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selahsays

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May 31, 2023
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"Everyone" in the distributive sense? What about infants, babies, toddlers, small children, the mentally incompetent, etc.?
In the millennium, there will be an abundance of teaching. Above all, we have a just and all-powerful Father in heaven who is still seated on His throne. IMG_5750.gif We can count on Him.
 

Genez

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Oct 12, 2017
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If a slave master makes his slaves do horrible and shameful things? Disgusting things.
Do you not have compassion of the one born into slavery who can not know anything different?

God sees the slave and knows what that slave would be if given freedom and instruction and power on how to live.
God is therefore able to love that slave before he is made free!

Calvinism as it is taught is cruelty professed in the name of righteousness and deep humility. Its bad news. Not good news.
TULIP is weird news.

Arminianism was a dream world approach in attempt to counter TULIP. Both are wrong.


........
 

MerSee

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Jan 13, 2024
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If a slave master makes his slaves do horrible and shameful things? Disgusting things.
Do you not have compassion of the one born into slavery who can not know anything different?

God sees the slave and knows what that slave would be if given freedom and instruction and power on how to live.
God is therefore able to love that slave before he is made free!

Calvinism as it is taught is cruelty professed in the name of righteousness and deep humility. Its bad news. Not good news.
TULIP is weird news.

Arminianism was a dream world approach in attempt to counter TULIP. Both are wrong.


........
:love: Jesus died on the cross for the just/elect/saved whose names are written in The book of life. :love:
 

Genez

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Oct 12, 2017
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In the millennium, there will be an abundance of teaching. Above all, we have a just and all-powerful Father in heaven who is still seated on His throne. View attachment 265162 We can count on Him.
The Millennium will be the time of obliterating every excuse a man may give for rejecting God as they now give when finding themselves in torments awaiting the Lake of Fire.

Right now majority of the teachings we see are so bad, and "broad and wide" leading the destruction of believers lives.
Good teaching will be found within a narrow realm of choosing. Those who are on the narrow road it will be placed
under cosmic pressures to quit that must be resisted until God's grace enables and enters them into FINDING LIFE MORE
ABUNDANTLY as Jesus promised for us who are faithful to grow in grace and knowledge of God's Word.

Its the way it is. Few find it. Many will not be granted to serve with Him, but will be saved.




For no one can lay any foundation other than the one already laid, which is Jesus Christ.
If anyone builds on this foundation using gold, silver, costly stones, wood, hay or straw,
their work will be shown for what it is, because the Day will bring it to light. It will be
revealed with fire, and the fire will test the quality of each person’s work. If what has
been built survives, the builder will receive a reward. If it is burned up, the builder
will suffer loss but yet will be saved—even though only as one escaping through the flames.



1 Corinthians 3:11-15
 

MerSee

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1 Whosoever are servants under the yoke, let them count their masters worthy of all honour; lest the name of the Lord and his doctrine be blasphemed. 2 But they that have believing masters, let them not despise them, because they are brethren; but serve them the rather, because they are faithful and beloved, who are partakers of the benefit. These things teach and exhort. 3 If any man teach otherwise, and consent not to the sound words of our Lord Jesus Christ, and to that doctrine which is according to godliness. 4 He is proud, knowing nothing, but sick about questions and strifes of words; from which arise envies, contentions, blasphemies, evil suspicions, 5 Conflicts of men corrupted in mind, and who are destitute of the truth, supposing gain to be godliness.
 

Genez

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Oct 12, 2017
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:love: Jesus died on the cross for the just/elect/saved whose names are written in The book of life. :love:
And?

How did you miss the following?


My little children, I am writing you these things so that you may not sin.
But if anyone does sin, we have an advocate with the Father—Jesus Christ
the righteous one. He himself is the atoning sacrifice for our sins, and not
only for ours, but also for those of the whole world.
1 John 2:1-2

Jesus died for the whole world! Even died for the sins of those who will refuse to believe!
He did not die only for the elect!

Stick with the Word.

He himself is the atoning sacrifice for our sins (the elect),
and not only for ours, but also for those of the whole world.
Be confused. Maybe you'll learn the truth while enduring it.

Stick with the Word!

grace and peace .............
 

MerSee

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Jan 13, 2024
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And?

How did you miss the following?


My little children, I am writing you these things so that you may not sin.
But if anyone does sin, we have an advocate with the Father—Jesus Christ
the righteous one. He himself is the atoning sacrifice for our sins, and not
only for ours, but also for those of the whole world.
1 John 2:1-2

Jesus died for the whole world! Even died for the sins of those who will refuse to believe!
He did not die only for the elect!

Stick with the Word.

He himself is the atoning sacrifice for our sins (the elect),
and not only for ours, but also for those of the whole world.
Be confused. Maybe you'll learn the truth while enduring it.

Stick with the Word!

grace and peace .............
The whole world is the elect who keep God's commandments.

1 My little children, these things I write to you, that you may not sin. But if any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the just: 2 And he is the propitiation for our sins: and not for ours only, but also for those of the whole world. 3 And by this we know that we have known him, if we keep his commandments. 4 He who saith that he knoweth him, and keepeth not his commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him. 5 But he that keepeth his word, in him in very deed the charity of God is perfected; and by this we know that we are in him.
 

PaulThomson

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Oct 29, 2023
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But . . . what do you think of the below passage set?
John 17:6-12 NKJV - "I have manifested Your name to the men whom You have given Me out of the world. They were Yours, You gave them to Me, and they have kept Your word. 7 "Now they have known that all things which You have given Me are from You. 8 "For I have given to them the words which You have given Me; and they have received them, and have known surely that I came forth from You; and they have believed that You sent Me. 9 "I pray for them. I do not pray for the world but for those whom You have given Me, for they are Yours. 10 "And all Mine are Yours, and Yours are Mine, and I am glorified in them. 11 "Now I am no longer in the world, but these are in the world, and I come to You. Holy Father, keep through Your name those whom You have given Me, that they may be one as We are. 12 "While I was with them in the world, I kept them in Your name. Those whom You gave Me I have kept; and none of them is lost except the son of perdition, that the Scripture might be fulfilled."
John 17:1-9 Jesus is praying for Himself.
vv. 89-19 Jesus is praying for those disciples He has gathered to Himself during His ministry thus far.
vv. 20-23 Jesus is praying for those who would be added to the church after Pentecost.
vv.. 24-26 Jesus is again praying for His present band of disciples.

He is praying, in the part you are citing, that those who are already His disciples, that they be kept in Jesus name. He is acknowledging that those who have not yet believed in His name are not yet in His name, so cannot be kept in the name they have not yet been brought into. The world that has not received Jesus so as to be in His name, cannot be kept in His name.

As an aside, I think vv 20-23 are one sentence, and the train of thought should not be broken at v. 22
 

PaulThomson

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Oct 29, 2023
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But . . . what do you think of the below passage set?
John 17:6-12 NKJV - "I have manifested Your name to the men whom You have given Me out of the world. They were Yours, You gave them to Me, and they have kept Your word. 7 "Now they have known that all things which You have given Me are from You. 8 "For I have given to them the words which You have given Me; and they have received them, and have known surely that I came forth from You; and they have believed that You sent Me. 9 "I pray for them. I do not pray for the world but for those whom You have given Me, for they are Yours. 10 "And all Mine are Yours, and Yours are Mine, and I am glorified in them. 11 "Now I am no longer in the world, but these are in the world, and I come to You. Holy Father, keep through Your name those whom You have given Me, that they may be one as We are. 12 "While I was with them in the world, I kept them in Your name. Those whom You gave Me I have kept; and none of them is lost except the son of perdition, that the Scripture might be fulfilled."

In verse 10 above, the word "all" is used. But clearly, "all" does not include the entire world. Because of this, when the word "all" is used in other scenarios, I take it to mean that "all" whom the Father has chosen, "all" that belong to the Lord and not of the Devil.
The context here ties all to all to [all] those you have given me. The context here limits the all to all that referenced group. You ought not take the fact that context limits all to all of an immediately referenced group, and take that local limitation and apply it willy-nilly to any other context anywhere else in the Bible..
 

PaulThomson

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You still don't get it. God is NOT relatively good. He is ABSOLUTELY good -- and that is HIS standard for his image-bearers -- and nothing less! This is precisely the point Jesus was getting at when he asked his question to the man. The man asking the question was thinking just like you! He thought Jesus was relatively good compared to other men. But that is not how Jesus measures Good! He measures Good on the vertical level, as his Father does. This is why he could make such an astounding statement: NO ONE ON THE ENTIRE PLANET IS GOOD, SAVE FOR GOD! Not one person CAN compare to God!

I don't know why you so vehemently oppose this easy-to-understand teaching. After all, doesn't it take only one sin to condemn a man to hell forever? How many sins did it take for Adam before he ruined the entire universe!?

And by the way, if a person isn't dead, then he is alive. And vice versa. Just sayin'... Oy Vey! :coffee:
I have not said that God is relatively good. I do get it, as I have explained three or four times to you. A uniquely perfect apple among a display of slightly or much marred apples is the only good (absolutely good) apple. But declaring that there is inly one absolutely good apple is not a declaration that there is no good in any other apple., or that nothing good can come from any other apple.

I do know why you so vehemently oppose this easy-to-understand teaching. Isolation from God because one is not perfect does not equate to that person being absolutely evil with no good in them, as you seem to be attempting to claim..
 

PaulThomson

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PaulThomson said:
Salvation is reconciliation with God, which God has already shown His desire to provide, through the demonstration of His love and mercy and desire for fellowship toward sinners through the cross. In the cross, propitiation has been made for all people, whether they knowit or not. And since God reckons faith toward Him as righteousness, any person can achieve peace with God through acknowledging His invisible deity and power and trusting in His benevolence, even if they don't know the details of the mechanism for reconciliation as revealed in the gospel. They need the gospel to experience salvation from their personal lostness and anxiety, by receiving objective assurance of salvation through the revelation of the cross. They can be reconciled, without realising it, by trusting in God according to the light they have.

So, I disagree with you, God has always made it possible for people to get saved. I just think your opinions about what salvation is and how it is achieved are blinding you to that fact.

So faith doesn't come by hearing? And hearing doesn't come by the word of God? And Jesus doesn't need to be the object of one's faith? And you think it's me who is blinded?
Faith in the gospel does come by hearing the good news. And hearing the good news comes from the word of God. What have I written that negates that? To receive assurance of salvation and not be anxious that one's record of infringements against conscience will be held against one in God's judgment, Jesus needs to be the object of one's faith. But in cases where someone has not heard the gospel, but believe in the light they have, God is able to attribute the death of Christ to them on the basis of their faith in the light they have, if He wills. Has He said in His word that it is not His will to reckon the faith in that limited light of an ungospeled person as righteousness?
However, if a person hears the true gospel but then rejects Jesus, their previous graced standing before God will be cancelled. If they are presented with a perverted gospel, and the vindictive kind of Jesus that is unlovely and unlovable, and reject that Jesus, God could show them more mercy than the false teacher who innoculated them against Christ.
 

PaulThomson

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I qualified my statement with what followed...when God does what only God can do, it must be God. So technically you are correct, the qualification given was sufficient for understanding the meaning: the works of God can be seen. And just like Jesus, we can do what we see the Father doing.
You wrote: "God isn't working in all places at all times. Where He is working, it isn't hard to discern. When God is doing what only God can do, it must be God."

How does someone determine that something is something only God can do? And does God only do things that only God could do? Does He not do anything that other spirits could also do?

These are not rhetorical questions. They need answers.
 

Cameron143

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You wrote: "God isn't working in all places at all times. Where He is working, it isn't hard to discern. When God is doing what only God can do, it must be God."

How does someone determine that something is something only God can do? And does God only do things that only God could do? Does He not do anything that other spirits could also do?

These are not rhetorical questions. They need answers.
So I'll get you started. Only God can save. Where you witness genuine salvation, God is at work. All wisdom has God as its source. Where you find wisdom, God is at work. The Holy Spirit produces the fruit of the Spirit. Where you find fruit being exercised, God is at work.
 

Cameron143

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PaulThomson said:
Salvation is reconciliation with God, which God has already shown His desire to provide, through the demonstration of His love and mercy and desire for fellowship toward sinners through the cross. In the cross, propitiation has been made for all people, whether they knowit or not. And since God reckons faith toward Him as righteousness, any person can achieve peace with God through acknowledging His invisible deity and power and trusting in His benevolence, even if they don't know the details of the mechanism for reconciliation as revealed in the gospel. They need the gospel to experience salvation from their personal lostness and anxiety, by receiving objective assurance of salvation through the revelation of the cross. They can be reconciled, without realising it, by trusting in God according to the light they have.

So, I disagree with you, God has always made it possible for people to get saved. I just think your opinions about what salvation is and how it is achieved are blinding you to that fact.



Faith in the gospel does come by hearing the good news. And hearing the good news comes from the word of God. What have I written that negates that? To receive assurance of salvation and not be anxious that one's record of infringements against conscience will be held against one in God's judgment, Jesus needs to be the object of one's faith. But in cases where someone has not heard the gospel, but believe in the light they have, God is able to attribute the death of Christ to them on the basis of their faith in the light they have, if He wills. Has He said in His word that it is not His will to reckon the faith in that limited light of an ungospeled person as righteousness?
However, if a person hears the true gospel but then rejects Jesus, their previous graced standing before God will be cancelled. If they are presented with a perverted gospel, and the vindictive kind of Jesus that is unlovely and unlovable, and reject that Jesus, God could show them more mercy than the false teacher who innoculated them against Christ.
This seems duplicitous. On the one hand, the gospel is necessary to saving faith, and on the other hand one can have faith in God apart from it.
 

Rufus

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Feb 17, 2024
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Hello Rufus,

In my opinion, I believe that you understand things very well. I would offer you these questions that you may likely have already asked yourself:

How could Abel be the first true Prophet of God?
How could Job be considered Pure, Upright, and Blameless?
How could Abraham be our Father of Faith?
How could David repeatedly write and sing of his Righteousness and Purity? And more on David, why is Jesus said to be the Son of David, the Son of Abraham? What is the significance of this short genealogy of Christ? Is it relatively meaningless, or is Matt 1:1 incredibly significant in a deep and complicated Spiritual sense?

Of course, we could ask the same for all men and women considered to be examples of Faith. Hebrews 11 is the "Great Hall of Faith" chapter, all of whom are listed as genuine children of the Lord. How is this possible if Jesus had yet to live, die, and be raised from the dead?

Until about 7 years ago, I admittedly did not study the Old Testament, nor had I ever read it (completely), let alone read it in an timeline, chronological order, thus making it 100% impossible to know and understand the Story of God. But after finding myself in the restricted presence of the Lord (which nearly took my life - SO WONDERFUL!!), I realized that I needed to turn to our Bible so that I could know who this unbelievable God is that found and chose me. So, I began asking myself these questions and set out to discover the answers, and as I found over many thousands of hours of study, these questions, if answered, point us to the Saving Plan of Jesus Christ.

I believe that you are right, which is that God worked differently with people in the Old Testament, as He did in the New. But what about those in the New Testament who were clearly Indwelt by the Spirit before Jesus was born? For example, Zechariah and Elizabeth. In a sense, the NT stories before Christ should be viewed in the same circumstance as those of the Old Testament. But upon strong searching, there are plenty of Scriptures that state that humans were Indwelt by the Holy Spirit (in the OT). I would say that most people who do not study the OT, nor care to study it in a timeline, chronological order, will fight against the idea that the Saints were not Indwelt by the Holy Spirit. The evidence just doesn't allow for that belief.

One difference between the saints of the OT and the NT, is that after the Resurrection of Christ, we find that a Promise is made, which is that the Holy Spirit would [never] leave a person, which is a guarantee of what is to come. The significance of the guarantee is that the Holy Spirit, if a person has TRULY been given "Him," the Spirit will intercede, pray for, and even cause change within the Spiritually purchase believer that will cause them to never turn and fall away. There is no such guarantee in the Old Testament, and king Saul is the proof of this principle, for God takes responsibility for giving him this Spirit, but also takes responsibility for taking the Heavenly Spirit away and replacing it with an evil Spirit. As you suggested, people think that our God is different between the OT and NT, but I don't see any difference in His way at all, other than the OT does not have this Promise, while this Promise of the Spirit staying with the Elect does.

The Old Covenant has nothing to do with why Abraham is our Father of Faith. Absolutely nothing. The Law was given to those who had not received Abraham's Faith, thus the Law protected them until they could and would obtain this Faith. The Law was a worldly guardian that would protect them until Christ lived, died, and was Resurrected. The dead (their spirits) would be given a chance to put their Faith into Christ, which Scripture clarifies. But the Law of Moses has nothing to do with the Abrahamic Covenant. This Covenant is also called the Covenant of Circumcision, and it is the terms of this Covenant which the Lord had already been exercising in the Life of Abel, the first true Prophet of God. These terms were already being exercised in the lives of Abraham, Moses, Eldad and Medad, Caleb and Joshua, Samuel, David, Rahab the prostitute, and on and on. As Paul said in Ephesians Chapters 1 and 3, these details were kept hidden and remained "mysterious" until his day, when the Lord revealed these details to him so that he could unpack them. However, these things have been recorded by him, and other Holy men, in a way that they remain hidden today and only available to those who diligently ask, seek, and knock.

This Covenant of Circumcision points directly to Christ and the New Covenant. For, the terms of the Covenant of Circumcision are the EXACT same terms of the New Covenant, except for the fact that the Spirit will remain with the Elect and never depart. As far as I have been able to determine, this is the only difference between the Covenant of Circumcision established in Abraham in Genesis 17, and the New Covenant in Christ. Yes, it is the same Covenant! Again, the Old Covenant was a temporary Covenant that appeared in the middle of the Covenant of Circumcision, which never stopped . . . it has been in process from the very beginning, a beginning with Abel.
(cut to save space)

Well, you have said a mouthful and then some... :LOL:. But I absolutely agree that the Spirit of God was very active in the OT...beginning with Adam! God breathed his Spirit into Adam, and thus he became a "living" soul or being. But after Adam sinned, God must have removed his Spirit from him (as he did with Saul), for else could Adam have died spiritually? Now...whether or not the Holy Spirit actually indwelt God's OT saints as a matter of course is questionable. Again, I appeal to the John 14 passage wherein Jesus told his disciples that they know the Spirit because he is with you -- but will soon be in you. So, there must be a difference. Whatever the differences are is not clear to me from scripture. God's Spirit could have been with or upon God's OT people. For example, in 1Sam 10, it is written of Saul that the "Spirit of the Lord will come upon you in power...".. (A very interesting study is to contrast the purposes of the working of the Holy Spirit between two very different OT characters: Saul and David; but that would be a study for another time.)

The Abrahamic Covenant and the Covenant of Circumcision (which I consider to be two separate covenants) is rich in theology. For one thing, the debate continues to this day whether or not the Abrahamic Covenant was conditional or unconditional in nature. Those who hold to the latter view insist it must be because all those who participate in the covenant must obey the covenant of circumcision. But for those who hold to the former position (as I do)) we believe it was unconditional since the covenant was unilaterally ratified by YHWH when he alone passed through the fire between the pieces of the sacrifice which he did before He instituted the covenant of circumcision. So, then the big question becomes: Why this second covenant AFTER the fact of the first? What purpose did the second covenant serve beyond it being a sign of the first? And honestly, I haven't studied this out sufficiently to feel comfortable offering something beyond opinion. But off the top of my head, I'm thinking the answers are contained in the typology of the sign itself and in the Abrahamic Covenant; for both of these covenants are types of the New Covenant. We should remember that God cut his covenant with Abraham who was a man of Faith. And not only a man of faith, but he was faithful man of faith. His life was a life of faithful obedience to God. And because God was pleased with Abraham, he entered into a covenant with him.

The second covenant could have been instituted to teach an important lesson to the Israelites: God could have been telling Abraham's descendants that just because I entered into the first covenant with your patriarch, don't rely on your lineage to Abraham or rely on his faith and faithfulness as your ticket to my grace, mercy, compassion and the fulfillment of my promises; rather, each male has do demonstrate faithfulness (obedience) by becoming circumcised; for to be in a covenant with me you must honor and fear me with your own personal faith and faithfulness. And this is why it took two different covenants to express the intimate connection between faith and faithfulness and personal resonsibility. But the inverse is true in the New Covenant. In the New, the circumcision is spiritual and hidden. In the new, circumcision comes either at the point of regeneration or at the new birth -- and not eight days later or after faith. Circumcision must precede faith because circumcision is of the heart -- it's a way of expressing how God gives the new heart (new set of faculties) to his elect. And of course, in the new, God supernaturally performs the inner circumcision. In short, I think circumcision in the OT could have been God's way of telling the Israelites what his expectations of them are since they're in a covenant relationship with him by virtue of their natural relationship with Abraham.

Gotta run...
 

2ndTimothyGroup

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Feb 20, 2021
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(cut to save space)

Well, you have said a mouthful and then some... :LOL:. But I absolutely agree that the Spirit of God was very active in the OT...beginning with Adam! God breathed his Spirit into Adam, and thus he became a "living" soul or being. But after Adam sinned, God must have removed his Spirit from him (as he did with Saul), for else could Adam have died spiritually? Now...whether or not the Holy Spirit actually indwelt God's OT saints as a matter of course is questionable. Again, I appeal to the John 14 passage wherein Jesus told his disciples that they know the Spirit because he is with you -- but will soon be in you. So, there must be a difference. Whatever the differences are is not clear to me from scripture. God's Spirit could have been with or upon God's OT people. For example, in 1Sam 10, it is written of Saul that the "Spirit of the Lord will come upon you in power...".. (A very interesting study is to contrast the purposes of the working of the Holy Spirit between two very different OT characters: Saul and David; but that would be a study for another time.)

The Abrahamic Covenant and the Covenant of Circumcision (which I consider to be two separate covenants) is rich in theology. For one thing, the debate continues to this day whether or not the Abrahamic Covenant was conditional or unconditional in nature. Those who hold to the latter view insist it must be because all those who participate in the covenant must obey the covenant of circumcision. But for those who hold to the former position (as I do)) we believe it was unconditional since the covenant was unilaterally ratified by YHWH when he alone passed through the fire between the pieces of the sacrifice which he did before He instituted the covenant of circumcision. So, then the big question becomes: Why this second covenant AFTER the fact of the first? What purpose did the second covenant serve beyond it being a sign of the first? And honestly, I haven't studied this out sufficiently to feel comfortable offering something beyond opinion. But off the top of my head, I'm thinking the answers are contained in the typology of the sign itself and in the Abrahamic Covenant; for both of these covenants are types of the New Covenant. We should remember that God cut his covenant with Abraham who was a man of Faith. And not only a man of faith, but he was faithful man of faith. His life was a life of faithful obedience to God. And because God was pleased with Abraham, he entered into a covenant with him.

The second covenant could have been instituted to teach an important lesson to the Israelites: God could have been telling Abraham's descendants that just because I entered into the first covenant with your patriarch, don't rely on your lineage to Abraham or rely on his faith and faithfulness as your ticket to my grace, mercy, compassion and the fulfillment of my promises; rather, each male has do demonstrate faithfulness (obedience) by becoming circumcised; for to be in a covenant with me you must honor and fear me with your own personal faith and faithfulness. And this is why it took two different covenants to express the intimate connection between faith and faithfulness and personal resonsibility. But the inverse is true in the New Covenant. In the New, the circumcision is spiritual and hidden. In the new, circumcision comes either at the point of regeneration or at the new birth -- and not eight days later or after faith. Circumcision must precede faith because circumcision is of the heart -- it's a way of expressing how God gives the new heart (new set of faculties) to his elect. And of course, in the new, God supernaturally performs the inner circumcision. In short, I think circumcision in the OT could have been God's way of telling the Israelites what his expectations of them are since they're in a covenant relationship with him by virtue of their natural relationship with Abraham.

Gotta run...
Hello @Rufus,

You have obviously been navigating the Bible for some time and thus I appreciate our positive exchanges!

You had mention that God breathed the Spirit into Adam. I’ve looked at the many translations I use and don’t find that it was the Spirt that was breathed into Adam, but the breath of life. Do you use a translation I might not be aware of? I highly value all respectable translations (less the Message – I don’t know what that “book” is!) haha

I hear you when you say that the Holy Spirit Indwelt the OT Saints. As a mere human, I’d hate to take a hard stance on that one. However, if I had to make a choice, I’d say yes based upon the following (and there is much more). I can’t imagine that Abraham would be our Father of Faith, but without the Holy Spirit:

Hebrews 7:6 NLT - 6 But Melchizedek, who was not a descendant of Levi, collected a tenth from Abraham. And Melchizedek placed a blessing upon Abraham, the one who had already received the promises of God.

Hebrews 11:17-19 NLT - 17 It was by faith that Abraham offered Isaac as a sacrifice when God was testing him. Abraham, who had received God's promises, was ready to sacrifice his only son, Isaac, 18 even though God had told him, "Isaac is the son through whom your descendants will be counted." 19 Abraham reasoned that if Isaac died, God was able to bring him back to life again. And in a sense, Abraham did receive his son back from the dead.

Galatians 3:14 KJV - 14 That the blessing of Abraham might come on the Gentiles through Jesus Christ; that we might receive the promise of the Spirit through faith.”

You offered:

“So, then the big question becomes: Why this second covenant AFTER the fact of the first?”

I can’t see how it is “after” the Covenant of the Law, for the Covenant of Circumcision has always existed, unlike the Covenant of the Law. I believe that the Bible demonstrates the Covenant of Circumcision as the ever-present and underlying Covenant, for this is the Promise of God that actually Saves. The Law of Moses, however, were worldly Laws that applied to the Jews. Part of that Law was physical Circumcision, which acted like the Passover Blood. Whichever house had [that] blood over their doors, the entire family was saved. It was as if the Lord said, apply this blood and you will be saved. Hence, apply this physical circumcision, as it represents my Promise to you that you will be Saved. Well, that is one idea, anyway. :D

The thing is this: Abel, Seth, Noah, Shem . . . all of these Righteous, Holy, and Purified people, they had already received the future Promises, the same promises made to Abraham. But those who had already received these promises, they would not need the Law of Moses to protect them because they had already been “set apart” (from the Laws already given and all Laws that would be given). God used the Jewish Nation to put on display, to the entire world, the Laws of Moses. So, the Jews were chosen to be this example, not only of the Law, but would use them to display His Raw, Almighty Power in a multitude of ways (pharaoh being one of the best examples).

When Christ was Resurrected from the Grave, the Law of Moses had fulfilled its Purpose, which was to protect the Blessed Jews. It was then that God would begin to implement, on a global basis, the Promised Covenant of Circumcision. This Covenant was made to Abraham and to all his descendants, both Jews and Gentiles alike. The Day of Pentecost was when that Promise to his offspring really began to take off. But until then, the Promises were given only to select people . . . the rest had to wait.

Lastly, I have scripture for every point made above. If you would like Scriptural evidence, I’d love to share it with you. And again, thank you for the chance to learn and grow. You clearly have much to offer. All respect!
 
Feb 10, 2024
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Matthew 24:14: And this gospel of the kingdom will be preached in all the world as a witness to all the nations, and then the end will come.

By the time Jesus Christ returns, everyone in today’s world will have heard the Gospel of the Kingdom.
—Selah
And?

How did you miss the following?


My little children, I am writing you these things so that you may not sin.
But if anyone does sin, we have an advocate with the Father—Jesus Christ
the righteous one. He himself is the atoning sacrifice for our sins, and not
only for ours, but also for those of the whole world.
1 John 2:1-2

Jesus died for the whole world! Even died for the sins of those who will refuse to believe!
He did not die only for the elect!

Stick with the Word.

He himself is the atoning sacrifice for our sins (the elect),
and not only for ours, but also for those of the whole world.
Be confused. Maybe you'll learn the truth while enduring it.

Stick with the Word!

grace and peace .............
“But he answered and said, I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel.”
matthew 15:24

“And I said after she had done all these things, Turn thou unto me. But she returned not. And her treacherous sister Judah saw it.

8And I saw, when for all the causes whereby backsliding Israel committed adultery I had put her away, and given her a bill of divorce;
Jeremiah 3:7,8

“I call heaven and earth to witness against you this day, that ye shall soon utterly perish from off the land whereunto ye go over Jordan to possess it; ye shall not prolong your days upon it, but shall utterly be destroyed.

27 And the Lord shall scatter you among the nations, and ye shall be left few in number among the heathen, whither the Lord shall lead you. And there ye shall serve gods, the work of men's hands, wood and stone, which neither see, nor hear, nor eat, nor smell.”Dueteronomy 4:26-28

“ In the days of Pekah king of Israel came Tiglathpileser king of Assyria, and took Ijon, and Abelbethmaachah, and Janoah, and Kedesh, and Hazor, and Gilead, and Galilee, all the land of Naphtali, and carried them captive to Assyria.
2 Kings 15:29

“n the ninth year of Hoshea the king of Assyria took Samaria, and carried Israel away into Assyria, and placed them in Halah and in Habor by the river of Gozan, and in the cities of the Medes.”
2 Kings 17:6

“For, lo, I will command, and I will sift the house of Israel among all nations, like as corn is sifted in a sieve, yet shall not the least grain fall upon the earth.”
Amos 9:9

“Surely as a wife treacherously departeth from her husband, so have ye dealt treacherously with me, O house of Israel, saith the Lord.
Return, ye backsliding children, and I will heal your backslidings. Behold, we come unto thee; for thou art the Lord our God.
Truly in vain is salvation hoped for from the hills, and from the multitude of mountains: truly in the Lord our God is the salvation of Israel.
Jeremiah 3:20,22-33

“And, behold, thou shalt conceive in thy womb, and bring forth a son, and shalt call his name Jesus.
And he shall reign over the house of Jacob for ever;
and of his kingdom there shall be no end.
Luke1:33,35

“Blessed be the Lord God of Israel; for he hath visited and redeemed his people,
And hath raised up an horn of salvation for us in the house of his servant David;
72 To perform the mercy promised to our fathers, and to remember his holy covenant;
The oath which he sware to our father Abraham,
That he would grant unto us, that we being delivered out of the hand of our enemies might serve him without fear,
To give knowledge of salvation unto his people by the remission of their sins,
Luke 1:68,6972-73

“I say then, Hath God cast away his people?God forbid. For I also am an Israelite, of the seed of Abraham, of the tribe of Benjamin. God hath not cast away his people which he foreknew.”
–Romans 11:1-2

You only have I known of all the families of the earth: therefore I will punish you for all your iniquities.”
Amos 3:2

“Even so then at this present time also there is a remnant according to the election of grace.”
Romans 11:5

This remnant does not refer to some generic group of people — or generic “gentiles” — rather the term “remnant” is always reserved for the Israelite people, as we see in Micah:

“I will surely assemble all of you, Jacob, I will surely gather the remnant of Israel. I will put them together like sheep in the fold; Like a flock in the midst of its pasture. They will be noisy with men.”
Micah 2:12

In the Gospel of John, Jesus echoes these words from Micah — when He refers to that “remnant” of lost Israelite “sheep” who are not found among the believing remnant in Judea:

And other sheep I have, which are not of this fold: them also I must bring, and they shall hear my voice; and there shall be one fold, and one shepherd.”
John 10:16

“I say then, Have they stumbled that they should fall? God forbid: but rather through their fall salvation is come unto the Nations, for to provoke them to jealousy. Now if the fall of them be the riches of the world, and the diminishing of them the riches of the Nations; how much more their fulness?“
Romans 11:11-12

The “nations” being all of the scattered israelites, “the dispersion” who are the “wild olive tree” that is grafted back into the nstural branches (israelite christians in judea)
 

Genez

Junior Member
Oct 12, 2017
2,973
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The whole world is the elect who keep God's commandments.

1 My little children, these things I write to you, that you may not sin. But if any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the just: 2 And he is the propitiation for our sins: and not for ours only, but also for those of the whole world. 3 And by this we know that we have known him, if we keep his commandments. 4 He who saith that he knoweth him, and keepeth not his commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him. 5 But he that keepeth his word, in him in very deed the charity of God is perfected; and by this we know that we are in him.
OKAY.... play like Joe Biden if you wish.
 

Genez

Junior Member
Oct 12, 2017
2,973
420
83
The whole world is the elect who keep God's commandments.
Hello?

Do not love the world or anything in the world.
If anyone loves the world, love for the Father is
not in them. 1 John 2:15​


You want to run that by me again?