Category Archives: Language

Mark 12:38-44 – The poor widow gave everything she had

As Jesus taught, he said, “Beware of the scribes, who like to walk around in long robes, and to be greeted with respect in the marketplaces, and to have the best seats in the synagogues and places of honor at banquets! They devour widows’ houses and for the sake of appearance say long prayers. They will receive the greater condemnation.”

He sat down opposite the treasury, and watched the crowd putting money into the treasury. Many rich people put in large sums. A poor widow came and put in two small copper coins, which are worth a penny. Then he called his disciples and said to them, “Truly I tell you, this poor widow has put in more than all those who are contributing to the treasury. For all of them have contributed out of their abundance; but she out of her poverty has put in everything she had, all she had to live on.”

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This is the Gospel selection from the Episcopal Lectionary for the Twenty-fifth Sunday after Pentecost, Year B 2018. In the numbering system that lists each Sunday in an ordinal fashion, this Sunday is referred to as Proper 27. It will next be read aloud in an Episcopal church by a priest on Sunday November 11, 2018. It is important because Jesus pointed out the disparity between those who wear church robes and the laity, as well as the wealthy of the church compared to the poor. Jesus said to beware of incorrect assumptions of piety because of collars and donations to the church treasury.

On the heels of the Gospel lesson from Mark that was delivered the prior Sunday[1], where Jesus made a spiritual connection with “one of the scribes,” we now read of Jesus saying, “Beware of the scribes.” This follows the encounter with a scribe, but after Jesus was again teaching [being inspected for blemishes] in the Temple. As part of that day’s discussion, Jesus had pointed out the error that the scribes had used in stating their conclusion that the Messiah will be the “son of David.” Jesus used logic to defeat the logic of the scribes, who spent more time than ordinary Jews coming up with answers to the questions the people had, such as, “Who will the Messiah be?”

Following that answer to the crowd [of which those trying to find error in Jesus’ words were present], Jesus then gave this warning about the scribes, giving his assessment of the privilege the scribes took advantage of, even when they knew less than they put on that they knew. To fully grasp what Jesus said next, it is important to realize that the scribes were the equivalent of modern scholastic researchers of holy texts [Judeo-Christian], with most then being like those now – far removed from life as a practicing Jew or Christian. As scholars they considered themselves to be part of the elite.

When we read that the scribes were those “who like to walk around in long robes,” this paraphrase misses the point of the word “thelontōn,” which means “desiring.” While “desire” can be reduced to “wanting, wishing, intending, and designing,” the “liking to walk around” is based on personal “will,” and not some mandatory rule that says a scribe must always wear a robe ‘in the work place AND in public’. Even if there were a ‘scribe dress code’, they would have written it and made it a point of mandating what they liked to wear.

When Peter recalled Jesus adding that the scribes did this “to be greeted with respect in the marketplaces, and to have the best seats in the synagogues and places of honor at banquets,” this is stating that the wearing of robes ‘off campus’ was to gain personal profit from being a scholar. The robes worn within the Temple’s library and as theological professors on the steps of the Temple were that of academia. The robes of a scribe let those within the Temple walls know who was a scribe, without needing to ask. It would be like a military officer wearing his or her uniform, which displayed a rank that others on a base must immediately recognize, as a matter of maintaining a service hierarchy. However, ‘off base’ or outside the Temple walls, where common people displayed no rank or privilege, dressing like normal folk was allowed.

By Jesus pointing out how the scribes were always found wearing their finest uniforms in public, he was saying they purposefully intended to play the role of elite rank, in order to gain favors that were not required of the poor and common people to give. They got discounted food and at-cost dry goods from vendors. The synagogues would give them front row seats and make others stand, placing them close to the speakers, while others might not hear as clearly in the back. The seats of favor would intimidate the rabbis, influencing them to say what they knew the scribes had taught, rather than speak from a connection to the Godhead. The places of honor at the banquets were near the head of the table, where the host sat. There, they would reap royal service and the choicest meats and drinks.

Imagine how skinny I would be without this frock!

Not only do the scribes profit from good deals and free lunches, they visit widows and make demands on their property, which a widowed woman without sons could do little to prevent. Jesus said they were “devouring” (from “katesthiontes,” meaning “eating up, eating until it is finished, squandering, and injuring”) what little a widow could have. They did this by placing guilt on them and making threats of laws being broken, forcing the Temple to make them outcast. The scribes did this for personal gain.  For old Jewish women, being one of God’s chosen people was all they had.

Then after going out to rob old women of their last jar of meal and oil [an allusion to an optional accompanying Old Testament reading], leaving them to starve to death, the scribes would recite their scholastic dissertations as if they were prayers to God. They would pretend to pray for the contributions of the dead, when such prayers of thanks never came when they were alive.  Therefore, the scribes offered up prayers for self-recognition, as if lengthy prayers were the only prayers they thought God appreciated.

As we remember our dear departed donor, on whose land our new cathedral will be built, let me now offer this prayer of thanksgiving.

Of this corruption Jesus had witnessed [and had inside information via the Christ Mind to know], he said, “They will receive the greater condemnation.”

The word translated as ‘condemnation” is “krima.” That is a legal term that means “judgment; a verdict; sometimes implying an adverse verdict,” as “a condemnation.” It bears the essence of “a lawsuit, as a case at law,” which was what the scribes specialized in studying and teaching.

The word translated as “greater” is “perissoteron,” which implies an abundance of, leaning towards “excessive,” “vehemently” administered. That says the judgment of God, towards those who the scribes condemn publicly and privately, will pale in comparison to the verdict that will be handed down in their cases, for the misdeeds of the scribes.

But I used to pretend to be a fine, upstanding doctor and respected citizen on TV.

It is important to see how the Law was given to the children of Israel for each to memorize and live by them. The “rabbi” for each family was the father. Each tribe of Israel had elders, who were connected to Moses physically, but should have been connected to God spiritually. The high priest (Aaron) offered sacrifices for the sins of the whole (and himself individually). A “scribe” was a useless position in that initial organization, as his only job was to record the Law on scrolls, not interpret them.

The elevation of scribes to being scholarly teacher and interpreters of the Law came after all of Judah had been lost. It was lost because few knew the details of the Law, and fewer followed them. A scribe then became one judge amid the returning Jews to Judea and Galilee, to whom the common people were told to turn to, so failure would not happen again.

The problem was the scribes did more misinterpreting of the Word of God than they showed competence, through divine guidance. Their failing to tell the people, “I really don’t know what it means, other than what the words appear to say, because I, like you, am not that much smarter than you are,” meant falsely representing themselves as those approved by God to speak for Him.

God did not give His approval. That was what Jesus was telling the people to “Beware” (with a capital “B”).

The Greek word written is “Blepete,” which is rooted in “blepó.” It better says to “Look, See, Perceive, or Discern,” with the implication being to “Be careful” and “Take heed.” This says to be vigilant and aware when one hears a scribe teaching, because one must question them as to how they draw their conclusions.

In other words, Jesus called the scribes (largely) liars, which meant the long robes they wore made them false shepherds. Because they avowed to speak the language of God (from the scrolls) they were self-proclaimed prophets. However, due to their lies about the meaning of the Word, they were not true prophets but false prophets.

This leads one to the warnings of God, through Moses, in Deuteronomy 18:20. There is written: “The prophet who dares to speak a message in My name that I have not commanded him to speak, or who speaks in the name of other gods—that prophet must die.” While a physical execution could certainly be read into that commandment, one must realize that “death” is metaphor for not gaining the reward of eternal life.  That was (and still is) the purpose of being God’s chosen people. Therefore, when Jesus said the scribes faced “greater condemnation,” that judgment would be banishment from Heaven.

Unfortunately, the realm of Christianity today has become top-heavy with false prophets, many who proclaim to speak for Jesus Christ, the external (yet ethereal) divine presence at the right hand of God. Simply by pretending to know what Jesus would do, they are breaking the same commandment the scribes broke; and, it is known to be a lie, because the right hand of God is an Apostle, who has been reborn in the name of Jesus Christ.

It is impossible to speak for Jesus Christ when one is supposed to be Jesus Christ AND when one is reborn as Jesus Christ, then one does not enter the realm of politics.  Is that not what “Give unto Caesar what is Caesar’s” mean?  Does not “Render unto God what is God’s” a statement that spirituality is the only goal of God’s people?

Jesus would have been talking to pilgrims on the Temple steps, outside the Nicanor Gate. Those steps rose from the Court of the Women, from which the Treasury alcoves were located. While it is not known how many alms boxes were arranged in those opposing rooms, it would have been near that court area that Jesus and his disciples “sat down opposite the treasury, and watched the crowd putting money into the treasury” (or “collection boxes”).

Having just recently answered someone’s question on the steps to the Nicanor Gate (about why that Jewish someone had heard a scribe explain a law differently than Jesus had taught), Jesus’ warning about the scribes using their position within the Temple to profit from both rich and poor, led him to point out to his disciples what he meant.  As he sat and watched the treasury activity, he knew the treasury would bring forth an example of what he had said to be wary of.

Jesus made his disciples learn by seeing for themselves how: “Many rich people put in large sums.” The disciples were from humble roots and had never known the wealth possessed by the rich. They had not yet faced any temptations to turn their backs to God for thirty pieces of silver [not copper].  One can imagine they were impressed by the amount of money they saw being dropped into the collection boxes [especially Judas Iscariot].

Jesus would have known the disciples would have wide eyes over such large donations being made, so he sat quietly and let the “many rich” that were present make their ritual commitments, so the Temple business of dealing with the poor could be funded. Then, after “a poor widow came and put in two small copper coins, which are worth a penny,” Jesus called their attention to that donation.

Jesus said, “Truly I tell you, this poor widow has put in more than all those who are contributing to the treasury. For all of them have contributed out of their abundance; but she out of her poverty has put in everything she had, all she had to live on.”

Don’t think the widow was unhappy about only being able to give two pennies. See her with a smile on her face, because she gave her all.

That meant that the “poor widow” only had “two small copper coins” to her name (called “kodrantés” in Greek, but “quadrans” in Latin), which were the smallest Roman coins minted. She put “everything she had” into the collection box.

For as little as she had, the rich gave about that little of their wealth, even though the amounts given seemed large and generous. When the donation ratio is 100% [poor widow] to 1% [many rich] (a 100:1 ratio), the rich were certainly not giving as much as they could.

Now, while this ratio is a figment of my imagination, it is likewise a figment of the imagination of those who pretend to speak for Jesus Christ as they stand on soapboxes with megaphones and lead protests against the players on Wall Street.  The wealthy have recently been targeted [within the last decade] as being those who are said to be “the one percent.”  Someone has come up with the number that says one percent of all people own ninety-nine percent of the world’s wealth.

Holy protesters who demand the wealth of the world be shared equally?

Jesus did not point out the law that said the land owners (the rich) had to leave the outer ten percent of their crops for the poor, such that this reading was meant to make a statement that the rich were not putting in ten percent of their wealth.  At that time, when the Roman’s owned all the land, but Jews were allowed to buy deeds for parcels of land and pay taxes to Rome, Jesus was not proposing that an uprising should take place.  Jesus was not teaching his disciples that it was necessary to force the rich to support the poor (something alms were for), such that the laws of Moses should be amended and new laws written, which would force the rich to become poor.

Jesus was not saying that future Christian churches should establish a heuristic of ten percent tithing … not to support the poor, but to support the organizations called churches.  In short, Jesus was not concerned with the money element of this lesson.

He was driving home a point about the scribes. This “poor widow” was just like the other poor widows whom the scribes “devoured widows’ houses.” They were said to “eat it up until finished,” by misusing the Law when they visited old ladies with houses of value. Wealthy Jews could pay higher rent in such properties. Rather than the poor widow being left with two cents to by food to eat (again, this ties in to an optional Old Testament reading that can accompany this Gospel reading), this devoted Jewish widow gave one hundred percent to those who pretended to be her shepherds.

She was “all-in,” even though she barely had two pennies to rub together. She gave “everything she had” because she trusted the false shepherds.

In Ezekiel 34:16, God said through His prophet (about false shepherds and the flocks they were prophesied to bring harm to): “I will seek the lost and bring back the strays; I will bandage the injured and strengthen the sick, but the fat and the strong I will destroy. I will feed them—with judgment!”

Hey little lamb, you lost? I can show you the way, if you would like me to.

Jesus was using the example of a poor widow woman being injured by the lies of scribes. The poor widow was probably old and feeble. Giving all the money she had would play into the hands of the scribes, who wanted to inherit her rights to a house. She had no heirs, as her son would have assumed her debts as being his own. She was poor because she was unable to provide for herself and she was soon to die because of the injury done by the men of law.

Their verdict was to kill her, using her love of the law and wanting to remain in good standing as a Jew.

God’s verdict, however, would be to grant the poor widow eternal life for her devotion, while the scribes would face a greater judgment … one they would not be expecting.

As the Gospel reading for the twenty-fifth Sunday after Pentecost, when one’s own personal ministry for the LORD should be underway – one should have been made aware of the false teachings of those saying they know what Jesus would do if he were alive today – the message here is to see the verdict that comes from God’s Judgment, for having lived a life under the pretense of religion, rather than having loved God with all one’s heart, soul, and strength, is one that just might be an unexpected shock that a soul is unprepared to hear.

In the Book of the Acts of the Apostles, there is the story of Ananias and his wife Sapphira (Acts 5:1-10).

They wanted to become members of the new church of Jews that Peter and the other Apostles were forming. That church was not for people pretending to believe in Jesus as the Messiah. Disbelievers still had the Jewish synagogues.  The new church was only for those who had been filled with the Holy Spirit, due to an immediate opening of their hearts and love pouring out to God. They were all those who had been reborn as Jesus Christ, through the Holy Spirit and the Christ Mind.

Membership in that new church required the sacrifice of self-ego, such that wealth was not something individually held. Wealth was held in common (a treasury) for the good of the whole church (all Apostles[2]). In that way, no one was poor, no one was rich, all needs were met and all served the Lord as a most holy and righteous priests (i.e.: Christians).

In verses one and two we see how Ananias and his wife sold a piece of property, and then agreed to hold back a portion of the proceeds for themselves. Think of this as a situation of wanting to be Christians, but they were lying about having received the Holy Spirit.  They were “desiring” just like the scribes.  They so wanted to get in on this new church venture (for whatever self-motivations they saw) that they sold one piece of property (possibly of many they owned). Still, because they were not totally committed to God (perhaps they had some reservations about losing everything they had) they held back some of the cash. One can assume they kept it hidden somewhere secret that only they knew: how much that was and where it was stashed. The remainder Ananias took and lay at Peter’s feet (as it was coins in a bag).[3]

In verses three, four and five we read, “Then Peter said, “Ananias, how is it that Satan has so filled your heart that you have lied to the Holy Spirit and have kept for yourself some of the money you received for the land? Didn’t it belong to you before it was sold? And after it was sold, wasn’t the money at your disposal? What made you think of doing such a thing? You have not lied just to human beings but to God.” When Ananias heard this, he fell down and died. And great fear seized all who heard what had happened.”

Peter’s questions asked were statements that said, “Nobody told you to give anything up.  God certainly did not tell to lie as a way to gain His favor.”

Some texts say he “gave up the ghost.” Death is the release of a soul, but Ananias gave up his chance for the Holy Ghost by lying to it.

When that reading was discussed in a church lectionary class that I attended (years ago), the discussion ended as it was about time for the next church service to begin. As the leader of that lectionary class hurried off to get settled into his favorite seat in the church (possibly a favored seat?), I hurried to ask him, “Whatever happened to that all-in church?”

He barely turned his head my way as he said with a smile, “That didn’t work out very well.” Then he kept hurrying to his seat.

Just by coincidence, the man was a wealthy lawyer. He contributed large sums of money to that church, and he was involved with leading discussion groups and being deeply involved with more in-depth study programs. He was what I consider a very nice man … a Christian man … in today’s partially-in church.

I can only imagine that he saw the two pennies the poor widow woman gave, in this lesson today, as a good example of how the poor widows today are better off, due to taxing the rich more. The welfare state cares for poor widows, unlike the Jewish leaders of Herod’s Temple. It took Christianity to appoint bishops to correct that problem.

Not long ago, the lesson was Jesus telling his disciples, “It is harder to get a rich man into heaven, than it is to get a camel through the eye of the needle.” There also was the parable of the talents, which so many today see as a lesson on signing up for church stewardship pledges, reminding the people how much they can afford to give. One cannot forget that there also was the parable about the poor beggar Lazarus and the rich man.   All [so many] have a theme of money.

Then there is the saying, “The love of money is the root of all kinds of evil.” (1 Timothy 6:10)

None of those lessons say anyone has to give any money, to anyone, at any time.  Money only has value in the earthly realm.

Being Christian is not about joining a club, such as Ananias and Sapphira thought. There are no monetary dues for being a Christian. The love of God cannot be placed on a scale and measured by ounces and pounds. The only portion of love of God that can make one a Christian is one hundred percent (“Love God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your strength.”) Therefore, it never worked out very well for a church of All Saints to be anything less than All Saints.

We are supposed to be all-in.  That “membership fee” is not based on one’s material wealth.  It is based on faith.

When everything one has is given to assure that God’s work is done (knowing God does not seek to feed the world or allow anyone capable of walking a thousand miles to be given some amount of free wealth, but God wants Saints to pass on the Holy Spirit to those who seek to know God), then God will make sure that the money jar you just emptied, so a fellow Saint could have a coat, is now full again (this related to that optional Old Testament reading that associates with this Gospel reading).  Money becomes nothing more than a tool that must be used, so positive growth can result (parable of the talents).  Positive results are measured in faith given and faith returned.

When one is all-in for God, then there is no need to worry about someone wearing a collar coming to visit, suggesting that it is time to remember the church when you pass away.  That promise of eternal happiness can only be promised to those who held back most of what they owned, having never given God any love.

When one has submitted to God completely, any physical property left over when one dies will go to surviving family.  Material inheritance will have been set up for a church of people, not an organization with buildings to maintain and employees to pay.  A church of people is usually sons and daughters and close friends who have had the Holy Spirit passed onto them, keeping worldly wealth at the feet of Saints.

In the end, it will not matter what physical possessions are left behind.  After all, you can’t take it with you.  What you do take is your soul and physical death needs to become the entrance into the eternal kingdom.  This is how this reading in Mark ends; it states, “all she had to live on,” or literally from the Greek, “all the life of her.”

When Jesus pointed out to his disciples, “she out of her poverty has put in everything she had,” everything she had was eternal “life.”  The time to suffer through physical life [mortal existence], for a promise of eternal life, is long before one is set upon one’s death bed.  That is not when one wants to ask God to forgive a lifetime that kept total commitment held back.

Eternal life does not come at discounted rates.  This lesson says to always give all you have, with love of God being the only currency that ultimately matters.

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[1] The Proper 26 readings were probably rejected in lieu of the All Saints readings that normally fell on Thursday, November 1, 2018.  Because few went to a mid-week church service [too lazy], many churches will feel it customary to toss out the Proper 26 readings and give a [usually] poor assessment of what All Saints represents.

Actually, this Gospel reading that warns of such berobed changes, in order to meet the lazy needs of high roller contributors [who never attend church on any day other than Sunday morning], is why the Episcopal Lectionary says, “All Saints may be celebrated” instead of the readings set up for Proper 26.  I add this just in case you went to church and heard nothing that came from Mark 12, Hebrews 9, and Ruth 1.

[2] It is important to return to the element of All Saints day, as this can now be seen not as a tribute to all the dead Saints that have been officially recognized by one or more Christian churches, but a recognition that all members of a church should be Saints.  If it is not All Saints, then the church becomes a chain of weak links, which ultimately leads to a weak chain that breaks apart.  Think about that and ask yourself, “When was the last time I saw a real, true Saint?”

[3] While not stated in this story in Acts 5, the bag of money laid at Peter’s feet would have been returned to the heirs of Ananias and Sapphira, not kept as an unholy offering.

Hebrews 9:24-28 – The foundation of the world

Christ did not enter a sanctuary made by human hands, a mere copy of the true one, but he entered into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God on our behalf. Nor was it to offer himself again and again, as the high priest enters the Holy Place year after year with blood that is not his own; for then he would have had to suffer again and again since the foundation of the world. But as it is, he has appeared once for all at the end of the age to remove sin by the sacrifice of himself. And just as it is appointed for mortals to die once, and after that the judgment, so Christ, having been offered once to bear the sins of many, will appear a second time, not to deal with sin, but to save those who are eagerly waiting for him.

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This is the Epistle selection from the Episcopal Lectionary for the Twenty-fifth Sunday after Pentecost, Year B 2018. In the numbering system that lists each Sunday in an ordinal fashion, this Sunday is referred to as Proper 27. It will next be read aloud in an Episcopal church by a reader on Sunday November 11, 2018. It is important because Paul gave further details about each true Christian sacrificing their own self-ego to be reborn as Jesus Christ.

[Omitted text that no longer applies here.]

Speaking of long-winded explanations of holy text, the Epistles (especially those of Paul) require many words that point out the nuances of God’s Word. It is purposefully written so that the whole truth is not readily seen. In the Gospels the whole truth is hidden under the cloak of parables and symbolic stories, which makes them seem easily understandable, but question, “What was the point?” Paul’s letters were almost like in a code that only Apostles could grasp. Breaking codes become more complex.

Here is this week’s breakdown of five verses from the ninth chapter of Paul’s letter to the Hebrew-speaking Jews [Christians] of Rome. There are fifteen word segments that are marked off by punctuation marks. There are five capitalized words, with God found once, Christ found twice and then “Otherwise” and “Namely” requiring insight as to why they are important.

The hard work has been done, by looking at the literal Greek [the ordering of each word being maintained] and looking up each Greek word for viable translation possibilities. By my having restated this reading in the following format, it should be just a matter of slowly reading my words of translation and letting a flow of thought [from reflection, meditation, and comparison to the read aloud translation] to see for oneself where that train of thought leads. Keep in mind how my translations are limiting many words from representing the fullness of translation viability.

Here is Hebrews 9:24-28 restated, from the Bible Hub Interlinear:

24. not then into artificial [made by human hands] has come in sacred ones Christ  ,

corresponding to those sincere ones [genuine ones]  ,

except towards self together heaven  ,

immediately to be made appear those the face followers of God on behalf of ourselves  .


25. nothing so that many times he should make an offering oneself  ¸

just as the high priest enters into those sacred places according to cycle of time when blood belonging to another .


26. Otherwise it was necessary for him many times to have suffered from laying down inhabitants of the world  .

at this instant then once for all on the basis of joint action followers of the present age  ,

towards setting aside followers sin  ,

through those sacrifice self he has been made known  .


27. Namely according to how much he has appointed followers to mankind once more to die  ,

beyond on top of this his divine judgment  .


28. in this manner namely followers Christ  ,

once more having been offered in sacrifice to those who many to offer up as sacrifices for sins  ,

from out of subsequently separately from sin  ,

will appear before him awaiting for salvation  .

Now, let’s look at what each verse says, realizing that each verse is actually like a separate paragraph of text, with a central statement that then presents statements in support of that theme.

Verse 24 begins by saying the central idea is relative to what is “not” to be assumed. As the first word stated, it must be understood that “not” is a transitional word that is based on that stated prior, in verse twenty-three. The segment of words leading up to verse twenty-four spoke of “heavenly sacrifices” or “spiritual offerings.” As such, verse twenty-four can be seen as explaining what “not” to assume about that statement.

By following “not” with the words that state “artificial” or “made by human hands,” this can be visualized as an altar on which slaughtered animals would be burned as burnt offerings. When the inverse of “not then into artificial” is seen as the positive (rather than the negative), Paul was stating “then into one made from God’s hand.” This should be read as implying a human soul, within a human body of flesh.

Still, recalling that this verse was written as an address to “sacrifices” and “offerings,” that which is the soul of a human being, Paul then wrote that this soul sacrifice “has come in” spiritually. It has not been summoned through the slaughter of flesh and the transformation of meat into smoke and ash (all physical changes). Instead, it “has come in” by the hand of God, from above. That presence has then created “sacred ones,” which is translated from the Greek word “hagia,” as the plural number of those who have been “set apart by (or for) God, holy, sacred.” Rather than assume the plural of “sacred” means places [that “made by human hands”], the deduction should be to “those spiritually made holy.”

The last word of this central idea is then “Christ,” which means the “Anointed one.” Therefore, the “offerings” stated in verse twenty-three are now said to be human beings, presumably those who believed Jesus of Nazareth was the Messiah [disciples], sacrifice their souls to God [self-ego slaughtered and transformed], which in return makes them Saints [“holy ones”] in the name of Jesus “Christ.”

The first supporting statement to this central idea begins by stating “antitypa,” which is Greek [in the plural number] for “copies” or “images” that are “corresponding to” the “Christ.” This means those “Saints,” in whom “has come in” the “Christ” spirit, are “patterned” or “representative of” Jesus of Nazareth.

Those representations of the “Christ” are then said to be “sincere ones,” which means they are not pretending to be Christ-like. They are “genuine” in this reproduction, as the Greek word “alēthinōn” states. They are “real” resurrection of Jesus Christ, not fake fans in a “We Love Jesus” club. They are “true” or “made of truth,” which is an inner [heart-driven] motivation, not a head-driven calculation.

The next supporting segment of words begins with “alla,” which states what is “to the contrary” of this recreation of “truth.” This “exception” is relative to the “self,” where “auton” emphatically refers to the “self,” in the sense that “oneself” then identified “the same” as a “condition” of or having joined “together” with “heaven,” the “spiritual” place of God.

Once the “self” has changed spiritually, there is an “immediate” change in the “self.” While still wearing the flesh that is identifiable as one’s own, a glow [invisible to human eyes] emits from “the face.” This is expressed in the “followers” of Jesus of Nazareth, so they too wear “the face of God.” This “face” becomes the “countenance” of a “presence” within; but it is not for the glorification of “self.” Instead, it is a “presence” that comes “on behalf of others.” This means Saints are made by the hand of God [resurrections of the Son of Man] for the purpose of ministry, just as was that recorded of Jesus of Nazareth.

Verse 25 then begins a subsequent paragraph that follows this line of thought. It begins with the Greek word “oude,” which is a negative word that is relative to those who are reborn as Jesus Christ and wear the face of God. The word means, “neither, nor, not even, and not,” such that it is a conjunction that says “nothing.” This should be read as a statement that God has the power to reproduce His Son in those who devote themselves to God – totally and completely – such that such an act is “not even” unfathomable. This negative word is then a balance to the negative word that began verse twenty-four, such that the inverse reading says “everything” is possible of God. This repetition is an example of symmetrical applications of God’s Word.

This is then a statement “so that” wearing the face of God is possible “many times.” This not only states that being reborn as Jesus Christ – as a Saint – has occurred “so that many time” one should find “nothing” that keeps one from also “make an offering of oneself.” Paul was writing this letter to the Saints reborn as Jesus Christ in Rome, who were many and growing in number. Paul was therefore encouraging them to lead more to God and have more wear the face of God. There were “no” limits, as long as one offered oneself to God.

Paul then supported that idea by saying a cycle of change is no different than a “cycle of time,” as one “year” follows with another “year,” so the same cycle of change is always taking place. He compared this to the cyclic entrance of the high priest into the Temple area for sacrifices, as commanded yearly. Just as a man wearing ceremonial robes enters into sacred places according to cycles of time, so too does God’s Holy Spirit enter into human temples that have accordingly been prepared for a ritual sacrifice. The presence of Jesus Christ is the pleasing smoke that rises from a self that has been given fully unto the Lord. The blood of the old has been transformed by the blood of Christ.

Verse 26 then begins with the capitalized Greek word “Epei,” which is elevated in importance. The word commonly translates as “of time: when, after; of cause: since, because; otherwise: else.” The word is said to imply: “properly, aptly if, introducing something assumed to be factual and fitting, i.e. as appropriate to what is assumed.” [HELPS Word-studies] It then becomes an important statement of what would be “Otherwise,” if one did not become filled with the spiritual blood of Jesus Christ. This assumption of fact then says that failure of others to become the resurrection of God’s Son would mean (as translated in the reading in church), “for then he would have had to suffer again and again since the foundation of the world.”

The Greek word translated as “foundation” is “katabolé.” Rather than seeing this as a statement of God’s worldly Creation, the cornerstone should be recalled as Jesus Christ. Paul wrote to the Ephesian Christians, “Consequently, you are no longer foreigners and strangers, but fellow citizens with God’s people and also members of his household, built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus himself as the chief cornerstone.” (Ephesians 2:19-20)

As such, “katabolé” should be realized as a word of “conception,” dating back to the sewing of priests into the world [Adam and sons], the conception of holy lineage promised to Abraham, and the laying down of holy seed into the womb of a holy land [Israel]. The purpose of that “foundation” having been “laid down” means Jesus Christ would fulfill that promise. “Otherwise,” Jesus of Nazareth would have to continually rise from his tomb in human form, only to go through the same suffering and the same end, countless times … all for the sins of others that could not be stopped. Only with Jesus Christ reborn within one [a priest of Yahweh] can sin be stopped.

From that talk of the “foundation of the world.” which would be Christianity, Paul then supported that central idea by beginning, “at this time.” He was talking to Saints who presently were that “foundation” intended by God. Jesus Christ was the cornerstone on which was sacrificed “once for all,” as the “basis of joint action.” Apostles were “joined” with that cornerstone as the “followers” Jesus of Nazareth called for when he lived. Then was realized by Paul and his fellow Saints “at that present time.” The intent had become a living reality.

They had been laid down “towards setting aside sin.” Their sins had been washed clean by their baptisms by the Holy Spirit. That is the only way to set aside sin. For them to go forth [“towards”] others with that promise, they had to be sacred, holy, and righteous, as was Jesus of Nazareth. They had to promote sin-free existence by demonstrating that in themselves [not a “do as I say, not as I do” scenario].

That step could only be possible by “the sacrifice of self.” Those who knew the Apostles prior to their transformations would be most able to see marked changes in personality. Their known “self” would be “made known” as changed. Instead of the persons they used to be, “he has been made known” instead. That was by them wearing the face of God; and that was the “tag, you’re it” immediate transformation that made Christianity grow exponentially in the beginning. Jesus was known to have been reborn in Saints, which then “laid down” more Saints.

Saint Denis was beheaded and then walked seven miles home, holding his head, which preached a sermon all the way, to many witnesses. What is a more apt symbol of sacrificing self-ego than being beheaded and still being able to be God’s voice?

Verse 27 begins with the capitalized Greek word “Kai,” which we saw in the past Sunday’s translation of Paul’s letters to the Hebrews of Rome. As was found there, the same applies here. The importance of capitalization has less impact as the common conjunction “And,” as it does when translated as “Namely” (a viable translation). Seen as an adverb that indicates the importance of “Specifically,” from which a name acts to identify “he who has been made known,” the importance “That is to say” is God and Christ.

Christ is known “according to how much he has appointed followers.” God is the source of the Christ Spirit, which filled His Son on earth, Jesus of Nazareth, the Son of Man. God has appointed Christ as the “Anointed One,” the “Messiah.” The repetition of Jesus is then his being sent again into “mankind once more,” in each Apostle that has “to die” in his place to receive that Holy Spirit.

Going beyond this inheritance from self-sacrifice is the promise of eternal life. This is God’s “divine judgment” to give and it is the righteousness of the Christ presence that assures one’s soul will end his or her physical life [“to die”] without further sins.

Verse 28 Paul again used “kai” (in the lower-case), where it is again translated as “namely,” with “Christ” following as the importance of specificity. This naming of the “Christ” Spirit as the means to facing God’s “judgment” successfully, Paul returned to the central idea of “sacrifice,” where “Christ” is the high priest that makes “sin offering” unto God. The Christ Spirit within the flesh of a human tabernacle the self will die to please God.

This means the cleansing of past sins, “from out of subsequently” the followers of Jesus of Nazareth will be delivered. Their past histories [as Saul transformed into Paul] then have their souls “separately” divided “from sin.” What was once will be no more. The sinful soul will die with the sacrifice of the self-ego it was led to sin by.

The remaining soul, which will have been cleansed of sin by the Holy Spirit, will be the one that “will appear before him” – the Lord. God will be “awaiting” the return of a lost soul to His realm. This return will be ‘for salvation.” The presence of Jesus Christ in the flesh, replacing the previous ego, then makes Christ the Savior.

When this translation is deeply compared to the translation that will be read aloud in church, one can see how the public reading says nothing that can lead one to anything more than belief. That belief is not sound and capable of withstanding the temptations of Satan. The alternate translation I offer makes it possible to see that faith can only come by being Jesus Christ reborn. Paul was an example of that transformation, as were all the early Saints upon whose works Christianity was built as a “foundation in the world.” The call is for the “followers” to sacrifice, as did Jesus of Nazareth, due to a deep love of God.

As the Epistle reading selection for the twenty-fifth Sunday after Pentecost, when one’s own personal ministry for the LORD should be underway – one should have died of self and been reborn as Jesus Christ – the message here is to see the sincerity that is required to sacrifice self and be joined with God and His Christ Spirit. This is basically the same thing Paul says [over and over] in all of his letters. Again and again, the Apostles to whom he wrote understood what he was saying.

The confusing nature of Scripture is designed by God. Being His Son is not meant to be accomplished by wishful thinking, with zero work required. One has to actually want to do as I have done here – as tedious as it is to write down what I see – to prove to God that one is refusing to read the Holy Book upon which the final exam will be written. Reading what I write and what others write is like buying the Cliff Notes of divine meaning.

There are no such cheat sheets available. If you do not read the assigned material and come to your own deeply reached conclusions, you will forget what you studied and be left with no retention of meaning. Making a C on a religious studies test means one cannot only not save oneself, it means one cannot save anyone else. It means the sins of laziness will always be knocking on one’s door and one will always be yelling from the sofa, “Come in! The door is open!”

Ruth 3:1-5; 4:13-17 – A son has been born to Naomi

Naomi her mother-in-law said to Ruth, “My daughter, I need to seek some security for you, so that it may be well with you. Now here is our kinsman Boaz, with whose young women you have been working. See, he is winnowing barley tonight at the threshing floor. Now wash and anoint yourself, and put on your best clothes and go down to the threshing floor; but do not make yourself known to the man until he has finished eating and drinking. When he lies down, observe the place where he lies; then, go and uncover his feet and lie down; and he will tell you what to do.” She said to her, “All that you tell me I will do.”

So Boaz took Ruth and she became his wife. When they came together, the Lord made her conceive, and she bore a son. Then the women said to Naomi, “Blessed be the Lord, who has not left you this day without next-of-kin; and may his name be renowned in Israel! He shall be to you a restorer of life and a nourisher of your old age; for your daughter-in-law who loves you, who is more to you than seven sons, has borne him.” Then Naomi took the child and laid him in her bosom, and became his nurse. The women of the neighborhood gave him a name, saying, “A son has been born to Naomi.” They named him Obed; he became the father of Jesse, the father of David.

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This is an optional Old Testament selection from the Episcopal Lectionary for the Twenty-fifth Sunday after Pentecost, Year B 2018. In the numbering system that lists each Sunday in an ordinal fashion, this Sunday is referred to as Proper 27. If chosen, it will next be read aloud in an Episcopal church by a reader on Sunday November 11, 2018. It is important because we see that the commitment Ruth [“Beauty”] made to stay with Naomi, as a Gentile married into the family of Yahweh, paid off as she found a new husband and bore the grandfather of David [Obed].

In last Sunday’s ‘episode’ we left off with the camera zooming in on Naomi, who had nothing to say about Ruth’s promise to stay with her mother-in-law until death, because she was part of her dear family.

She would not return to her homeland [Moab] and her birth family. Now the story has progressed to Naomi doing the works of matchmaking, because Ruth has become Naomi’s full-fledged daughter.

Once again, the reader has to be fluent in the language of names, as all the names of the Holy Bible play a role in establishing the character of those given their names. The first name of importance is Boaz, the eligible Israelite bachelor who will be seduced by Ruth’s “Beauty.” The name “Boaz” means, “By Strength,” implying “In Him [the Lord] Is Strength”. Thus, Naomi knew that Boaz was a righteous man, whose strength was greater than physical.

Now, this reading is the beginning of chapter three [five verses] and then it skips to near then end of chapter four [five verses], which can leave the impression that some hanky-panky took place. Nothing of the sort happened. This reading simply tells how Naomi led Ruth to be introduced to a man of importance, so that a friendly relationship could begin. This then led to Boaz marrying Ruth, out of love, and conceiving a holy child by God’s assistance.

The name of the child is then Obed. The name “Obed” means “Servant” or “Slave.” Some sources say the name means “Serving.” For such a name to be given to an infant by his father means service was a valued characteristic in the Israelite people.

Ruth identified herself to Boaz as “your maidservant” (“’ă·mā·ṯe·ḵā”), because she and Naomi had to serve as slaves because they had no husbands.

Boaz was identified as a “kinsman redeemer” (“ḡō·’êl”) because Naomi was from the same bloodline and as a kinsman with property and wealth, Boaz provided a service to widows by becoming their employer. Therefore, the pair bonded through their service to the tribe and their service to Yahweh; meaning their child was to reflect that value.

As an optional Old Testament reading selection for the twenty-fifth Sunday after Pentecost, when one’s own personal ministry for the LORD should be underway – one has entered into deep-felt Service to God – the message here is the redemption that comes from marriage to God. God is our Strength; and from God entering into our hearts is born the ultimate Servant, Jesus Christ.

The story of Ruth is she was seen as a Moabite, which is a Gentile. She was not born of the blood of the descendant of Jacob. She married into that family when she wed Naomi’s son Mahlon [“Great Infirmity”], but with his death coming before they had a child together, Ruth was free to return to her Moabite roots. She refused to be released from Naomi [“Pleasantness of the Lord”].

Christians [males and females] should all see themselves as Ruth. Being Christian means adhering to the principles of Mosaic Law, believing in only One God – YHWH. In today’s modern world, there is much rejection of the Old Testament stories, where people who sin are called abominations and the enemies of the Israelites were ordered slain [men, women, children and animals] by God’s prophets. Westerners of Christianity reject what they see as no longer viable. They reject it as uncivil and many lean on the concept of Jesus telling everyone to love, rather than judge others for what they are. That is not being a reflection of Ruth.

Ruth was the lowest of the low in the Israelite societal pecking order. She had no voice about what was right or what was wrong, according to the Laws of Moses. She had been given her freedom to practice whatever rules and customs the descendants of Lot had established which might have included idol worship and human sacrifices to please many gods. The same freedom is given to ALL human beings in the world, because God never sent a fireball from outer space to destroy the Egyptians or the Canaanites or anyone else. However, being one of God’s chosen people means: agreeing to the Mosaic Laws; and choosing to only SERVE Yahweh.

When those two stipulations are met, then one lays at the feet of God as His maidservant [regardless of human gender]. There can be no Big Head of self that tells God, “Hey God, we’ve been thinking and all this harsh legal stuff is just too much to agree to anymore. So, we are going to make a few changes here and there and instead of praying to You, we are just going to idolize You Son Jesus. How’s that sound to You?”

[SILENCE] [Cue the cricket chirping soundtrack]

That means turning one’s back on God, so call yourself whatever you want to call yourself, it does not make you one of God’s chosen people. You have rejected God, so God has rejected you. You have gone all Old Testament on your soul and killed its chance of eternal life in Heaven.

Ruth symbolizes a love of the Law – which is symbolized by Naomi being “Pleasantness of the Lord” – where nothing bad ever happened to those who followed the commandments of God through His Prophets. Only the evil suffered physical death – but those souls all lived to be reincarnated another day, with no real harm done. Ruth became a servant of the law, even though the law made he the lowest of the low, as a widow without issue. She did not rise in rebellion to the unfairness of the Law. She complied out of love, trusting in the God of Israel to show His love in return.

It is vital to realize that the STRENGTH of Israel was the Ark of the Covenant. When a judge or prophet was told by God to encounter an enemy, the Ark was always carried into the field of battle. The Israelites were able to defeat evil because God was with them. Israel was a body of parts [the Twelve Tribes] with the Ark of the Covenant being the heart of that body. This is how a heart symbolizes the strength of courage, which is also symbolized in the lion’s strength and kingliness.

When Ruth was taken in marriage by Boaz that symbolizes one today being married to God. One is totally committed to being God’s wife [regardless of human gender]. From that marriage is born Jesus Christ, which is the STRENGTH of God within that defeats all attacks by evil. The Ark of the Covenant has not been lost; it has been transformed into an inner tabernacle, where Jesus Christ serves the Father as one’s personal high priest. Wherever one goes, the Ark of the Covenant is there – in the battlefield of life.

The threshing and winnowing of barley is a necessary work that separates the chaff from the grain.  Ruth was sent to the threshing floor to see the work that is necessary for the bread of life to be gained.  The STRENGTH of Boaz was witnessed, through the work that he did.

Whoever refuses to have the Law written into their hearts is not Ruth. Anyone calling himself or herself Christian, while bending the laws of Moses to suit one’s needs, is more in line with the ex-daughter-in-law of Naomi, Orpah [Mane or Neck]. One proudly holds high the head and its inner brain as the personal source of strength. While one kissed the “Pleasantness of the Lord” and the Law Naomi stood for, one feels strong enough to remember some of the Law, while rewriting that which was misunderstood. One has not then married Yahweh, but one has returned to pagan worship and idolizing multiple gods.

To truly be Christian, one must say to the Law the same as Ruth told Naomi: “All that you tell me I will do.” Jesus said, “Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them.” (Matthew 5:17)

Jesus Christ being resurrected within a true Christian is the miracle blessing of the Lord, as one has been recognized as a “next-of-kin,” a Brother [regardless of human gender] in the holy bloodline of God’s chosen people, another Son of Man. Being reborn as Jesus Christ means, “he shall be to you a restorer of life and a nourisher of your old age.”

A true Christian has been redeemed by the STRENGTH of the Lord and made a SERVANT that offers salvation to other lost souls. As such, when one reads, “Naomi took the child and laid him in her bosom, and became his nurse,” this is the “Pleasantness of the Lord” [the Law] being written onto one’s heart and nourished daily. One does not seek to change the Law to match the laws of Gentiles. Instead, the Laws nourish the SERVANT that one has become, as the Son of God reborn. This is why the women [all Christians, regardless of human gender] gave a name to those who honor the Law: “A son has been born to Naomi.”

The Law’s Pleasantness has delivered one’s Savior, once again.

#Matthew517 #Ruth315 #Ruth41317

1 Kings 17:8-16 – Make God a little cake to eat

The word of the Lord came to Elijah, saying, “Go now to Zarephath, which belongs to Sidon, and live there; for I have commanded a widow there to feed you.” So he set out and went to Zarephath. When he came to the gate of the town, a widow was there gathering sticks; he called to her and said, “Bring me a little water in a vessel, so that I may drink.” As she was going to bring it, he called to her and said, “Bring me a morsel of bread in your hand.” But she said, “As the Lord your God lives, I have nothing baked, only a handful of meal in a jar, and a little oil in a jug; I am now gathering a couple of sticks, so that I may go home and prepare it for myself and my son, that we may eat it, and die.” Elijah said to her, “Do not be afraid; go and do as you have said; but first make me a little cake of it and bring it to me, and afterwards make something for yourself and your son. For thus says the Lord the God of Israel: The jar of meal will not be emptied and the jug of oil will not fail until the day that the Lord sends rain on the earth.” She went and did as Elijah said, so that she as well as he and her household ate for many days. The jar of meal was not emptied, neither did the jug of oil fail, according to the word of the Lord that he spoke by Elijah.

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This is an optional Old Testament selection from the Episcopal Lectionary for the Twenty-fifth Sunday after Pentecost, Year B 2018. In the numbering system that lists each Sunday in an ordinal fashion, this Sunday is referred to as Proper 27. If chosen, it will next be read aloud in an Episcopal church by a reader on Sunday November 11, 2018. It is important because it tells a story of faith being rewarded by God.

This is not the primary Old Testament reading selection, which means it will probably not be read in most Episcopal churches on the twenty-fifth Sunday after Pentecost. It is obviously chosen, however, because the message is centered on a widow woman, which is half of the focus in the Gospel reading of Mark 12. The alternative Old Testament reading selection (from Ruth 3 and 4) also deals with a widow (two actually: Naomi and Ruth) and a son, although they are not named as widows and the boy is a birth celebrated by a new marriage to a widow.

That theme of a widow with child is more pronounced here in 1 Kings. It should be read as symbolic of Mary and Jesus, as a prophecy of God protecting that most holy lineage. In the story of Ruth, Obed was the child born from her marriage to Boaz. Obed would be the father of Jesse, who would be the father of David. The same preservation of a bloodline is stated here in 1 Kings, although the woman and her child are nameless.

When this reading begins, “The word of the Lord came to Elijah,” Elijah is not named in these verses. It is understood that “to him” (Hebrew “’ê·lāw”) means Elijah, from his name having been mentioned earlier in chapter seventeen. The reading is best translated to begin by saying, “And came about the word of Yahweh.” While Elijah was a prophet of the Lord, one who heard the Word, the Word of God was a presence that was not limited “to him” alone.

Because this is a story of God speaking to Elijah, it is worthwhile to realize that the name “Elijah” means: “Yahweh is God” or “Strength Of The Lord.” Every story of Elijah is then one that shows the STRENGTH [this is the meaning of the name “Boaz”] of YHWH in a human form in worldly settings. Elijah had been sent “east” by Yahweh, after he confronted Ahab about his wicked ways, where Elijah could find safety. Ravens brought food to Elijah each day that he was in a place Ahab could not find him.

The setting now has God telling Elijah, “Go now to Zarephath, which belongs to Sidon, and live there.” Zarephath was a “Phoenician village that belonged to Sidon and was located in the northern extremity of Canaan.” Its name means, “Workshop For Melting And Refining Metals” or “Smelting Place.” Sidon was a “town a little over a day’s journey north of Tyre.” Based on the name meaning, “Sidon” was a “Fishery” or a “Place Of Fish.” Zarephath was between the two towns, but under the rule of Sidon.

One way to look at Zarephath is as a place where raw ores and other materials were placed in a furnace and transformed from separate solids to a unified molten liquid.  This liquid would then be poured in shapes, such as ingots and bars, for easy handling and shipment elsewhere.  The production of refined [purified] metals [most likely iron alloys] was hard work, with danger being ever-present from accidents from burning by molten rock or crushing under raw materials being offloaded and transported from a nearby pier [perhaps how the widow woman became a widow?].  Because it was the possession of Sidon [a larger seaport town], it could have smelted more valuable metals, such as gold, copper-bronze, tin-lead or any of the ancient iron alloys, depending on the number of smelting furnaces that were built there.  The symbolism of God telling His Prophet to “live there” should be realized as that where the metal of the widow woman’s heart would be tested for purity.

It also should be recalled that Jesus traveled to Tyre (Matthew 15:21), where he was confronted by a Canaanite woman that pleaded with Jesus to heal her demon possessed daughter (Matthew 15:22). Jesus said he had only been “sent for the lost sheep of Israel.” (Matthew 15:24) The woman begged for help, causing Jesus to say, “It is not right to take the children’s bread and toss it to the dogs.” (Matthew 15:26) The woman agreed and then said, “Even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their master’s table.” (Matthew 15:27) Jesus was amazed at her having spoken via the Holy Spirit and said, “Woman, you have great faith! Your request is granted.” That story then says, “her daughter was healed at that moment.”

Because that story was of Matthew saying, “Jesus withdrew to the region of Tyre and Sidon” [Phoenicia], the implication could be that the mother traveled to Tyre to find Jesus, having left her daughter in Sidon, but the whole region had once been the land allotted to the Asher tribe.  It became an “alloy” of Israelite, Hittite, and Canaanite blood.

When God sent Elijah to the same region, the land that was once given by God to the Israelites had long been ceded to the neighboring Hittites, who later became the Sidonians and Phoenicians. This region is then symbolic of the outward reach of the Israelite faith, which remained true to Yahweh amid Gentile influence. Just as God sent Jesus into that mixed land, at a time when Jesus was sought by the evil rulers of the land, so too had God previously sent Elijah into the same mixed land for the same purpose of avoiding those searching for him.

When we read, how God told Elijah, “I have commanded a widow there to feed you,” the story obviously does not play out as if the widow woman had received any divine orders from God. Therefore, the Hebrew word translated as “I have commanded” (“ṣiw·wî·ṯî,” from “tsavah”) is better understood as, “I have put” or “I have committed a widow there to feed you.” The implication is a statement of God knowing the commitment of a devoted servant in that region, whom God would allow to serve Him through Elijah; further protecting Elijah, through a woman whose life was committed to following God’s Commandments.

Once Elijah reached the entrance into Zarephath and saw the widow there gathering sticks, one needs to know that the land was near the end of a three and one-half year drought. Rather than picking up vegetables and things growing in a garden, the widow was picking up the death that surrounded Zarephath as sticks were then plentiful. It should be understood that sticks (from “‘ê·ṣîm,” wood from trees) would have been used to feed the furnaces.  It would not be unexpected to find a woman gathering sticks for that purpose.  However, during a period of drought, the smelting operations would probably have been curtailed, if not shut down completely, to avoid a wildfire burning down the village.

When Elijah asked the woman to bring him a cup of water, she immediately began going to the well, which had not gone dry. One needs to see how water symbolizes emotions, so when God appeared in the form of Elijah asking the widow to produce the emotions of faith, she was prepared to readily show God her love.

Because the widow woman did not hesitate when asked to serve Elijah a cup of water, God had him then command, “Bring me a morsel of bread in your hand.” One needs to see how bread is more than simply food that keeps human beings alive. It is the nourishment that comes from faith and is shared with those of the same faith. When it was instructed to come from her “hand,” God wanted the widow woman to share her own encouragement with a stranger, beyond showing her love of God.

When we hear the widow woman say, “As the Lord your God lives,” that was a confession of faith. By adding, “I have nothing baked, only a handful of meal in a jar, and a little oil in a jug; I am now gathering a couple of sticks, so that I may go home and prepare it for myself and my son, that we may eat it, and die.” That confession said she said she was unprepared to serve encouragement to anyone beyond her own family, which was just her and her son.

The meal symbolized the Torah and the oil symbolized those who were anointed by God as the blood of Israel. The sticks would burn as an altar fire, with death being self-sacrifice.

The assumption could then be made that her husband had died leaving his wife and their young child with enough physical foodstuff to last through three years of famine. Elijah then arrived when that inheritance had dwindled to one last supper. Death was then their sacrifice of themselves to God, in thanks for all they had already received. The husband [like Ruth’s departed Mahlon – meaning “Sickly” or “Great Infirmity”] had left behind the Laws of Moses as his only possession. While that had kept the widow and son alive until Elijah’s arrival, she had not foreseen prolonged life on earth.

When God spoke to the widow woman through Elijah, saying “Do not be afraid; go and do as you have said,” the widow was told not to fear death. She was to go and prepare for herself and her son to die, but that would not be soon. She was going to die, as all mortal human beings die … eventually, but her soul had just been assured eternal life, with God’s command through Elijah.

When Elijah then said to the widow, “First make me a little cake of it and bring it to me, and afterwards make something for yourself and your son,” the implication was asking her to make more bread than the woman had said she had left.  There is a change of request made, from “a morsel of bread” (from “paṯ-le·ḥem“) to now a “small cake” (from “u·ḡāh qə·ṭan·nāh).  From unleavened flatbread [implying hand me one of your scrolls of text] to a cake of risen bread [implying the fullness of knowledge that comes from the Holy Spirit], God had Elijah ask the woman to share her knowledge of the meaning of God’s laws, because she had then been touched by a divine presence.

Just as Jesus remarked to the Canaanite woman, “Woman, you have great faith! Your request is granted,” the faith of the widow woman of Zarephath has also been blessed.  The Holy Spirit fell upon her.  She was no longer an unmarried widow, as she was one with Yahweh, her Lord.

This is then the miracle of Jesus feeding the multitudes (twice), before that event occurred.  While Jesus had this same effect of marrying God to His devoted lovers, in numbers of five thousand and four thousand [minimally], each one that was touched by Jesus [as him through his disciples] was exactly like the widow woman touched by Elijah.  In all cases, it is God telling His devotees, “Prepare for eternal life by not fearing death by first serving others before you serve yourself, trusting that I [God] will provide for all My [His] children.”

This reading ends by stating: “For thus says the Lord the God of Israel: The jar of meal will not be emptied and the jug of oil will not fail until the day that the Lord sends rain on the earth.” She went and did as Elijah said, so that she as well as he and her household ate for many days. The jar of meal was not emptied, neither did the jug of oil fail, according to the word of the Lord that he spoke by Elijah.”

That says it was Yahweh speaking through Elijah. The Law of Moses and the anointed of God will not be emptied [disappeared from the world] before new emotion falls upon the land [the rainwater of God’s love]. The widow woman followed the instruction given to her by God’s Prophet. She never once questioned how a miracle could happen. She never doubted that Yahweh lived. Just as the widow who put all she had into the Temple treasury boxes [to feed the poor], the widow woman of Zarephath also gave everything she had to God.

In return, she was promised eternal life.

As an optional Old Testament reading for the twenty-fifth Sunday after Pentecost, when one’s own personal ministry for the LORD should be underway – one should be willing to die without losing one’s faith in God – the message here is God knows His flock. He watches over them all and sees who needs Him to appear before them as a Prophet. Strangers will come when true Christians need reinforcement and strength, to keep one’s spiritual emotions high and to give all you have to other Christians that bring orders from God.

In many Old Testament texts where a prophet is recognized as such, but not known by name, the address given to them is read as “Man of God.” It was a title of respect for the position. The widow woman did not make such an address to Elijah.

That says she only recognized him as an Israelite, but since all Israelites were expected to be men and women of God, she acted without pretense as any Israelites making demands on her during a famine would have found the same responses of service. This also says that Elijah did not travel to draw attention to himself [especially when Ahab was hunting for him], which Jesus pointed out the scribes did.  He said they wear their long robes in the marketplace, meaning that made sure the common people knew what rank they held upon their arrival.  They took advantage of the poor without concern for their lives.  Elijah did nothing of the sort.

In the optional reading from Ruth, the conclusion said the women gave Naomi a name in Hebrew that proclaimed “A son have been born to Naomi.” The son [Obed] was actually born to her daughter[in-law] Ruth, who married Naomi’s kinsman Boaz. Naomi took that son to her bosom and nurtured it, which caused her women friends to name her as a wet-nurse. Naomi was not a wet-nurse, but a woman much like the widow woman here. She helped Ruth much like Elijah helped the widow woman and her son – Elijah took them to his bosom and nurtured them, so the bloodline of God would grow strong and remain pure.

In this way it is vital to see oneself [regardless of human gender] as the widow woman. The assumption always seems to be of an old woman, but the human age [like gender] does not matter. We are all women looking for a husband’s redemption, where redemption means having all one’s debt be assumed by one who had the means to pay that off. Our debts are our sins and the only one who can forgive those debts is God. We must find a way to please God so He will marry each of us; but for that to happen we must be totally committed to pleasing God.

The widow woman was submissive to God when He appeared in the form of His Prophet Elijah. We must likewise be willing to hear the commands of God and obey as good wives. When we prove our devotion, God will show us how the bread and oil will not run out.  The basic materials of faith will give rise to new knowledge that must be shared with others. The child born to each of us, through marriage to God, will be Jesus Christ. We will take him to our bosoms and nurture him forever.

In return, we will be promised eternal life

Mark 13:1-8 – Let no one lead you astray

As Jesus came out of the temple, one of his disciples said to him, “Look, Teacher, what large stones and what large buildings!” Then Jesus asked him, “Do you see these great buildings? Not one stone will be left here upon another; all will be thrown down.”

When he was sitting on the Mount of Olives opposite the temple, Peter, James, John, and Andrew asked him privately, “Tell us, when will this be, and what will be the sign that all these things are about to be accomplished?” Then Jesus began to say to them, “Beware that no one leads you astray. Many will come in my name and say, ‘I am he!’ and they will lead many astray. When you hear of wars and rumors of wars, do not be alarmed; this must take place, but the end is still to come. For nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom; there will be earthquakes in various places; there will be famines. This is but the beginning of the birthpangs.”

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This is the Gospel selection from the Episcopal Lectionary for the Twenty-sixth Sunday after Pentecost, Year B 2018. In the numbering system that lists each Sunday in an ordinal fashion, this Sunday is referred to as Proper 28. It will next be read aloud in an Episcopal church by a priest on Sunday November 18, 2018. It is important because Jesus foretold of the destruction of Herod’s Temple, telling how nothing man creates – no matter how grandiose – can withstand the tests of time. Only God offers everlasting accomplishments and without God is destruction assured.

When one reads that “one of his disciples said to [Jesus], “Look, Teacher, what large stones and what large buildings!”’ he was marveling over the construction project that gave the Second Temple the nickname “Herod’s Temple.” According to the Wikipedia article on Second Temple, under the sub-heading “Herod’s Temple: Construction,” the following is written:

“Herod’s Temple was one of the larger construction projects of the 1st century BCE. Josephus records that Herod was interested in perpetuating his name through building projects, that his construction programs were extensive and paid for by heavy taxes, but that his masterpiece was the Temple of Jerusalem.”

By the time Jesus was in the final days of his ministry [he was in Jerusalem for his final Passover when this event occurred], the Temple beautification project initiated by King Herod [the Great] was in its forty-ninth year, having begun twenty years before Herod’s death. While much of the outer work might have been basically in place when one of the disciples pointed out the magnitude to Jesus, work on Herod’s Temple would continue until 63 A.D. [ref.], such that the rebuilding process stretched over eighty years. One should calculate that Jesus’ last Passover in Jerusalem [in the body of a living human being] was around 27 A.D., when he was about 33 years of age.

While in Jerusalem during the Passover at the onset of Jesus’ ministry, he had told pilgrims in Jerusalem, “Destroy this temple, and I will raise it again in three days.” (John 2:19) That conversation was not recorded by the disciples of Jesus (neither Matthew nor  Mark), but three years later Jesus defined “Destroy this temple” as, “Not one stone will be left here upon another; all will be thrown down.”

This meant not simply the destruction that would be done by the Romans, but the ravages of time after that, especially when the Saracens [Arabians] spread into Palestine, becoming synonymous with Muslims. Stones of the temple ruins would have been utilized in other small building projects over five hundred years of time, and the transformation of the temple mount to the Dome of the Rock [691 A.D.] would be when “all will be thrown down” completely [except part of the Western wall, today called the Wailing Wall].

It is important to grasp the history, both the prior and future changes affecting the Second Temple and the two times Jesus spoke of the temple being destroyed. First of all, God never asked for a temple of stone, as He said He preferred to be mobile. That means the destruction of a brick and mortal temple that had become a monument to Herod the Great, not to God, would be replaced by Jesus Christ [the high priest] being reborn in true Christians [each a rebuilt mobile tabernacle].  That transformation would wait until after Jesus had died by execution and was dead for three days before resurrecting. Third, the complete erasure of Herod’s Temple and the rebuilding of a Muslim holy building on that same piece of real estate would simply be God’s way of saying, “I Am That I Am when I am written on the hearts of Apostles and Saints [The Ark of the Covenant within the Tabernacle], which are in the name of Jesus Christ.”  God cannot be made a shrine that pilgrims must visit once in a lifetime, as God is limitless, available to all who love Him dearly.

When we read, “When he was sitting on the Mount of Olives opposite the temple,” the Greek written by Mark includes a comma, such that the literal translation says: “And sitting of him upon the mountain the [one] of Olives  ,  opposite the temple”. This is two segments of words, not one.  The second segment is then a helpful segment of words that is used to clarify which mountain or hill with olive trees that Peter [through Mark] was talking about.

This story is found also told in Matthew and Luke. Luke does not state where Jesus privately told the disciples when the temple would be destroyed. Matthew wrote that it was on the mount the [one] of Olives, but did not get specific about where that hill was, in comparison to the temple.  This means mark’s version adds truth that is helpful to the one carefully paying attention to Scripture.

The reason Mark made this clarification is there were two hills that were known for having olive trees. Only one had an olive oil press [Gethsemane], which was near the base of the Mount of Olives. Simply by capitalizing “Elaiōn” the implication was “Mount of Olives.” Still, there was also a hill outside the Essenes Gate that was known as a “hill of Olive trees.”  That was where Jesus would lead his disciples after the Passover meal. However, Mark was making clear that the private discussion Jesus had with his disciples was on the mountain of Olives that was “opposite the temple.”

When Mark then wrote that “Peter, James, John, and Andrew asked him privately,” it should be realized that neither Matthew nor Luke listed anyone specifically. Only Mark [Peter’s Gospel writer] wrote those names. Peter was the brother of Andrew and James and John were the sons of Zebedee. Those were the disciples first chosen by Jesus.  Peter was making it clear that the ones who raised the question: “Tell us, when will this be, and what will be the sign that all these things are about to be accomplished?” were the ones who had served Jesus the longest and the ones who thought they were Jesus’ most trusted disciples. Therefore, they felt it was their right to know when to look for the signs of destruction that Jesus knew was coming.

The reading then follows with Mark writing, “Then Jesus began to say to them.” The Greek word “ērxato” is the past tense of “archomai,” meaning “to begin” or “to commence.” It also means Jesus, for the first time, established the “rule” by which the times of Jewish destruction, as a religion meant only for the descendants of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob [a biological subrace of the human race – see “Physiological race”], would occur.

As it was then, the radiance of Herod’s Temple stood as an outward glorification of Judaism. Rather than a simple reproduction financed by the Persian kings Cyrus the Great and Darius I, Herod the Great would enhance the old, so it spoke loudly for his greatness.  Still, the grander the temple complex became, the more it projected how a most powerful, singular God, made Israelites [under David primarily] and Jews a select people, amid the vast empirical holdings of those who worshipped many gods, but rose and sank over time: Egyptians, Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, Greeks, and then Romans. For as lasting as YHWH had proved His capability to keep the children of Israel intact [remnants that they had become], still adherents to Mosaic Law, Jesus began to tell of the destruction that would be the end of that favor.

To best understand the words that then came out of Jesus’ mouth, one must remember that Jesus was not speaking as a favored son of God. That would be how the elite of Judaism saw themselves: the Pharisees, the Sadducees, the temple scribes and high priests. Jesus spoke as THE Son of God, which meant he only spoke the truth, which the Father was speaking through him. Therefore, Jesus then responded to the question posed by his disciples in the voice of God that flowed through him.

It was then God that told Jesus’ disciples, “Beware that no one leads you astray.” In actuality, the capitalized Greek word, “Blepete,” is a one-word statement of importance, separate from the words that follow by a comma [real or implied]. As a form of the root word “blepó,” the impact is placed on “Sight, Perception, Discernment, and Observance.” To “Beware” means to become “Aware,” by being “Watchful.”

Before anything else, Jesus said, “Look!”  This is then the importance of Jesus’ parables about “Vigilance” and staying “Awake.” The purpose of staying “Awake” means to not fall asleep, which is the danger of mortal death and the recycling of reincarnation, rather than the wakeful state of eternal life.

It is then the importance of that state of “Alertness” that has one prepared to wait for the bridegroom’s call [Parable of the Ten Virgins], “lest anyone you mislead.” Being misled is then forgetting to keep oil in one’s lamp, so the light of alertness will shine through the darkness of night [symbolic death]. This translates according to common language as “that no one leads you astray,” but in the same words says one is responsible for not letting others be misled through self-failure of “Being aware.” The “Wakeful” state keeps one from misleading others and being misled.  That is parallel to the five bridesmaids who saw they would run out of oil and asked the other five to share their oil.  The lamp oil is what keeps one awake and alert, thus it represents personal devotion to the Lord.  Each is responsible for preparing one’s soul for a marriage to God.

God then said through His Son, “Many will come in my name and say, ‘I am he!’ and they will lead many astray.” This translation does not capture God as the voice speaking those words. The literal Greek states, “many will come in the name of me  ,  saying then  I am  ,  and many will be misled  .” This needs closer inspection.

Jesus then prophesied that “many [lower-case] will come in the name of Jesus Christ [“mou” as “of me.”].” The word “mou” is a form of the Greek word “egó,” which means “I.” That is then a statement that “many will come” who will have sacrificed their “egos” [their “I”s] so they will assume the ego of Jesus Christ, where Jesus of Nazareth is a Son “of God.” Therefore, the Christ is the presence “of God” [“of me”] that “many will become” filled with love from.

This foretold of the advent of Christianity, where those “many” would be “then saying” or “speaking then” the truth of God, just as was Jesus of Nazareth. Rather than one man “speaking then,” who led a relatively small group of Jewish disciples [men and women], “many” would spread the breadth and scope of that Gospel.  Those who follow Jesus become reborn as Jesus Christ.

This spread of true Christianity will “then” lead “many” to “say” they are Christian [without the bold type], simply because it seems like the good thing to do. The problem that comes with those who “speak then” but do not tell the truth, is they do not say, “this voice comes from God as Jesus reborn.” Instead, they proclaim, “I am” a Christian, where the Greek word “Egō” is capitalized, showing there has been absolutely no sacrifice of self-ego for God. They proclaim they are gods, rather than acting as wholly subservient slaves of YHWH – “I Am That I Am.”

This is the Big Brain Syndrome that I speak of. People who say, “I am Christian,” often then say, “I am sure, if Jesus were here today, he would say the same things that I am saying. By admitting that I am Christian, I am then allowed to play god.”

God was then advising the disciples of His Son that “namely” [the viable translation of the Greek word “kai,” which commonly means “and”] is as “namely” does.  Using the “I” word then identifies those who will number “many,” such that through their claims of “I am” righteous “many will be misled.”

One has to see how God spoke through Jesus saying that the time was coming when the destruction of Judaism would be due to the improper leadership the people had. They would be misled into believing that “I am” was the ego of God’s chosen people. For that heresy, every stone of the renovations done to the Second Temple would be thrown down. Still, the errors of the Jews were foretold by Jesus to be repeated in the far distant future, when the stone foundations of Christianity would likewise come tumbling down. Any time that religious leaders mislead God’s children [false shepherds and false prophets], they will be exposed as liars and overthrown by God.

God then spoke through Jesus, saying “When you hear of wars and rumors of wars, do not be alarmed; this must take place, but the end is still to come.”

When one realizes Jesus spoke to his disciples in 27 A.D. [C.E.] that was still four decades before the Jewish revolt against Rome would begin [67 C.E.]. Prior to that there would be words of war, even rumors would spread that another Messiah had come [a warrior Christ], who would lead the Jews to independence and win the return of Israel into the world. By 70 A.D. [C.E.] that war would be won by Rome, with all the false prophets of Judaism killed and the grandiose temple in Jerusalem razed to the ground. However, even that many years after Jesus would be dead, resurrected, ascended and return in Apostles, “the end is still to come.”

The vision of God stretched well beyond that of ordinary human eyes. That “end,” from the Greek word “telos,” meaning the “conclusion” of the destruction of the religion of the One God Yahweh, that would be after “nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom; there will be earthquakes in various places; there will be famines.”  That too needs closer inspection.

The Greek word “ethnos” is translated as “nation,” but it conveys a meaning of “the heathen world,” that of Gentiles. It is a statement that “race will rise against race.” We live now in a time when “race” is commonly used as a weapon of destruction. There is no longer a clear boundary that keeps the “races” of the world pure. The mixture of “races” dilutes that purity, so the “races” designed by God are forced to mingle, so pure blood become one global blob of humanity.  Then, none of the Gentiles stand out for their God-given superiorities. Likewise, the religions of the world have blended into misleading dogmatic rituals of meaningless sayings, because the “people rise against people” whose beliefs are impure [false].

The Greek word “basileia” means “kingdom,” which is different from the Israel under Herod the Great.  Judea had a governor that was appointed by an emperor, who reigned from Rome over many lands.  The segment of words that say “kingdom against kingdom” is then a vision that extended beyond the fall of the Roman Empire, to a distant time when the lands of Europe would be led by kings [and queens]. Those kings would be believed to have been descended from the holy bloodline of God’s Son, indirectly descended from Jesus of Nazareth. Those European “kingdoms” would then become the resurrection of the anger of brother against brother, or Can against Abel, since royal lines of “kingdoms” made them Apostles [regardless of gender] by holy blood. Eventually, all of those “kingdoms” would be reduced to governments of philosophies that lied to the people as if the will of all would rule a commonly elected few.

For God to state, “there will be earthquakes in various places,” this is a normal occurrence of shifting tectonic plates. Rather than have Jesus seem to state a forecast of common natural events, the Greek word “seismoi” should be understood as many violent “shakings” and “commotions” (from the root word “seismos”) on earth that will crumble the foundations of religious faith. These are then the philosophies of man that will introduce the concepts of democracy, equality among men [not always implying women too], and freedom, giving rise to all kinds of “–isms” that will shake belief in religions to their cores.

The statement, “there will be famines,” has nothing to do with the weather patterns that bring drought and failing crops. It has little to do with having billions of human beings on a limited space of land, where the land cannot produce enough food for that many people to be fed. It has no bearing on the desert environments of the world that have historically produced minimal numbers of plants and animals; and there is no correlation to global warming, pollutants caused by ignorant masses, or the extinctions of flora and fauna caused by an earth teeming with uncaring human beings. The “famine” God spoke of was due to a lack of spiritual food being available for a corrupted mankind to be fed. That lack of religious feeding will be most evident when the “end” time arrives.

Again, the evidence of all those signs stated by the mouth of Jesus are prevalent today. The people rise up against the people. The kingdoms have been reduced to political parties forcing their will upon the meek. The philosophies of the world are shaking religion just as the Romans destroyed the Temple of Jerusalem. The people are famished from lack of spiritual nourishment. Thus, we are ripe for the end coming.

When Jesus then said to his disciples, “This is but the beginning of the birthpangs,” his word “archē” (“beginning”) refers them [and the reader] back to his first statement of explanation, which Mark introduced by saying, “And Jesus began to say to them.” Jesus was telling them that the words of what to look for, which they would see, would only be “the beginning of the birthpangs” of the destruction of Judaism. The “birth” would produce Christianity, but “birthpangs” are always followed by death pains. We are all born mortal, bound to die.  Death’s pains occur at the end of life on earth. For that reason, one should be “Awake” when the end time comes.

While this ends the reading selection as chosen, the text of Mark adds one more verse to this section.  It repeats the capitalized “Blepete,” or “Take heed,” returning one’s focus to the same important one-word statement. This warning of vigilance was directed at the disciples themselves, where Jesus told them, “You will be handed over to the local councils and flogged in the synagogues. On account of me you will stand before governors and kings as witnesses to them.” (Mark 13:9; NIV) Those signs will indicate the beginning of a new religion of self-sacrifice for devotion wholly to Yahweh. The deaths of the Apostles will bring the birthpangs of true Christianity into being.

As the Gospel selection for the twenty-sixth Sunday after Pentecost, when one’s own personal ministry for the LORD should be underway – one is aware of the signs of the end times – the message here is to not be mesmerized by the wonders of a material world. Everything is in a state of change, which slowly builds up and slowly breaks down; it is often difficult to see how the world is crushing the life out of humanity. We have to know what signs to look for and we need to always be alert to the fact that Satan wants all human beings to be misled.

As American Christians, in a multitude of sects and denominations, just driving around town brings forth a reaction to the grandiosity of buildings of worship. They appear to strive, by design, to beacon to the passerby, “You need to come inside and see more!” This is akin to the disciples telling Jesus, “Look, Teacher, what large stones and what large buildings!” We are easily distracted by bells and whistles, smoke and mirrors.

The problem with palatial buildings is the cost involved.  It should lead one to wonder, “To what end?” If there is so much pain and suffering in the world that needs donations and contributions, why is money being put into anything more than a tent with poles, folding chairs and some sawdust?

This is in addition to a monthly payment to his church’s Capital Campaign and normal Stewardship tithing.

The answer is profit. There has not been an American business man or woman yet that proposes spend a huge sum on freebies. The news in the past couple of years has been how the downtrodden of Houston, after a hurricane hit Texas, found chains put on the doors of Joel Osteen’s megachurch.  No public shelter there!  It seems he built it with money donated to him (not God) and he invested that money into a profit-making megastructure.  After what happened to the inside of the Superdome, following Hurricane Katrina, who can blame him wanting to avoid the renovation costs of being charitable?

[I do not name him specifically as the only one who has followed this model of profiting from selling religion to people willing to pay.  He is simply one of “many” – nothing more.]

Jesus replied to his disciples, “Do you see these great buildings? Not one stone will be left here upon another; all will be thrown down.” He was not simply speaking about the beautification project of the Temple of Jerusalem. He was speaking of all who had, all who were, and all who would try to box God into permanent buildings. There has not been built one yet that can last as long as God. They will all find the same end that mortal human beings find – death and destruction of all that had been built over time. The only thing that lasts like God is the soul, but souls cannot return to God if they find a sense of self-pride in a magnificent building.

The private question the disciples asked Jesus – by Peter, James, John, and Andrew – were not much different than that asked by the young, rich ruler. Rather than, “What do I have to do to get to Heaven?” they asked, “When will Heaven come?” Such a question asked privately might mean those four disciples secretly either hoped for the destruction of evil, seen in opulent wealth and material objects of worship cast down, or they were most worried about when they should be careful of their lives, because the destruction of the Temple of Jerusalem would mean a powerful enemy was at hand. Either way, there were inner doubts that they were trying to assuage by trying to get inside information about how much time Jesus was talking about.

It is important to remember that the disciples had not yet been filled with God’s Holy Spirit. They had not yet been given the Christ Mind, in exchange for their own self-egos. They are then the models of all Christians today, who know a thing or two about what Jesus did, but know nothing about the love of God and being adopted as His Son.

One has to imagine one’s own fears rising, as Jesus spoke for the Father about the fall of the religion the disciples had invested so much time and energy into believing.  Christians today feel exactly how the disciples felt. We are all still being taught to “Be aware!” “Stay awake!” “Be vigilant!” or be lost.

Jesus taught to his disciples in the same manner that parents teach their young children. They tell a child, “Do not touch the stove top burner, as it will hurt very much if you do.” Children trust their parents and listen to what they say. They do not have to touch the hot stove top to find out the truth, as the vividness of their imagination and having experienced pain and crying is enough to believe a warning from someone they know loves them deeply.

Jesus then told his disciples to always discern the truth. One has to see the truth with one’s own eyes, or belief will never convert into faith. By not testing the words of those who preach from a position of “I am!” humans return to that state of being as a trusting child. Humans do not want to take the time or put in the energy it takes to see a truth with their own eyes: what was really said and what that really means. This is the warning given by Jesus. If one does not test the many that will come and say, “I am speaking for Christ,” then those will be misled, fall asleep and miss the boat to Heaven.

I do not ask anyone to believe what I say. Believing what I say will make one a poor reproduction of me. If questioned about my life, anyone other than myself will turn and run away in fear. I demand that everyone who wants to become Jesus Christ resurrected test what Jesus said, as recorded in the Gospels.

If I am wrong, then tell me where I missed what you see.

Hebrews 10:11-25 – When one’s sins are no longer on God’s Mind

Every priest stands day after day at his service, offering again and again the same sacrifices that can never take away sins. But when Christ had offered for all time a single sacrifice for sins, “he sat down at the right hand of God,” and since then has been waiting “until his enemies would be made a footstool for his feet.” For by a single offering he has perfected for all time those who are sanctified. [And the Holy Spirit also testifies to us, for after saying,

“This is the covenant that I will make with them

after those days, says the Lord:

I will put my laws in their hearts,

and I will write them on their minds,”

he also adds,

“I will remember their sins and their lawless deeds no more.”

Where there is forgiveness of these, there is no longer any offering for sin.]

Therefore, my friends, since we have confidence to enter the sanctuary by the blood of Jesus, by the new and living way that he opened for us through the curtain (that is, through his flesh), and since we have a great priest over the house of God, let us approach with a true heart in full assurance of faith, with our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water. Let us hold fast to the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who has promised is faithful. And let us consider how to provoke one another to love and good deeds, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day approaching.

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This is the Epistle selection from the Episcopal Lectionary for the Twenty-sixth Sunday after Pentecost, Year B 2018. In the numbering system that lists each Sunday in an ordinal fashion, this Sunday is referred to as Proper 28. It will next be read aloud in an Episcopal church by a reader on Sunday November 18, 2018. It is important because Paul (once again) explained how an Apostle-Saint is the tabernacle in which the Ark of the Covenant is written on one’s heart.  It is within that chamber that Jesus Christ is the reborn high priest. One’s sacrifice of self, in service to God Almighty, brings forgiveness of sins past and brings on the true heart of faith.

Due to the length of this selected reading of Paul’s letter to the Hebrews, I will not dissect it into segments as I have been doing for shorter readings. While this process is important, this translation read aloud makes it easy to follow the intent. However, reading the Bible Hub Interlinear in a ‘side-by-side’ manner makes the message vividly clear, exposing the errors of the public translation.

Verse eleven is speaking of typical priests, as he knew them in Jerusalem, as well as in Greek and Roman temples. It was their daily rituals to make blood offerings to the gods. None of those offerings of animal sacrifice ever took away the sins of the people or the priests.  This then translates to all ministers, priests, pastors and preachers of Christianity, who have a college degree to memorize ritual and administer rites, with external laws of Moses forgotten [for Jews only] or misunderstood.

Verse twelve then does not specifically name Christ as read aloud. This is implied by the word “houtos,” which means “this one.”  That word implies a singularity not found in typical priests. One sacrifice, of Jesus of Nazareth himself, would last in perpetuity. That means the sins of all could be cleansed by that singular sacrifice. That singular sacrifice was not so Jesus would be raised into Heaven and then be seated [“sat down”] on a throne next to God, by His right hand]. That would mean God sacrificed His Son so His Son could be God II in Heaven [a ridiculous concept].  Instead, the Greek word “ekathisen” needs to be seen differently.  Rather than meaning “sat down,” it should be read as meaning “was appointed,” as in “given the official job” (“seated”) as God’s “right hand.” That “hand of God” was then given the authority to be the human sacrifice that would take away the sins of the world.  It is God’s right hand that extends from Heaven to the earthly realm.

You are sent by my right hand to be the lineage to my right hand man.

Verse thirteen then does not say that Jesus Christ sits in a throne waiting for his enemies to bow down before his feet.  Rather, it says that those who are sinners awaiting redemption (those who think they “should be fixed” by Jesus being sacrificed), without doing anything to show repentance and love of God, are acting as the enemies of God [and God’s “right hand”]. Such refusal to repent places them as the low of humanity, at the feet of God. “For those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted.” (Matthew 23:12)  One should realize that reaching for the right hand of God is more difficult when laying in the gutter, at the feet of God and Christ.

Verse fourteen then states that God allowing His Son to be sacrificed, Jesus Christ represents the perfect way to be made holy. Rather than others needing to be offered up as burnt offerings [death, followed by resurrection and ascension of the body and soul], one simply needs to sacrifice one’s own self-ego and submit to God.  Since this models just as Jesus of Nazareth did, that prototype of sacrificial perfection. That death of ego then allows the Holy Spirit of Jesus Christ to be reborn within one’s flesh, which sanctifies each Apostle [i.e.: Saint]. It cannot get more perfect than that.

Instructions: Follow the real Jesus, not a dashboard model.

Verse fifteen [an optional verse, as well as are verses 16-18] confirms that it is the Holy Spirit that sanctifies one and clears the slate of all past sins. The translation that says “testifies” is actually the first word in verse fifteen, one that is capitalized as an important statement. The Greek word “Martyrei” is written, which better says “Bears witness.” This is the personal experience of the Holy Spirit, where one’s soul is baptized clean of sins, past, present AND future. One then “Bears witness” to the Christ Mind, as Jesus Christ resurrected. That Greek word is the root word for the English word “martyr,” which is then an important statement that “One has chosen to suffer death for religious purposes.” That “Death,” however, is not physical but mental, as the sacrifice of self.

Verse sixteen is then Paul quoting from Jeremiah 31:33, which fully states: “This is the covenant I will make with the people of Israel after that time,” declares the LORD. “I will put my law in their minds and write it on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people.” That quote says the presence of the Holy Spirit is known when the law is written in one’s heart by a profound love of God and it is written in their minds by the presence of the Christ. One “Bears witness” to all meaning of all Scripture … because of having sacrificed one’s brain, to stop holding one back from serving God.

Verse seventeen is a partial quote from Jeremiah 31:34, which fully states: “No longer will they teach their neighbor, or say to one another, ‘Know the LORD,’ because they will all know me, from the least of them to the greatest,” declares the LORD. “For I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no more.’” In this forgiveness of sins, one has to realize that God KNOWS ALL [He is omniscient].  This then means “remember” is not the best translation [although both Hebrew and Greek verses commonly use that translation]. Both languages allow for their respective words to also say, “call to mind.”  One’s sins will then never again (“no more”) “call [out] to [God’s] mind.”  The reason is there will be no more sins done by one filled by the Holy Spirit.  This is then a statement that once the Holy Spirit has come one with one’s soul, then there will never be any other sins that will call upon God’s mind for judgment.  God “remembers” the self-sacrifices of His beloveds.

This is then stated by Paul in verse eighteen, which is how the whole verse of Jeremiah says, “No longer will they teach their neighbor, or say to one another, ‘Know the LORD,’ because they will all know me.” Knowing the Lord means being one with God, as a marriage union, such that ‘biblical knowing’ means making a baby. With God as the Husband, the baby that is born is Jesus Christ. When one is reborn as Jesus Christ, one will act exactly like Jesus did, so no more sins will ever need to be repented. Still, all Saints will always feel repentance for past sins; that is when they give thanks to God for having saved them from ruin.

Verse nineteen is poorly translated as it replaces Paul’s use of “brothers” with the generic and meaningless word “friends.” That misses the point of all Saints being the Son [a male designation] of the Father.  The “confidence” of which Paul wrote was not “to enter sanctuaries,” but the “boldness” that overtakes one, due to “the entering” of the Holy Spirit within their bodies.  That “confidence” immediately comes from the union of God with one’s soul. No longer were they disciples, they had themselves each been transformed into “sanctuaries,” which is better understood as those “sacred.”  This means the use here of “hagiōn” (translated above as “sanctuaries”) is repeating that stated in verse fourteen (“hagiazomenous“). They have each become tabernacles in which the high priest Jesus has entered, which is the blood of a human Saint infused with the Holy Spirit. This is the true meaning of Jesus telling his disciples, “Drink from [this cup of wine] all of you. This is my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins.” Please take note how Jeremiah quoted God as having said the same thing.

Wine is wine. See how drinking of this ceremonial Passover cup of wine acts as a toast to seal the covenant with God that spiritually welcomes my holy blood within you.

Verse twenty then says that a Saint becomes like Moses, who had to wear a veil because the face of God shone upon his. A new Saint is a newly dedicated tabernacle of the Lord, one made of flesh that projects His Son through the “curtain” that is one’s flesh.  When one also sees a Saint being a new tabernacle that houses the Lord in one’s heart [the Holy of Holies place, behind the curtain], this is where only the high priest is allowed to go.  Visitors can only see the majesty of a phenomenal temple veil.

Verse twenty-one states that Jesus Christ is the great priest [high priest] that resides within that tabernacle of flesh.  Jesus Christ is the high priest that makes offerings to God above.

Verse twenty-two then says that this presence of the Trinity in each Saint draws one closer to Father [in our hearts] and the Holy Spirit [sprinkled clean] and Son [washed clean of evil]. In God one knows more than one believes, so Paul said each Saint has the full assurance of faith, through the experience of God’s love and loving God in return.

Verse twenty-three is confusing when “confession” and “hope” are the translations. The better statement means Paul said Saints will hold fast to their affirmations of faith. Rather than expressing hope for others (which is true), hope is best conveyed through “confidence,” which was first stated in verse nineteen. By demonstrating a fast hold on faith, from knowing God personally, others will find hope for them in the conviction of Saints.

Verse twenty-four says that each Saint should perceive each other as the same entity, which makes them all “brothers” [including women], because all are reborn as Jesus Christ, the Son of the Father. By seeing one another in that way, the love of God within each is then stirred up for others in the name of Jesus Christ, which is the love of God shared with all who are likewise wearing the face of God. This is the most important commandment that Jesus told the scribe [two Sundays past]. All other commandments are then naturally subsequent to that love, due to God having written the laws on each Saint’s heart.

Verse twenty-five does not say that Saints should not neglect to gather together, as is the custom of Jewish synagogues. God does not extend His right hand to human beings so they will stay in one place and gather together, not as Jews, but as Christians. While Paul knew there were churches of true Christians, which included both Jews and Gentiles, the intent was not to create a new religion. Instead, Saints were to travel in pairs [not always the same partner] and spread the Good News to those who had not yet heard.

The “Gospel” is not simply that Jesus of Nazareth was the Messiah, but more importantly it is one sharing with others their experience of God and Christ; to allow those who had never met Jesus of Nazareth to meet Jesus Christ in the body of a Saint. The role of Saints was (and is still) to recognize the Sabbath with strangers, in their churches or synagogues, staying as long as they were welcomed by those strangers. What Saints could not do was fail to encourage other Saints, those whose presence they knew prior [by encouraging them with loving letters], present [encouraging them with loving words], and future [teaching the meaning of Scripture with loving kindness]. This was to be done until those saintly souls were separated from their flesh on their “Day” of deliverance to God.

As the Epistle selection for the twenty-sixth Sunday after Pentecost, when one’s own personal ministry for the LORD should be underway – one should be fluent in the words of Paul, as the Mind of Christ shows one how to speak in the tongues of God – the message here (as always with Paul) is to serve the Lord with all one’s heart, with all one’s soul, and with all one’s strength. Then, one should love all others who equally love God and wear the face of God wherever they go, just as one loves God.

For as often as Paul wrote what it takes to be cleansed of sins, it is the waywardness of Christians that has a false belief in what “confession” means, what “Jesus died for our sins” means, and what the Lord’s Prayer means. One has to be transformed by a profound love of God to understand Paul’s letters.

In the Episcopal Church [all “catholic” churches] there is recited aloud each Sunday a statement of Belief [Nicene Creed], a Confession of Sins, and the Lord’s Prayer.

Christians should have faith, which comes from knowing God personally. The Nicene Creed was originally written [after much debate] by Saints, or people very close to that sacred status. Many who recite the modified words of that Creed [read from a Prayer Book or a printed handout] pay little attention to what the words say and mean. Some might believe that saying those words, like saying the Pledge of Allegiance, means one is Christian. When one’s faith is written on the walls of one’s heart, one’s faith is stated by the glow of wearing God’s face [depicted in art historically as a halo].  Words cannot replace that glow.

As we learn from this reading from Paul, God will not have the sins of a Saint come to His Mind. Why, then, do people speak out loud, in unison in a church about how miserable they were to not sin? They proclaim boldly, “We are sinners!”  Certainly, Saints confess their sins every day, multiple times, but they do not get all ‘Pharisee’ about it and shout so everyone can hear them. They silently ask God to keep them from sinning, asking forgiveness for past sins they have come back into their minds … remembrances of how they once were. They thank God for having given them the strength of Jesus Christ, so they cannot sin again.

When the disciples went to Jesus and asked him to teach them to pray, rote memorization of the example prayer Jesus gave his students is not how a Saint speaks to God. How many times did Moses, Samuel, Elijah, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Amos and all the judges and prophets of Israel and Judah recite the Lord’s Prayer?  The answer is never.

In John 17, when Jesus prayed for himself, his disciples, and all believers, he did not say the Lord’s Prayer. That is a prayer taught to children. It leads one to establish a comfort in talking to God. Prayer is done in private, and if spoken, done so calmly, quietly, and sincerely. Jesus taught his children-disciples, “God is your Father. Address Him as such.” For that relationship to be true, one has to love God as His Son [regardless of human gender].

And that’s all I have to say about that.

#Hebrews101125 #Jeremiah313334 #John17 #Matthew2312

1 Samuel 1:4-20 – A double portion of love offering

On the day when Elkanah sacrificed, he would give portions to his wife Peninnah and to all her sons and daughters; but to Hannah he gave a double portion, because he loved her, though the Lord had closed her womb. Her rival used to provoke her severely, to irritate her, because the Lord had closed her womb. So it went on year by year; as often as she went up to the house of the Lord, she used to provoke her. Therefore Hannah wept and would not eat. Her husband Elkanah said to her, “Hannah, why do you weep? Why do you not eat? Why is your heart sad? Am I not more to you than ten sons?”

After they had eaten and drunk at Shiloh, Hannah rose and presented herself before the Lord. Now Eli the priest was sitting on the seat beside the doorpost of the temple of the Lord. She was deeply distressed and prayed to the Lord, and wept bitterly. She made this vow: “O Lord of hosts, if only you will look on the misery of your servant, and remember me, and not forget your servant, but will give to your servant a male child, then I will set him before you as a nazirite until the day of his death. He shall drink neither wine nor intoxicants, and no razor shall touch his head.”

As she continued praying before the Lord, Eli observed her mouth. Hannah was praying silently; only her lips moved, but her voice was not heard; therefore Eli thought she was drunk. So Eli said to her, “How long will you make a drunken spectacle of yourself? Put away your wine.” But Hannah answered, “No, my lord, I am a woman deeply troubled; I have drunk neither wine nor strong drink, but I have been pouring out my soul before the Lord. Do not regard your servant as a worthless woman, for I have been speaking out of my great anxiety and vexation all this time.” Then Eli answered, “Go in peace; the God of Israel grant the petition you have made to him.” And she said, “Let your servant find favor in your sight.” Then the woman went to her quarters, ate and drank with her husband, and her countenance was sad no longer.

They rose early in the morning and worshiped before the Lord; then they went back to their house at Ramah. Elkanah knew his wife Hannah, and the Lord remembered her. In due time Hannah conceived and bore a son. She named him Samuel, for she said, “I have asked him of the Lord.”

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This is an optional Old Testament selection from the Episcopal Lectionary for the Twenty-sixth Sunday after Pentecost, Year B 2018. In the numbering system that lists each Sunday in an ordinal fashion, this Sunday is referred to as Proper 28. If chosen, it will next be read aloud in an Episcopal church by a reader on Sunday November 18, 2018. It is important because the story of Samuel’s birth to a barren mother, as the answer to prayers to God, shows that Salvation is possible to all who swear devotion to God.

When we read, “On the day when Elkanah sacrificed, he would give portions to his wife Peninnah and to all her sons and daughters; but to Hannah he gave a double portion,” the “portions” given are animals sacrificed. The sacrifices were made yearly in Shiloh, where a Levite priest would perform the ritual of sin offerings. This implies that all had sinned, but because Hannah was barren, her sins were worth double portions being sacrificed. Elkanah was willing to offer those extra animals “because he loved [Hannah].”

When we read, “she used to provoke her,” this was Peninnah pointing out to Hannah that her sins, which caused her barrenness, were why their husband Elkanah had to sacrifice more than customary. Peninnah had given birth to multiple “sons and daughters,” which she would point out to Hannah as proof that she was viewed by God as the better wife. These bitter words “provoked [Hannah] severely.” Thus, as time went on, Elkanah came to find Hannah weeping, not eating, and with a heart full of sorrow.

When we read, “After they had eaten and drunk at Shiloh,” several deductions can be made here, with some important information missing from verses one through three being omitted from this reading.

One is the family traveled to Shiloh yearly. The Passover was not commanded to be observed at any specific location, but the eating and drinking could be an indication of that timing of travel. Even though 2 Kings 23:22 states, “Neither in the days of the judges who led Israel nor in the days of the kings of Israel and the kings of Judah had any such Passover been observed,” that truth leaves open the possibility of Levites honoring it yearly, while reminding the local Israelites to do so, family-by-family. It was not a pilgrimage event to a Temple of brick and mortar, but a private observance in each home. Still, Levite priests might have originated that concept informally.

Second, verse nineteen says “to their house at Ramah,” but verse one states this clearly as being Ramathaim Zophim. This is a distance of roughly twelve miles west of Shiloh, or about a day’s journey [with lambs]. Both places were in the area set aside for the tribe of Ephraim.

Third, it can seem as if Elkanah did the sacrificing. He was a prominent Levite of Ephraim, thus a priest who was capable of offering sacrifices; but verse three says that the sons of Eli – Hophni and Phinehas – made the offerings to God that Elkanah brought. Eli and his sons were priests of the tabernacle in Shiloh, where the Ark of the Covenant was kept, and all were Aaronites [Levites directly descended from Aaron]. Eli was both the judge of Israel [following Samson] and the high priest of the tabernacle.

Eli’s sons would later be exposed as bad priests, who kept the best portions for themselves, meaning what Elkanah’s family ate and drank quite possibly was part of the of their sacrificed lambs. This would have been eaten with wine, which might not have been the ceremonial Seder cups later established, but the act of getting drunk on wine into the evening could be what led Eli to think Hannah was drunk.

Seeing the depth of reality that this reading places one amidst, we then read that after eating and drinking, “Hannah rose and presented herself before the Lord.” She went to the tabernacle to pray to the Lord, because “she was deeply distressed.” Eli was sitting outside the entrance to the tabernacle, in a seat next to a support pole for the tent of meeting. In the dark, Hannah must not have seen Eli, but Eli saw her come up, as she would have been lit into visibility by the fire still glowing from the altar of burnt offerings.

We are told the prayer of Hannah, which was silently communicated as she “wept bitterly.” In the vow Hannah made to God, she asked God to “remember me, and not forget your servant.” In the Epistle reading from Hebrews 10, Paul quoted Jeremiah 31:34, such that Yahweh said the time would come when “I will remember their sins no more.” That echoes back to the times of Hannah and Eli, when God remembered the sins of His people, expecting them to remember the connection a judge had with the Lord.  The high priest made sin offerings to God, in remembrance of past sins.  This method of atonement pleased God, so His judges were anointed to lead the people.

Seeing this expectation each Israelite shared, Hannah knew she had lived a life of devotion – to her husband, to her family [which included her husband’s other wife and children], and to her God. She should then be seen in the light of Job, who also was without sin and punished unjustly. Just as Job cried as he tried to get God to rescue him from a punishment he did not deserve, Hannah cried [silently], “O Lord of hosts, if only you will look on the misery of your servant, and remember me, and not forget your servant, but will give to your servant a male child, then I will set him before you as a nazirite until the day of his death.”

A “nazarite” is defined as, “An Israelite consecrated to the service of God, under vows to abstain from alcohol, let the hair grow, and avoid defilement by contact with corpses (Num. 6).” This was Hannah then saying her greatest sorrow was not from the hurtful things people thought, which her sister wife Peninnah said openly, but that she had failed God as a Levite wife. It was the duty of a Levite’s wife to give birth to a firstborn son, who would be dedicated to a lifetime of service in the temple – a nazarite. Because Peninnah was not Elkanah’s first wife, her firstborn son was probably exempt from that rule. Therefore, Hannah could not reward the love Elkanah showered upon his first wife by honoring his love with the redemption of the firstborn son [Pidyon haben], as commanded by God [Exodus 13:2].

Seeing Hannah’s lips moving as she wept bitterly, Eli’s first thought was she had drunk too much wine. When Eli said to Hannah, “How long will you make a drunken spectacle of yourself? Put away your wine,” he was quite possibly making reference to ritual red wine being consumed as symbolic of sacrificial blood. Remembering God passing over the Israelites because the blood of firstborn male lambs was painted one the thresholds of their homes, would then have been done with wine. Consumed, it would mark them within as those who served the Lord as His priests. That event of memory would then explain why she cried to God, “remember me, and not forget your servant.”

We then read Hannah’s response to Eli presuming her to be drunk on wine, saying: “No, my lord, I am a woman deeply troubled; I have drunk neither wine nor strong drink, but I have been pouring out my soul before the Lord.” She did not pour out red wine that would artificially intoxicate her and separate her from her grief. Instead, she poured out her soul. Her soul was the blood of the innocent that was painted over her flesh for the Angel of Death to see.

When Hannah then said to Eli, “Do not regard your servant as a worthless woman, for I have been speaking out of my great anxiety and vexation all this time,” Eli immediately knew in his heart that the Angel of Death, sent by God to judge the worthless and spare the innocent, had spared Hannah. Hannah had been passed over.  Because Eli was a judge and high priest of Israel, he was able to discern God’s Will. It was then from that holy connection that Eli did not speak for himself, but for God, when he said to Hannah, “Go in peace; the God of Israel grant the petition you have made to him.”

For as holy a man as Eli was, his brain made errors of deduction. His faulty abilities to think what was going on, proved he was in no way capable to know what Hannah meant when she said to him [a stranger, basically], “I have been speaking out of my great anxiety and vexation all this time.” Eli did not have permission to speak blessings for God, as if he felt being judge and high priest made him a powerful dude. Eli was, however, sacrificed of self so the Lord had total permission to use Eli’s voice to speak His Will through him.  Whereas a high priest had specific rules and regulations to follow, in order to maintain the dignity of the tabernacle, a judge had the freedom to speak without dogmatic procedure being a hindrance.

We do not read that Hanna jumped with joy after she heard Eli’s promise that God had granted her prayer and vow. We read she said, “Let your servant find favor in your sight.” She was not a servant of Eli, which means she was responding to God, recognizing it was His voice that came from His servant Eli – a nameless figure in robes, sitting on a holy throne of the temple. Eli served the Lord as a judge.  Hannah then thanked God by asking Him to show her thanks for Eli, for the role he played as medium to her petition.

The joy that Hannah felt was then stated as, “Then the woman went to her quarters, ate and drank with her husband, and her countenance was sad no longer.” Hannah was a changed person after having been assured her prayer would be answered. She was not praying for a baby, but a son who would be given to God out of devotion. She knew she could live a loved life without children of her own to raise. However, her heart was raised by knowing she could fulfill her role in maintaining the lineage of God’s servants in His tabernacle.

The real happy ending to this story is then stated as: “They rose early in the morning and worshiped before the Lord; then they went back to their house at Ramah. Elkanah knew his wife Hannah, and the Lord remembered her. In due time Hannah conceived and bore a son. She named him Samuel, for she said, “I have asked him of the Lord.” That happiness came from the rise of a new day, when the glory of the Lord shone brightly on Shiloh AND “they worshipped before the Lord.”

The naming of the baby Samuel says, “Heard Of God.”  He was the fulfillment of a prayer that was heard by God.  The name Elkanah was then lived up to: “God Has Redeemed” through a firstborn son kohen (priest).  The redemption of Pidyon haben had occurred.  The truth spoke by God through Eli was the fulfillment of his name: “God Is Me.”  Eli did not grant a prayer would be answered; it was God.  Hannah had been blessed as she prayed to be, living up to her name: “Gratuitous Gift.”  Her gift of a nazarite was God’s gift to her, as both gifts were of “Graciousness.”  Yahweh remembers His people for their service, more than for their sins.

As a final note, the Passover is always recognized on the 15th of Nisan, which is the first full moon of spring, with spring being when the Sun reaches the Vernal Equinox [a Northern Hemisphere event of rebirth]. Supposing Elkanan and Hannah went home to Ramathaim Zophim and “knew” each other on 17 Nisan, then the birth of Samuel would have been around 17 Tevet (nine months later, in the tenth month of the Hebrew calendar). That would have been around January 9th (Julian calendar), or the dead of winter. That would be symbolic of Samuel being a seed planted in Israel, to sprout, grow, and become a mighty oak tree in Israel’s history, when the judges would be replaced by kings.

As an Old Testament reading selection for the twenty-sixth Sunday after Pentecost, when one’s own personal ministry for the LORD should be underway – one should have made a vow to God of self-sacrifice and service if God will allow one to give birth to Jesus Christ, the high priest “Heard Of God” – the message here is to feel the distress and “great anxiety and vexation” for not having yet delivered one’s soul into God’s hands. One needs to pour out one’s soul before the Lord.

The aspect of Elkanah giving twice as many animals to sacrifice for the sins of his wife Hannah has to be seen as him doing his priestly duty to bring a woman he loved dearly into favor with God. While it is not stated as why God answered Hannah’s prayer that specific time, knowing that verse three said this was a yearly time of sacrifice, Elkanah had sacrificed double portions each year. This has to be seen as the value of prayer for loved ones. All we can do is love one another and pray for the best for those we love, leaving everything in God’s hands and trusting He knows best.

The aspect of Eli sitting on a seat of honor outside the doorway to the tent of meeting makes him seem to be guarding the doorway, as only approved priests were allowed inside. That exclusion of common Israelites from the holy place, while positioned to watch anyone who entered the outer walls of canvas, into the outer courtyard, projects Eli as the Christian Church of today. He reflects all priests (ministers, pastors, or preachers), including bishops and others of hierarchical ranking, as he was the high priest of Israel.

The Church welcomes visitors (as Hannah was to Eli), but there is a line drawn that separates how far a priest can venture beyond the rules and bylaws of the Church, and how close the laity can get to a priest. Eli was an Aaronite, which means he was directly descended from Aaron and dedicated as a priest (even high priest) by birth. Such family connection to the institution of the tabernacle (the same with the Church) makes a high priest seem to be too high to associate with the commoners. As such, neither the tabernacle nor the Church [both holy buildings that attract God’s children to Him] can offer those institutions as substitutes to God. They are not allowed to be anything more than a place to offer sacrifices and prayers to the Lord.  A building cannot replace each heart’s need to connect to God directly.

It should be understood that the Israelites officially offered prayers three times a day: Morning; Afternoon; and Evening. Because Hannah showed up later than the evening prayer time, Eli thought a strange woman was not following normal visiting hours. Again, if drinking wine was a ritual practice during the ritual recognition of the Passover, as I have already stated, then Eli was led to think that a devoted Israelite had consumed her limit of wine, so he advised her: “Put away your wine.”  Wine acted as a false link to spirituality, which would have been the motivation Eli saw in a strange woman coming at a strange time to pray at the alter of burnt offerings.

That is how a Church that is not linked directly to God, through the Holy Spirit, makes poor decisions. It cannot know every woman’s heart that comes in crying and moving her lips. Instead, an institution becomes protective of its procedures, rules, and behaviors … because the public does not fully understand all that its own has to learn  and comply thereof.

Without the ability to cross the line that trusts only God and sees common humanity in more of a negative light (for self-preservation reasons), Eli was probably worried that a drunk woman might do some damage to herself or the altar of burnt offerings. That failure of a Church to hold every one of its members equally, as all being priests with full access to an order of brothers and sisters, will always (invariably) reject well-meaning people.  Some of the people are written off as the casualties of doing business for God.

That was the high priest Eli. However, Eli was also a judge. He had replaced Samson. The role of a judge of Israel was different than a high priest. It was not a position determined by birth or heredity. A judge was one within Israel who was anointed by God.

Samson, for example, was from the Tribe of Dan, close to where Israel bordered Philistia. Samson was also a nazirite, such that when Hannah promised God, “He shall drink neither wine nor intoxicants, and no razor shall touch his head,” Samson’s downfall was due to losing his strength from Delilah cutting his hair. Still, a judge was told by an angel of the Lord, “You’re it!” and they all had an ability to speak to God and know they were heard.

When the judge Eli spoke to Hannah it was not the same as the high priest Eli. He spoke to her as God having heard her vow, he was Eli the judge. Eli the high priest could only see her lips moving.

This has to be seen in terms of Elkanah double portion sacrificed. The reward sent by God was a double portion of Eli. If there had only been one portion set aside for Hannah’s need for fulfillment, Eli would have run her off as just another drunk woman that wandered into the tabernacle’s outer courtyard.  A single portion Eli would sacrifice one lamb to God and give an edible portion to Elkanah.  No more would be expected in return.  A double portion of Eli would be to call upon him as the judge.  The double portion was returned by the voice of the Lord being heard.

This reading should be seen by the reader as a test of one’s character. One does not get to choose only one of the characters that is closest to how one ordinarily acts or wants to be though of by others. Instead, one should see how all of the characters fit oneself. Do we set aside double portions of sacrifices for the special people in our lives? Do we cause anger in those who are less fortunate than us? Do we have anguish because we fail to serve God as much as we wish, feeling we are not giving as much as we should? Do we see strangers and think they are having a breakdown, when they are merely praying to God for help?

The most important characteristic we all should pray for is to speak the truth of the Lord as a judge. When that happens, we get a double portion of a priest and a judge. Jesus is the high priest that guards the tabernacle in our hearts. Jesus Christ is the voice of God that speaks through our lips.  Jesus Christ is the firstborn son we want born into us, so we can dedicate ourselves into God’s service forevermore.

That is when the Church and the people become equal and love flows eternal.

#1Samuel1420 #2Kings2322 #Exodus132 #Jeremiah3134

Daniel 12:1-3 – A time of cold turkey

The Lord spoke to Daniel in a vision and said, “At that time Michael, the great prince, the protector of your people, shall arise. There shall be a time of anguish, such as has never occurred since nations first came into existence. But at that time your people shall be delivered, everyone who is found written in the book. Many of those who sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt. Those who are wise shall shine like the brightness of the sky, and those who lead many to righteousness, like the stars forever and ever.”

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This is an optional Old Testament selection from the Episcopal Lectionary for the Twenty-sixth Sunday after Pentecost, Year B 2018. In the numbering system that lists each Sunday in an ordinal fashion, this Sunday is referred to as Proper 28. If chosen, it will next be read aloud in an Episcopal church by a reader on Sunday November 18, 2018. It is important because it is seen as a prophecy of the end times, making it fit the theme seen in the Gospel reading from Mark 12.

When we read, “The Lord spoke to Daniel in a vision,” this is not stated in verse one of chapter twelve. Daniel was a man of many visions sent to him by God. In chapter eleven the written text tells of a vision being shown to Daniel in the first year of Darius the Mede’s reign. After chapter eleven told of the future for Persia, that vision has continued into chapter twelve, with focus now being put on the people of Israel.

At an earlier time (as told in chapter eight), Daniel was shown the angel Gabriel. In chapter ten he first met the angel Michael. Now, he is being shown the angel Michael again, who will be sent by God in the future.  God is telling Daniel of the end times.

Certainly, this vision could be interpreted as predicting the downfall of the Persians by the Greeks, and then the downfall of the Greeks by the Romans. All of those subsequent events would make this a prophecy that came true. However, in the vacuum of three verses, alone without context, that segregation makes these words be not truly been fulfilled to this day. That means they are prophetic, telling of the great end of the world [as we know that as thought to be].

If one looks at the Bible Hub Interlinear for this reading, then one will see a link to a similar reading [if not the same message repeated], which is Revelation 1:1-3. In John’s book, there is no mention of the specific angel, Michael, although John did mention his revelation came by way of an “angel” of God. This specificity should not be overlooked as having meaning.

The name “Michael” is one that asks a question: “Who Is Like God?” When that name is then attached to the literal Hebrew that says, “the great prince who stands [watch] over the sons of your people,” the one who is like God is Jesus Christ. This deduction can then be affirmed by John, where the beginning of his Revelation states, “Revelation of Jesus Christ.” That specificity then matches the specificity of Daniel, such that Michael is the Christ Spirit, the prince of peace.

Because Daniel wrote of Michael that he was “the great prince,” this also affirmed the prophecy of Isaiah, who wrote: “For a child is born, unto us a son is given, unto us and will be born dominion upon his shoulders; and will be called his name wonderful, councilor, god [“el“], mighty father everlasting prince of peace.” (Isaiah 9:6) That element of peace must now be seen as that which “shall arise” or “shall stand up.” This strength that watches over the people of God [Christians, when Michael is understood as the Christ Spirit] will be called upon when “there shall be a time of anguish” or “times of trouble and distress.”

When Daniel wrote, “There shall be a time of anguish, such as has never occurred since nations first came into existence,” this becomes a match to Jesus telling his disciple, “nation will rise against nation.” The oldest civilization dug up by archaeology points to the Sumerians, which was in the Fertile Crescent, post-Flood. Because Jesus spoke of when the beautiful buildings of the Temple of Jerusalem would all be overturned, as far as their private question asked by the disciples, the expected historic answer would relate to the history that occurred in 70 C.E.  Comparing those words of Jesus to Daniel’s makes it clearer to see how Jesus was not talking about a Great War, as much as he was telling of the time when religion [Christianity] would reach “times of trouble.”

Daniel wrote of this time being a first since any nations existed. The cornerstone for any worldly nation is its religion, from which priests are dedicated to the gods [for Israel one God], to ensure the life of each nation. Jesus had told the pilgrims and leaders of Jerusalem, “Destroy this temple, and I will raise it again in three days.” (John 2:19) He was not referring to the physical destruction of the Temple of Jerusalem, but the people being led away from the decadence and corruption that it represented. Likewise, he told his disciples Judaism would be thrown down [“not one stone will be left on another”] in similar metaphor. Daniel prophesied when the world would no longer have nations seeking to please spiritual deities; and John also wrote of those end times.

God does not seek pilgrims who might come to Him, as a majestic building.  God wants hearts to live within. Therefore, Jesus Christ was prophesied as the tumbling down of building being a substitute houses for God.

When Daniel is then said to have written, “your people shall be delivered, everyone who is found written in the book,” the better translation that does not paraphrase says, “at that time that shall be delivered  ,  your people everyone who is written in the book  .” More than a whole people being “delivered,” the “time that” has been prophesied as coming [“a time of anguish”] will be delivered. Once all people are amid terrifying times, then not only will “your people” be held accountable, but “everyone” whose name is written “in the book” shall find themselves removed from the world. That will not be a rapture of the innocent, but the time of final judgment for all mankind.

This “book” is then the Akashic Records, or the Book of Life. The possessive pronoun “your,” which is applied to the word “people,” can be read as meaning the Israelites, since Michael [the Christ Spirit] has been appointed by God to govern the righteous. Still, the possessive reflects back on God [Yahweh], as He is the one to whom all Israelite hearts should be married. Through the prince of peace – Jesus Christ being reborn in both Jews and Gentiles – who stands up as the one who watches over God’s people [from within their souls], all humanity will have been given the opportunity to receive the Christ Spirit and be protected from these end times. The Book of Life then records who shall be given eternal life, or life back in a world that can no longer sustain life as we know it now.

When Daniel was told by God, through Michael [Christ], “Many of those who sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake,” “dust” should be read as metaphor of a body of flesh [“ashes to ashes, dust to dust,” such that the breath of life is blown into dust and then taken away through mortality]. The word “sleep” should be recognized as synonymous with death, but being mortal is being born of death. The word “awake” is then the realization of eternal life, which transforms the soul from that eternal spirit reincarnated repeatedly into dust that requires sleep into one that desires to forever be returned with God. The word “many” is then less a number of souls, but the suddenness that “greatly” falls upon mankind, during these times of distress. This is then all souls being awakened to the day of reckoning.

That judgment is then stated as, “some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt.” This, again, is a paraphrase, where the literal Hebrew states: “these to life  ,  everlasting these and to shame and contempt everlasting  .” The great awakening is to “life,” which is the soul state. A soul cannot die, as it is “everlasting.”

There are no words written that distinguish “some” being given “everlasting life” and “some” who will find “shame and contempt everlasting.” ALL souls will find they will get to “sleep” as a mortal one last time. ALL souls then lose their illusion of material bodies and must face “life everlasting.” This is where the word “many” is the number of souls that will find the “shame” of having forsaken God Eternal for temporal pleasures. In return, their “life” will find “contempt everlasting” as God’s rejection of those souls.

When Daniel was told, “Those who are wise shall shine like the brightness of the sky,” this refers to those who accepted the protection of Michael [Christ] and stopped being souls led by human brains. They sacrificed their self-egos to be led by the wisdom of the Christ Mind. This means the ones who will “shine like the brightness of the sky” will have sacrificed their human faces to wear the face of God. Those will be the Saints reborn of Jesus Christ, having married God in their hearts.

When that voice went on to say, “those who lead many to righteousness [will be] like the stars forever and ever,” this means the Saints will be the ones who have been granted redemption and salvation to shine like the sun [a star that reflects the light and the true of Jesus Christ] forevermore. The purpose of a Saint is to “lead many to righteousness,” with “many” being the great unknown number of soul that will awaken from their earthly slumber saying, “Ruh roh.”

While many should allow themselves to be led to righteousness, many will prefer to sleep in the dust of the earth. Thus the saying “head in the sand” is born.

This includes all those who foresee a rapture of God-fearing Christians who have no presence of God’s love in their hearts for their fellow neighbors that call themselves Christians of a different variety. Christians today would rather strike down other Christians, as Gentiles against Gentiles [“nation against nation”], rather than receive the Holy Spirit and go into the world “leading many to righteousness.”

As an optional Old Testament reading selection for the twenty-sixth Sunday after Pentecost, when one’s own ministry for the LORD should be underway – one should be trying to lead others to righteousness, rather than draw the contempt of God from persecuting true Christians and falsely claiming a right to speak for Jesus Christ – the message here is to wake up and see how the message always has been to see the lure of the flesh and the material realm is distracting one from a personal ministry for the LORD.  Life misleads a soul to self-worship and losing sight of God.

The Episcopal Church lectionary cycle is not some random schedule of Biblical readings. They were arranged with purpose and from spiritual insight making those choices be placed together. The Day of Pentecost [fifty days after the first full day of the Passover] represents when one has opened one’s heart to God and had Jesus Christ be resurrected within one’s flesh. The “after Pentecost” season [called “Ordinary Time”] is then when one’s ministry for the LORD should be underway. It is not alright to sit in a pew, year after year, lifetime after lifetime, never feeling one can risk material stuff for a gamble on God.

Advent is the dawning that rebirth must be a personal experience of Jesus born again. Christmas is the prophecy of that rebirth in oneself. Epiphany is the realization that one is too sinful to gain salvation. Lent is the purging of one’s addictions to sin, to make oneself acceptable to God in marriage. Easter is the willing sacrifice of self-ego so one can be raised by the cleansing of the Holy Spirit. Pentecost is the Law being written within one’s heart, which releases Jesus Christ into a new Saint, which must minister to the needs of others, by passing on the Holy Spirit so the cycle renews.

The end times are then dependent on one receiving the Spirit from the readings each week. One needs to not hear meaningless stories, but be filled with the wisdom of discernment. The readings must have a personal connection for one to be self-motivated to begin the cycle all over again. Otherwise, one will be just like the many who will find life everlasting as a punishment for having wallowed in the sins that only exist in a material realm.

Try to imagine an addiction to heroin and then being locked into a void where nothing material exists. A soul will then crawl up and down imaginary walls for eternity, with no relief.

One does not need to know heroin personally to imagine such a scenario. One gets to fill in the blank as to what would be most distressful to lose, going “cold turkey” for eternity without _________.

Anything short of God filling that blank means eternal anguish.

John 18:33-37 – So Jesus is a king?

Pilate entered the headquarters again, summoned Jesus, and asked him, “Are you the King of the Jews?” Jesus answered, “Do you ask this on your own, or did others tell you about me?” Pilate replied, “I am not a Jew, am I? Your own nation and the chief priests have handed you over to me. What have you done?” Jesus answered, “My kingdom is not from this world. If my kingdom were from this world, my followers would be fighting to keep me from being handed over to the Jews. But as it is, my kingdom is not from here.” Pilate asked him, “So you are a king?” Jesus answered, “You say that I am a king. For this I was born, and for this I came into the world, to testify to the truth. Everyone who belongs to the truth listens to my voice.”

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This is the Gospel selection from the Episcopal Lectionary for the Twenty-seventh Sunday after Pentecost, Year B 2018, which is the Last Sunday after Pentecost. In the numbering system that lists each Sunday in an ordinal fashion, this Sunday would be referred to as Proper 29, but it is called “Christ the King Sunday.” It will next be read aloud in an Episcopal church by a priest on Sunday November 25, 2018. It is important because Jesus admitted to Pilate that he was a king, but that admission is left up to the whole world to discern (just like Pilate had difficulty understanding): Where is Jesus’ kingdom, if it is not from this world?

I will preface this reading interpretation with the basic statement that one has to have a firm grasp on the facts of reality, as far as Jesus’ final days are concerned.

1. Jerusalem was packed with Passover Festival pilgrim Israelites, local Jews, Romans and other Gentiles.
2. The Passover Festival in ancient Jerusalem lasted eight days.
3. Jesus had his disciples prepare for the Passover Seder meal [the first of two Seders: the night of 15 Nisan and the night of 16 Nisan] on Friday, 14 Nisan.
4. Jesus was arrested early in the morning of 15 Nisan, which was a most holy Shabbat [Saturday].
5. The written accounts of Jesus’ appearances before a Temple high priest, a Roman provincial governor, a Roman tetrarch [ruler of one quarter of a country] and back to the Roman provincial governor could not possibly happen on the same day and have his body taken down from a cross of death the following Friday.
6. The Romans were good record keepers and little is written of the trial and execution of Jesus of Nazareth, meaning the world did not stand still because of Jesus’ arrest.
7. Biblical records [the four Gospels] are so laser focused on what happened to Jesus that is appears that time stood still, just as it appears that a four-hour Passover Seder ritual meal was over in minutes.
8. The ignorance by Gentiles of the ritual of a Seder meal means the non-Jewish Christian thinks the Yachatz (breaking of the middle matzah) preceded the Beirach (Grace after Meals) and Kos Shlishi (the Third Cup of Wine), as quickly as a Christian priest can hold up a cup of wine and a large wafer, while reciting the Biblical text of Matthew.

With that understood, this reading from John must be seen as taken from the whole, as one part of an eight-day event that was surrounding the life of Jesus; this episode being one witnessed by John, who was not a disciple of Jesus. It is important to know that Mark [Peter’s Gospel writer] wrote of Peter’s disowning Jesus at the end of chapter fourteen. At the beginning of chapter fifteen, Mark wrote of Jesus appearing before Pilate. Matthew wrote of the same order, but he wrote of Judas hanging himself prior to witnessing Jesus before Pilate. Luke, likewise, followed the same order of Peter’s denial, such that Jesus appeared before Pilate later; but Luke [Mother Mary’s Gospel writer] then was the only one to write of Jesus being sent to appear before Herod, followed by Jesus standing before Pilate again.

All four Gospels then create a three-dimensional view of the truth surrounding Jesus before Pilate, such that this account by John is the first time Jesus was seen by the governor of Judea. However, this reading from John is seamlessly attached the account of Pilate offering Barabbas and Jesus to the people to vote on freeing.  That event, as told by Luke, clearly said it was Jesus’ second appearance before Pilate.  For the truth of all to emerge, one needs to be able to see an invisible point of transition appear in John’s words.

The word translated as “headquarters” is the Greek word “praitōrion.” When capitalized, this word is translated as “Praetorium,” which [in Latin] was the official residence of a governor, but when Herod visited Jerusalem it was his palace. Both Herod and Pilate were in Jerusalem at the time of the Passover Festival.  In Jerusalem there was both a Palace of Herod and a Hasmonean Palace within the temple compound, both of which would justify being identified in the upper-case as “Praetorium.” However, the spelling in John is in the lower-case, which means this can refer to the “praetorian guard,” which were Roman soldiers that were primarily housed in the Antonia Fortress, but also had guard houses surrounding the palaces.

By understanding the intent of the lower-case spelling, this meeting by Pilate with Jesus was not in the palace.  Instead, the Sanhedrin had taken a prisoner to the guards of the fortress, which obviously had holding cells for prisoners.  The presence of Jews bringing in a Jewish prisoner necessitated Pilate be summoned to the fortress, to approve that imprisonment.  The last thing Pilate wanted was a riot ensuing, due to a Jew being falsely imprisoned by Rome, in Jerusalem, during the most holy time of the year when emotions were already high.

John’s verses twenty-eight and twenty-nine state, “Then the Jewish leaders took Jesus from Caiaphas to the palace of the Roman governor. By now it was early morning, and to avoid ceremonial uncleanness they did not enter the palace, because they wanted to be able to eat the Passover. So Pilate came out to them.”

This says it was after sunrise, after Peter had denied Jesus three times, and after Judas hung himself at dawn. The aspect of the elite Jews wanting “to be able to eat the Passover” says it was 15 Nisan, the Sabbath, with evening being when the second Seder would be eaten.  They, like Jesus and his disciples and family, had partaken of the first Seder meal before Jesus was arrested.

By reading that Pilate “again” went into the “praitōrion,” he had been outside talking to the Jewish leaders. That discussion was recorded by John, in verses twenty-nine through thirty-two. He had obviously been inside the first time to give the orders to imprison Jesus, before going outside to talk with the ones making accusations that Jesus was a criminal against Rome. When he returned inside the fortress and went to the holding cell of Jesus, he was “again inside” the fortress.  Pilate then asking “Are you the king of the Jews?” was based on nothing written by John that would indicates that title was expressly stated by the Jewish leaders.

This is why Jesus [who had the mind of the Christ for his insight] asked Pilate in return, “Do you ask this on your own, or did others tell you about me?” Jesus knew the true answer to that question, which means he immediately knew that no one had accused Jesus of claiming to be a king. John wrote they told Pilate, “If he was not doing evil, then we would not have delivered him to you.” (John 18:30) [In that verse, “kakon poiōn” translates as “evil doing,” not “criminal.”]

As far as Rome was concerned, a promised “Messiah” [in Greek a “Christ”] was nothing to worry about. As long as someone was not raising a sword against Rome [something to which they would gladly raise one in return], religious zealots (such as John the Baptizer) were nothing more than a lot of harmless hot air.

Look! Up in the sky! It’s the Messiah!

We then read that Pilate said to Jesus, ““I am not a Jew, am I? Your own nation and the chief priests have handed you over to me. What have you done?”

This is the mantra of all Gentiles, including the Christians of the Western world. The vast majority of Christians, as produced by the Roman Catholic Church, beginning in earnest in the Dark Ages, proclaim, “I am not a Jew, am I?”

As Romanized Christians, rather than Apostles who have been passed the torch of the Holy Spirit, those people act as if they are doing Jesus a favor by picking up what the Jews cast off. Christians of the West say, “Your own nation and the chief priests have handed you over to me.”

Finally, as those who have no bloodline connection to the lineage of Jesus of Nazareth [born in Bethlehem] and having never witnessed any of the miracles that Jesus was said to have performed, Christian Gentiles ask Christ, “What have you done?” Sure, they have been told what to believe, and like good pagans-turned-Christians, they believe.  However, they ask the same question as Pilate, with most muttering under their breath, “for me.”

While it can seem as though Pilate was speaking from a level of ignorance about the Jews, as a Roman citizen appointed as the fifth Perfect over Judea [there had been four Perfects of Judea prior to Pilate, him having succeeded Valerius Gratus], and only in that position for about the same length of time Jesus had been ministering the children of Israel, it is better to see Pilate working Jesus like a cop in an interrogation room. By playing ignorant, he hoped Jesus would begin bragging about all he had done, which would have allowed Pilate to hear for himself if Jesus was doing “wicked deeds” against the Jews of the temple, or against Roman dominion there.

When Jesus then said, “My kingdom is not of this world,” he admitted that he had allowed others, in one way or another, to hear him talk about a kingdom that he possessed. If cable TV and The History Channel had existed back then, and if Pilate had been a fan of Ancient Aliens, undoubtedly he would have been intrigued by Jesus’ answer. He might have wondered what ancient alien theorist would say about an “out of this world kingdom.”

Still, the Greek written by John, “ basileiaemē,” can say, “This authority [or rule] this my own.” The word “kingdom” is not to be understood as a worldly nation of people, but one person. While Pilate could not discern the importance of the capitalization of “” (meaning “This”), one can imagine Jesus gestured with his hands, by sweeping them along the form of his body from chest to waist. By his saying “This” along with that gesture, his word would then show that Jesus himself was where his reign was. By then repeating the word “this,” without gestures, Jesus was then saying [as Seinfeld made a running joke in one episode], “I am the master of this domain that stands before you.”

While Jesus had just admitted Jesus of Nazareth was a kingdom, he then added, “not is of the world this.” In actuality, the Greek of John says, “exists not in this realm” or “is not from here.” The paraphrase assumes that Jesus was not talking of a kingdom on earth, but his words could have been heard by Pilate as saying, “My kingdom is not in Judea.” Pilate’s ears could hear, but they were not geared to think in metaphysical ways. He was deaf to the proposition that the king of the kingdom of Jesus of Nazareth was not material in nature but spiritual.

Think about that for a moment and let that sink in. See if your ears can hear Jesus saying, “This (my body) kingdom this my own (body) [has a King] not from the material realm.”

[tick, tock, tick, tock, tick, tock]

Jesus said, “You will know that I am he and that I do nothing on my own but speak just what the Father has taught me.” (John 8:28) He also said, “I did not speak on my own, but the Father who sent me commanded me to say all that I have spoken.” (John 12:49) Jesus again said, “Don’t you believe that I am in the Father, and that the Father is in me? The words I say to you I do not speak on my own authority. Rather, it is the Father, living in me, who is doing his work.” (John 14:10)

What Jesus said to Pilate was no different than what he had said to others before. This is Jesus being exactly as the Israelites were all supposed to be, as priests to Yahweh. Each was to be a kingdom of which God was the king. When the elders of Israel went to Samuel and said, “Appoint for us a king, to be like other nations,” Samuel said, “God is your king.” Samuel, like Jesus, was a kingdom of God, as human flesh, with the king being the presence of God within them, via the Holy Spirit.

Pilate was having none of that out of this world namby pamby. The investigator in him came out; so we read, “Pilate asked him, “So you are a king?”

He must have missed the hand gesture. All he wanted was a confession. He did not realize that every word coming from Jesus’ mouth was the truth of God. The answer had been given, “Yes, I God am a King, but my Kingdom is Spiritual, which in Jesus of Nazareth stretches as far as the skin can go and inward to the soul.”  To Pilate, Jesus spoke, not Yahweh.

Since God had already answered Pilate’s question prior, He then told Pilate through Jesus’ lips, “You say that I am a king.” Jesus was saying that Pilate was only defining the word “king” in worldly terms. Jesus then said, “You are putting words in my mouth, which I did not say.” Jesus said he had “authority” that was solely his own. He did not say, “I am a king of a kingdom that is not from this land possessed by Rome.”

Jesus had explained to Pilate that, if he were a ruler of land, then he would command soldiers to fight for his release, as kings do. Those soldiers would have given their lives fighting against the tyranny of the Temple rulers, who had arrested Jesus. No soldiers had come to rescue Jesus, so Jesus was a kingdom of one. Only he was there defending himself. No real king would do that.

In this children’s game, the most important piece is the flag. It cannot move. It must have other pieces defend it.

To clarify what Jesus had previously spoken, which Pilate misunderstood, Jesus said, “For this I was born, and for this I came into the world, to testify to the truth.”

Twice Jesus said “touto,” which is again stating his use of “this” prior: “This authority this my own not of the world is this.” The word that was used to express “this kingdom not of this world” was “toutou.” At this time the verbiage was “this kingdom not of this world” was why Jesus was born. He said “this kingdom not of this world” was why Jesus came into the world in “this” body of his, which came with Spiritual authority … like a kingdom.

To be a kingdom of God on earth was the absent purpose that was not in existence in Judaism. All the high priests, all the scribes, all the lawyers and common folk were supposed to be kingdoms of God, but they all had failed God. Because they were not kingdoms of God, God sent Jesus to be the torch that would re-ignite that responsibility in all the children of God.

Jesus then said what his “authority” was. It was that “rule” he had been given by the Father [God] that the leaders of the Temple were mistaking as Jesus saying he was a king. Jesus was sent by God [the King] “to testify to the truth.” While Pilate would question, “What is truth?” [not part of this reading, so it might have been asked when Jesus returned for his judgment], the truth that was missing was the kingdoms of God that each Jew and scattered Israelite [as well as Samaritans and Gentiles later] were supposed to be was not.  They were dead to God in their hearts. Only the truth of Holy Scripture could awaken them from death’s slumber.

Jesus spoke the truth of Holy Scripture by being a living example of that truth.  Thus the truth proclaimed by him and his disciples was, “The kingdom of God has come near.”

Jesus then told Pilate, “Everyone who belongs to the truth listens to my voice.” The truth was then all of God’s people, as His chosen ones. They had been spoken for.  They belonged to God in marriage. They had broken the marriage contract and thus had been divorced; but God would open their hearts again with the truth. Jesus was sent to speak the truth of God, but God needed to release the Holy Spirit of Jesus Christ so that more than one human body of flesh could be the voice of truth.

Pilate, unwittingly, had a divine role to play in that release.  He had never been convinced that truth truly existed.  That was why he asked [not read in this reading]: “What is truth?”  That doubt is why God sent His Son to a world that lacked true Spirituality.

As the Gospel reading selection for the last Sunday after Pentecost, also known as Christ the King Sunday, when one’s own personal ministry for the LORD should be underway – one should be that voice of truth as Jesus Christ resurrected into a new bodily kingdom of God – the message here is to stop being like Pilate, refusing to hear what Jesus said. This does not mean reading the verses that the witnesses of Jesus of Nazareth remembered he said [or having someone read them to one] is the voice of truth.  While the words are always true, they are easily misunderstood [reference Pilate].  Therefore, hearing one’s own voice speaking as the voice of truth that comes from having been reborn as Jesus, through the Christ Spirit, is the only true way to hear Jesus speak.

When one has been reborn as Jesus, one has become the womb from which Jesus could return into the world in Spirit. When one has resurrected the Holy Spirit of Christ and become Jesus again on earth, it is then “to testify to the truth.” The truth is not known by Gentiles, such as Pontius Pilate, as they ask, “What is truth?” Therefore, when one is reborn as the holy duplication of Jesus – an Apostle or Saint – one is tasked to make the truth be known.

While the truth comes from Scripture, which is the Word of God, leading others to facts and figures, those explanations and interpretations are only the essence of truth.  The Word of God comes alive and speaks as the voice of God to those whose hearts are then opened to receive the Spirit.  One has to become one with God the Father, becoming one with the Son, as one’s soul is joined with the Holy Spirit – the right hand of God.

The Trinity is when Heaven and earth meet in you.  The Trinity is Jesus again born into the world so the voice of truth can be witnessed … a holy kingdom, where Jesus Christ is the high priest and God is the King.

The whole concept of “Christ the King Sunday” is then a return to being like Pilate, who asked Jesus, “Are you the King of the Jews?”

To see Jesus of Nazareth as the Christ is missing the point. One is seeing the flesh of life that stands on two feet and talks. One is seeing a human ruler of a religion that has not yet begun. That is the wrong way to see how Christ is the King.

Jesus said he was the kingdom, all by himself. The “authority” that made Jesus of Nazareth [born in Bethlehem] a kingdom was God. God was [and still is] his King. God is always the King who is not from this world of matter. God Created the material world from His Spiritual realm.  Thus, God rules over His kingdoms that have been reborn as Jesus of Nazareth – the prototype of a fully committed wife of God, whose love of God has brought forth the Christ Spirit.

Those potential wives [virgins] not prepared for the coming of the Lord [death] will weep.

The Christ Spirit is the presence of God in a human soul [not of matter], so Jesus of Nazareth [a planned human birth by God the Father of Jesus] was born without a self-ego, being given the Christ Mind from birth. The sacrifice of Jesus of Nazareth, which Pilate was destined to order after inspecting the Lamb of God and finding him without blemish, was so the soul of Jesus Christ could be released from its prison of flesh and then fill countless other souls who sacrifice their self-egos in order to serve the Lord.

This means “Christ the King” is God. To choose Jesus the man to be one’s Christ is to make the same wrong decision Pilate made. Pilate heard what Jesus said and ignored the statement that implied, “God is King, I am the kingdom.” All he heard was, “So you are a king?”

One has to listen to Jesus’ response. Jesus said to Pilate just as he says to all who fail to recognize God is the King that loves his subjects and His subjects love God in return. God IS the Christ.

When Jesus said, “You say that I am a king,” he meant that the reader (just as Pilate) thinks human subjects must kneel before a human being and swear allegiance. To worship Jesus [a man born of a woman, thus made of matter] as king means to sentence that king to crucifixion and let his soul go away from oneself, as Arthur was sent sailing off to Avalon.  Jesus has been exiled by Christians, sent to a magical island that is not of this world.

“Bye bye Jesus my king!” his fans cry. “Watch over my sinful soul and wretched flesh from your new island home, so my soul can sail off to be with you when I die.”

God is the Christ. God is the King. God is Christ the King.

Jesus is the model of what a loyal, loving subject does for one’s King.

Live the truth.

Revelation 1:4b-8 – See! He is coming after clouds

Grace to you and peace from him who is and who was and who is to come, and from the seven spirits who are before his throne, and from Jesus Christ, the faithful witness, the firstborn of the dead, and the ruler of the kings of the earth.

To him who loves us and freed us from our sins by his blood, and made us to be a kingdom, priests serving his God and Father, to him be glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen.

Look! He is coming with the clouds;

every eye will see him,

even those who pierced him;

and on his account all the tribes of the earth will wail.

So it is to be. Amen.

“I am the Alpha and the Omega,” says the Lord God, who is and who was and who is to come, the Almighty.

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This is the Epistle selection from the Episcopal Lectionary for the Twenty-seventh Sunday after Pentecost, Year B 2018, which is the Last Sunday after Pentecost. In the numbering system that lists each Sunday in an ordinal fashion, this Sunday would be referred to as Proper 29, but it is called “Christ the King Sunday.” It will next be read aloud in an Episcopal church by a reader on Sunday November 25, 2018. It is important because it is the Apostle John [the Beloved, not of Zebedee] speaking of the coming of Jesus Christ, about to be introduced to the seven churches of Asia. This reading begins a most ominous book that strikes so much fear in Christian ministers that they often refuse to preach about the End Times message this introduction leads to.

First of all, let me remind the reader that this reading selection is the Epistle of John. John was filled with the Holy Spirit, and like all other Epistle writers, wrote in the language of God, which is difficult for simple translators to grasp. This means the reading shown above is a paraphrase of what was actually written and needs a literal translation to accompany it, so one can catch where the translation read aloud becomes misleading. To avert that, I will present this short reading in segmented format, with each segment determined by punctuation marks (real or imagined).

Second, I would like to remind the reader that my abilities in reading holy texts originated when I began to understand the holy prophet Nostradamus. The ‘rules’ that I follow here [in all Biblical readings, but in particular with the Epistles of the Apostles] are based on those I was shown in the writing style of Nostradamus. I mention this now because there is a significant reflection of the presentation of heavenly language [that which appears earthly, but is invisible when paraphrase takes place] that John used in these five verses that is strikingly similar to that used by Nostradamus. I will point that out.

Third, this selected reading begins in the middle of verse four, following a colon mark. A colon [by standards of punctuation that are modern and may not have been standard at the time of original writing – thus imagined rather than real] introduces language that follows that will clarify a previous statement, usually by listing examples or explanation. By separating this selection form the preceding verbiage, some intent is lost in translation. To overcome that confusion, I will make some references to what was written prior to this reading [from John 1:1-4a].

Before I can present the segmented literal translation, based on the Bible Hub Interlinear translation and alternative possibilities of translation, I need to explain the comparison to the writings of Nostradamus. I will say that there is no arguing that the essence of Nostradamus’ The Prophecies and The Apocalypse of John is similar in they both present messages of doom and gloom, which has both classified as having written of the End Times. That general assessment is based on paraphrased translations, which may or may not be accurate.

What most people do not realize about Nostradamus is he wrote two letters that have been included in all books representing The Prophecies following the death of Nostradamus [1566]. One is the “Preface” and the other is his letter to King Henry II of France. Both are “epistles,” and they explain what can be found as the intent for all the poems of prophecy that make up The Prophecies.

In an analysis of both of Nostradamus’ epistles, one finds there are very few period marks, which makes it appear he was very long-winded, writing very confusing “sentences,” filled with many commas and other marks [like colons]. Amid all that length are a great many ampersands (&), which are commonly shown in paraphrase as “and.” Often, a comma will precede an ampersand, as “,&”. This is bad grammar written in a mark and a symbol, where a comma implies the use of “and,” and an ampersand implies the use of “and,” so the result reads as “and and.”

In my segmented translations of the letter of Nostradamus, I have found that an ampersand must be read as a mark of separation, such that the symbol that implies “and” begins a new segmented line. In the cases where Nostradamus would use an ampersand between two words, without a comma present, it was to indicate a symmetry between that stated prior and that stated following. That also acted to join two concepts together as one, but for that union to be understood, one had to first understand each of two parts fully. To do that, one part would end a segment, with the ampersand beginning the next segment, followed by the symmetrical word. This means every ampersand is not simply a shortcut “and,” but rather the symbol for “and” means the reader is signaled to pause and reflect deeply on how to read the verbiage that surrounds an ampersand.

In this reading from John’s Revelation, there are no ampersand symbols. However, there are seventeen uses of the Greek word “kai,” which commonly translates as “and.” When one reads Biblical Scripture, one often finds this repetition, and all the ands are completely overlooked, seen as nothing but just another bullet point on an endless list of things said. We miss the power of one word being repeated, due to our haste; we so desire to get to the point quickly we fail to see the forest for the trees.

Of the seventeen uses of “kai” written in these five verses, eight follow a comma mark. Eight appear amid a segment, joining two words as one, but where symmetry should be given thought. Finally, there is one “kai” following a double-dash [em dash], which should be seen as similar to following a comma. In the segmented literal translation below, I have placed “kai” at the head of a segment of words, either a whole segment or a subset segment. I have not translated “kai” as “and.”

The Strong’s Concordance says the Greek word “kai” is a conjunction, meaning, “and, even, also, namely.” On the same page that links this word to the Bible Hub information, they state that the “NASB” [New American Standard Bible] shows this Greek word’s “translations” as an assortment of viable options. Those are: “accompanied (1), actually (2), after (2), again (1), again* (1), along (4), also (535), although (1), although* (1), besides* (1), both (37), both* (1), certainly (1), continue (1), either (2), else (1), even (132), forty-six* (1), if (1), including (1), indeed (20), indeed* (2), just (3), likewise (1), more* (2), moving about freely* (1), nor (4), now (2), only (2), only* (1), or (11), same (1), so (30), than (2), than* (4), then (105), though (1), though* (6), together (1), too (34), until (1), very (3), well (13), when (7), whether (1), while (1), whose* (1), without* (4), yet (9).” [NAS Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible with Hebrew-Aramaic and Greek Dictionaries]

The numbers in parentheses are the occurrences of that translation. The asterisks are not footnoted, but one can assume there might be debate about those translations. It is important to realize that “kai” is “the most common NT conjunction, used over 9,000 times” [HELPS-Word studies], meaning the most common translation is as “and.”  Therefore, the list above shows the exceptions to that common translation.

With that stated, I have not translated “kai” as a word that is limited in translation, denying other possibilities to be realized. Instead, I present it in its Greek spelling, so it is more like a symbol that implies “and” but is more [like Nostradamus used ampersands]. With this option now visible, I welcome you to read these five verses of John’s Revelation, while seeing “kai” as a time to pause and reflect on the importance of what has been said before and how an important transition is being made to that stated next.

Revelation 1

4b. Grace to you
          kai peace from him being
          kai who was
kai who is coming ,
kai from the seven Spirits that in the presence of the throne of him  ,
5. kai from Jesus Christ  ,
who witness [martyr] those who faithful  ,
those firstborn of the dead
          kai one ruler of the kings of the earth  .
Followers loving us
kai releasing us from the sins of us through the blood of him 
6. kai he has made us a kingdom  ,
priests all God
          kai Father of him 
to him this glory  ,
kai followers dominion into these ages  .
truly  .
7. behold!  ,
he is coming after this clouds  ,
kai will see him every eye  ,
kai those who him pierced  ,
kai will lament because of him all those races of the earth  .
certainly  !
truly  !
8. I am all Alpha
kai all Omega  ,
beginning
          kai end  ,
says the Lord one God  ,
one being  ,
kai who was  ,
kai who is coming  ,
one Almighty  .

Before beginning to understand the beginning of this reading, where verse four above is following a lead in from verse four that has been omitted, one should know what context was stated prior. Verse four begins by stating “John” as a one-word statement that identifies the writer of this epistle, but the capitalization is more than stating a proper name.

“John” is the translation of “Ioannes,” which has been adapted to “Joannes.” The meaning of that name is “God Has Been Gracious.” It is then that important Grace that is being told by the angel of Jesus Christ, “To those seven churches to those in all Asia.” This is to whom “Grace” is sent in a letter.

It is worthwhile to realize that verse four-A repeats the word “tais,” with the first one capitalized – the first word after the comma following “Ioannes.” I have translated both words as meaning “to those,” with “To those” having the importance of implying “God Has Been Gracious To those” who had been touched by John’s “Grace” from God. Those of the seven churches were then those who passed the truth of the Holy Spirit onto “all of Asia.” Therefore, “Grace to you” means all true Christians that had spread across the face of Asia, beyond the places in Greek Turkey [its modern name], eastward.

Verse three then plays into this aspect of “John,” who was the Evangelist that served the Lord by ministering to Jews and Gentiles, as an Apostle of Christ. When broken down into segments of words, it reads as such:

3. Blessed followers reading  ,
kai those hearing the words of this prophecy  ,
kai observing the things in it having been written  ;
those because opportunity close  .

This says that “Grace to you” is a “Blessing” from God to all “followers” (from “ho”) of Jesus Christ [like John], who walk in the footsteps of Jesus of Nazareth, having been reborn of the Christ. Those with that important “Blessing” will benefit from “reading” this epistle, where the Greek word “anaginōskōn” implies “discernment” (from the root “anaginóskó”) of the words read. That ability to “know certainly” comes from having been “Blessed” with the Christ Mind.

Next, one finds two segments that have been created with a comma leading to the word “kai.” To read “and” at those places lessens one’s ability to see the importance of a symbolic word that says, “and understand this.” One who is “Blessed” is given ears that hear the insight of the Holy Spirit, saying “Look closely here.” Look at how the “truth is being revealed” (from “prophēteias”) Then, look at how one should “observe the [hidden] things [that are] in it having been written.”

The Greek word “tērountes” means “observing,” but it is seeing what has been “kept intact” through a “guarded” way of “preserving” what has been written from being understood by those not “Blessed.” It is “those” (from “ho”) who understand the “opportunity” (from “kairos”) that comes from “close” inspection of the Word that is hidden in the words.

It is important to grasp that insight, especially when one wants to be responsible for a true prophecy of God, sent through Apostles. This is the purpose of God’s “Grace” – to be one of “those” who have seized the “opportunity” [the “time and season”] to be “near” or “close” to God.

Verse four-B then tells that God’s “Grace” bring “peace of mind” to those who have sacrificed their self-egos in subjection to God. This “well-being” comes “from him being” the replacement. This is the Christ Mind, which is born with the birth of Jesus Christ within one’s “being.”

The word translated as “being” is “ōn,” which is derived from “eimi,” meaning “I am, I exist.” While this can mistakenly be read as a statement of what “is,” in the present tense, that overlooks the value of having sacrificed an old state of “being” for what now “is,” through Christ. Jesus of Nazareth is “who was” the Christ alone, in his human flesh; but the sacrifice of that flesh and blood for others is then “who is coming,” where “erchomenos” is the present participle that “is” “coming” into Apostles and Saints.

The segment of words that follows a comma mark and begins with “kai” then places important focus on Jesus Christ being “from the seven Spirits,” where “Spirits” is capitalized. As one entity of two words – “seven Spirits” (from “hepta Pneumatōn”) – this is reference to Isaiah 11:2-3, which states: “The Spirit of the LORD shall rest upon him, the Spirit of wisdom and understanding, the Spirit of counsel and might, the Spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the LORD, and He will delight in the fear of the Lord.”[1]  As such, Jesus Christ is:

1. “The Spirit of the LORD,” meaning he is the Christ of God.

2. “the Spirit of wisdom,” means the Mind of Christ.

3. “[the spirit of] understanding,” means having the ability to discern Scripture.

4. “the Spirit of counsel,” meaning the role of a teacher.

5. “[the spirit of] might,” meaning the strength to withstand persecution.

6. “the Spirit of knowledge,” meaning the ability to know the hearts and minds of others.

7. “[the spirit] of the fear of the LORD,” meaning no sins or threats can influence.

All of this is made available to the servants who have been “Blessed” with the “Grace” of God, to be reborn as Jesus Christ. They all kneel before “the throne of him,” whose “presence” is within one’s heart, mind, and soul. That throne belongs to God. Those who have the presences of God in their flesh [as a soul in union with the Holy Spirit] will be at the throne of God as Jesus Christ, the right hand of God resurrected.

Verse five begins with the importance of that rebirth of Jesus Christ. The Greek word “martys” then says an Apostle or Saint becomes a “witness,” as “followers” (from “ho”) who were disciples of Jesus of Nazareth who became Jesus Christ reborn. They are therefore “faithful followers” (from “ho pistos”). Those first Saints were then the “firstborn of the dead,” where “firstborn” (from “prōtotokos”) means they were the “elders” of Christianity. They had been the “first reborn” as the Christ, having sacrificed their self-egos that kept them bonded to a mortal cycle of death. They were the first to break that cycle of reincarnation and sin.

The subset segment is then as symmetrical connection of “firstborn of the dead” AND “the one ruler of the kings.” The implication is the “firstborn” were initially twelve, with all twelve having the same ruler.

The Greek word “archōn” means “ruler, governor, leader, or authority.” It should not be read as “king,” because Jesus Christ is not only the ruler of Apostles [as their “governor” or “prince”], but also the same to the “kings of the earth” [a bloodline of European kings that would surface centuries after].

That last segment ended with the first period mark of this reading. The segments of verse five had focused on Jesus Christ. Now, there is a transition to the “Followers,” where the capitalized Greek word “” is written. “” has the same translation possibilities as “ho,” where “followers” is a viable translation to “the [one].” Either way, the importance conveyed by capitalization refers back to the “kings of the earth,” who will be “loving us,” who are the “firstborn” Christians.

The Greek word “lysanti” is translated as “releasing,” from the root word “luó,” but it is reference to the future when Christianity would be “unbound” from the Middle East and Eastern Europe, as a persecuted minority. Remember, the letter was written to the seven churches of Asia. The “sins” (from “hamartiōn”) being “released” are not wicked things done, but the “faults” seen in them by Eastern Jews. The rejection of Jesus by Jews [their own “blood”] would be soothed by the coming of Christian kings that would rise from the holy blood of Jesus of Nazareth.

The double-dash [also called an “em dash”] is not an often used punctuation in language. It is used today as a replacement for a comma, parentheses, or a colon. Because this extended hyphen ends verse five and a second is found amid verse six, one should see the two as marks that set aside the next two segments and the ensuing subset segment as a large aside [use of parentheses], which would act as a clarification of this element of “us through the blood of him.”

Verse six then makes one realize that the spread of Christianity is the “kingdom” John referred to. This is then where the “blood” (from “haimati”) of Christ is both the human sacrifice of him body and blood, “releasing” his soul so his Spirit could be in the “blood” of his “Followers.” That spiritual “blood” was then guarded by the physical “blood” of kings.

This physical bloodline plainly says Jesus of Nazareth had a child. That child was John the Evangelist [John the Beloved]. John, in turn had a daughter that traveled to Europe with Mary Magdalene, Mary Salome, Mary of Cleopas, and Joseph of Arimathea (see Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer), which is the stuff of lore known as the Sang Real (Royal Blood).

This then leads to another symmetrical arrangement where this “kingdom” of Christianity would be both “priests all God” AND “Father of him [“in Christ”].” While it is easy to read “God and Father of him,” that redundancy really makes little sense. However, when one see how this is a prophecy of future times, when there will be Christian “kings of the earth” and “kingdoms releasing” Christianity to grow, the “priests all God” are the kings of Europe [royalty] and their subjects, AND the “Father in him” is a Roman pope. Remember, John is writing a letter to the seven churches and all Asia, where each church will suffer future failures. Rather than see a limitation in this prophecy of John as just the seven villages in Greek Turkey, one can see the “Father in him” as the failure coming that involves the Church of Rome.

This then says, “to him this glory,” where the Greek word “doxa” not only states the generic state of ‘glory,” but also the “honor” and “renown” that this spiritual and physical bloodline will bring. Europe would become a place known as a bastion of Christianity. Additionally, the European “followers” of Christ would find “dominion” [“power, strength” from “kratos”] as Christian nations. As John was writing around 90 C.E., that coming strength that glorified Jesus Christ would last “towards” (from “eis”) the time when “ages” (from “aiōnas”) meet. The Age of Pisces [Jesus’s age] will last until the Age of Aquarius [age of knowledge and technology], which could come any time now.

As we often end a prayer with the word “amēn,” the word means, “verily” or “truly.” At the end of a verse, it can be read as, “so let it be.” It is important to note that the word follows the second period mark, and also ends with the third period mark, which makes “amen” a stand-alone sentence.

Verse seven begins with the important one-word statement, which in Greek is the capitalized “Idou.” The translation read aloud adds an exclamation point, which is perfectly allowed. Still, this important word is followed by a comma, which cannot replace that mark; it simply highlights how a mark of punctuation is simply a symbol that tells one how to read Scripture. The word itself implying it be spoken emphatically means the comma is separating that word from the next, placing focus on just that. “Idou” says, “Look!” “Behold!” or “See!” Following a one-word statement that says, “So let it be,” the shout is to “Wake up!” “Behold what will be!”

Following verse six telling of the vast spread of Christianity, John’s cry to “See!” he said “he is coming” (from “erchetai” – third person singular future), which indicates Jesus will come into the Apostles that will lead that expansion. This will be “after” (from “meta”) the timing of John’s epistle, as he wrote a prophecy. The Apostles of John’s day (the “firstborn”) will lay the foundation of that which “will be coming after” them.

John’s use of “clouds” is then not a literal descent of Jesus coming in the future from “clouds” (from “nephelōn”), but the emotion of Christianity will fall like rain from the sky, flooding the “kingdoms” with belief. This emotion will lead to Jesus seeing through the eyes of God’s faithful, so the presence of true Christians will allow “every eye” to “see” (remember this verse began with “Behold!”) Jesus Christ in those who have been reborn as him.

[Let me add that it used to be a common mistake to find the astrological sign Aquarius stated to be a Water Sign.  This is because Aquarius [in Latin] means “Water-bearer” or “Water-carrier.”  Aquarius is actually an Air Sign, such that “clouds” are water vapors in the sky.  In terms of “after,” the Age of Aquarius will “be coming after” the Age of Pisces.]

When John wrote, “those who pierced [Jesus],” those were Romans. The soldiers of Rome nailed his hands and feet to a cross. A Roman guard pierced Jesus’ side with a spear, to see if he was dead. The Romans were seen to be the ones who would “Behold!” the emotion of repentance foremost. It will be from their sorrow that the Church of Rome will align with the “kings of the earth” and spread Christianity to “all those races of the earth” that the Holy Roman Empire will spread.

John then emphatically stated, “certainly!” (from “nai,” which also says, “yes!”). That was an emphatic “assurance” this future would come. He then, again, added, “amen,” this time adding another exclamation point. John shouted, “So let it be!” It will “truly” come! And, it has come, as the truth be told.

Verse eight begins with “I am,” which presents the capitalized word “Egō” and the lower-case word “eimi.” In actuality, the word “eimi” alone says, “I am” or “I exist,” as an expression of the Greek infinitive “to be.” The capitalized “Egō” means (importantly) “Myself,” as an emphatic statement of “Me.” However, John is not the true author of this epistle, as he was being told what to write by the Holy Spirit of Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ had thus become the “Ego” of John, with John having sacrificed his self-ego to the Lord. Therefore verse eight begins by saying, “from a most holy Ego am I.”

This is then linked to the simple word “to,” a variation of the Greek word “ho,” which could state “followers,” as has been used prior. That plural indication of one type of people that are associated to “the one” can now appear as one claim for “all” followers of Christ. This means “Alpha” (a capitalized word of importance) becomes a word pointing focus on the “firstborn,” as alpha is the first letter in the Greek alphabet.

John then importantly spoke as a sacrificed self-ego that allowed “all” Christians to become the “Ego” of Jesus Christ, who spoke for God the Father, again in human flesh. One must remember YHWH means, “I Am That I Am.” Such an “Ego” brings the Mind of God as what “I am” Christians say.

The symmetry of “Alpha” AND “Omega” (another capitalized word of importance) is then separated into the focus that will be set on future Christians, who will be the last of a line. Since omega is the last letter of the Greek alphabet, it is then importantly representative of those who will come last. This means it cannot be God who is “Alpha and Omega,” because God has no beginning and no end. God is always, forever and eternal. Jesus Christ is an Age of Man, the one that calls for self-sacrifice for a higher, Spiritual goal.

That Age of Christ then has “beginning” AND “end,” another symmetrical arrangement of principles that must be understood individually. The “beginning” of God’s Christ goes back to God creating His Son, who most know as “Adam.” Adam is thus the “Alpha,” who was the first Son of God, the only Son made as Man. Jesus is then the “Omega,” as the “end” of that line of holy men who would reincarnate as God’s individual servants, sent to lead the children of God. Jesus is not the “end” entity as a human of flesh and bones, because his “end” became the exponential spread of that “last” Son into all who would duplicate that “end.”

All who will be duplicates of Jesus Christ, from “beginning and end,” “say the Lord [is] one God.” That is the commonality of all Christians, as they have within them the “Master” in Christ, who serves only “one God.” This is not done from a perspective of God being external, as determined by one’s self-ego, or human brain. It is known by the Mind of Christ, which comes from “being one” with God, through the marriage of the soul with the Holy Spirit. That sacrifice is possible when one realizes what “one was.” One can then commit to God so a marriage “will be coming.” The marriage is the union of “one” with the “Almighty.”

As the epistle selection for the last Sunday after Pentecost, also known as Christ the King Sunday, when one’s own personal ministry for the LORD should be well underway – one should realize that one is of the Omega class of Christians, nearing the end of an age – the message here is obviously misunderstood by most people. The message is to understand prophecy as a real warning to “Behold!” danger is at hand, because one’s soul is at risk. Stop looking up in the sky for something to happen in the clouds, when the cloud is one’s own confusion and distractions from self-indulgence.

In the Acts of the Apostles says:

You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.” After he said this, he was taken up before their very eyes, and a cloud hid him from their sight. They were looking intently up into the sky as he was going, when suddenly two men dressed in white stood beside them. “Men of Galilee,” they said, “why do you stand here looking into the sky? This same Jesus, who has been taken from you into heaven, will come back in the same way you have seen him go into heaven.” (Acts 1:8-11)

That same way was disappearing in “a cloud” that “hid him from their sight.” “See!” with your hearts, minds and souls. He has come in the same way, reappearing invisibly in Apostles and Saints. He returned the very next day [Pentecost, which happened to be a Sunday]. He has been here since that “Alpha” day in the “beginning.” “Why do you stand here looking into the sky?”

Who were those “two men dressed in white”? Well, they could have been the appearance of the constellation Gemini, which are the twins Castor and Pollux. That tells one the eve of Pentecost was during the time when the sun traverses Gemini, between late May and mid-June. Still, it could be Moses and Elijah, who Peter, James, and John of Zebedee saw with Jesus on the high mountain.

The point of this reading being public on a day that recognizes Christ the King is it paraphrases Scripture so it places Christians inside a cloud of confusion. God is the King. God is the Christ. Jesus is the Son of God, as God’s right hand reaching down to earth and filling human souls with the desire to please God, as did His Son Jesus Christ. It is now up to each individual to stop looking into the sky for Jesus to come save us. We need to become a cloud of love for God and let the rain of God’s love fall upon our souls.

We fear or are thrilled by the thought [a human ego minimal power] of John telling of the End Times to come.  That means people pour over documents, trying to find evidence of when this prophesied end will come … all for personal glory and profit.  Others refuse to “Look!” at the Revelation, because it frightens the paying members of a congregation.  No one has eyes that can see Jesus has long returned.  Had he not, there would be no pews for Christians to sit in.

John’s introduction of a holy prophecy points the loving finger at us today, who claim to be Christian but struggle to know just what that means.  We do not read today what each of the seven churches have failed to do, but failure is what all have done.  We are at the end of an age of man, when the time of Jesus Christ will collapse, caved in by the trinkets of invention.  You probably hold one in your hand now, or it is within easy grabbing distance.

These five verses [six including verse three] are pointing to our responsibility.  The time has come to bow down before the throne of God and commit our souls to His service.  God must be realized as one’s true King.  One’s only hope is to be knighted as the Son of God, the Prince of Peace.  We must hear from the clouds of emotion, a most holy voice say, “Rise Sir Christ, and serve your King with honor.”

[1] Some contend that Paul’s seven gifts of the Holy Spirit could be the “seven Spirits,” but the Holy Spirit is one Spirit, not seven.

#Acts1811 #Isaiah1123 #Revelation138