Results 1 - 3 of 3
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Results from: Answered Bible Questions, Answers, Unanswered Bible Questions, Notes Ordered by Verse | ||||||
Results | Verse | Author | ID# | |||
1 | "Least in the kingdom of God"? | Matt 11:11 | victorA | 122663 | ||
Three years later, on the day of Pentecost of the year 33, the apostle Peter said that the descendant of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, namely, King David, had not ascended to heaven and so was not in any kingdom of the heavens or kingdom of God in Acts 2:34, “Actually David did not ascend to the heavens,”. Peter said that after Jesus made the statement about Abraham, Isaac and Jacob in Matthew 8:11 at the time of healing the servant of a Roman centurion. So those three patriarchs could not be in the Kingdom class as joint heirs with the Lord Jesus Christ. They were his ancestors, who preceded him by more than seventeen hundred years. It is therefore evident so the scriptures harmonize, that in Matthew 8:11 Jesus referred to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob figuratively. On the occasion when Abraham offered up his son Isaac, Abraham would figuratively represented Jehovah God and Isaac represented God’s only-begotten Son Jesus Christ, who was offered up in sacrifice. Accordingly Jacob represented the spiritual Christian congregation, the “kingdom of the heavens” class; for, just as the congregation gets life through Jesus Christ, so Jacob got life from Abraham through Isaac. From this standpoint Abraham, Isaac and Jacob mentioned together in Jesus’ illustration would picture the great theocratic kingdom or government, in which Jehovah is the Great Theocrat, Jesus Christ is his anointed representative King, and the faithful, victorious Christian congregation that Revelation 7:4 and Rev. 14:3 numbers as 144,000 are the members of the body of Christ as joint heirs in the Kingdom. When this Christian congregation was founded on the day of Pentecost, its spirit-anointed members were made Christ’s joint heirs and were put in line for a place in the heavenly kingdom, to recline there at the spiritual table with the Greater Abraham and the Greater Isaac. The natural or fleshly Jews of the nation of Israel claimed to be the “sons of the kingdom” or the prospective members of God’s kingdom. From the day of Pentecost forward they saw the beginning and the gradual development of this theocratic arrangement, but because of their lack of faith in Christ they were not in it. Hence, as Jesus said (Matt. 8:12): “The sons of the kingdom will be thrown into the darkness outside. There is where their weeping and the gnashing of their teeth will be.” For this reason it became necessary that many Gentiles (non-Jews), like the Roman centurion whose faith brought a miraculous cure by Jesus, should come “from eastern parts and western parts,” from all around the earth, to become dedicated, baptized Christians. Thus they could help make up the full number of the Kingdom class. For faithfulness to the death these converted Gentiles are resurrected to heavenly life to recline at the heavenly table, as it were, with Jehovah God and Jesus Christ “in the kingdom of the heavens.” When understood this way, Matthew 8:11 agrees with Jesus’ words in Matthew 11:11: “Among those born of women there has not been raised up a greater than John the Baptist; but a person that is a lesser one in the kingdom of the heavens is greater than he is.” Since Abraham, Isaac and Jacob are not greater than John, they will not be literally in the kingdom of the heavens. Jesus used them only as an illustration of those who will actually be in it. Wow, you picked a deep subject, a great subject a key to understanding the Kingdom of God. |
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2 | "Least in the kingdom of God"? | Matt 11:11 | Hank | 122703 | ||
victorA: Your theological terminologies and viewpoints are not unlike those of Watchtower Bible and Tract Society and its disciples, the Jehovah's Witnesses. Do you identify yourself as a member of this group? --Hank | ||||||
3 | "Least in the kingdom of God"? | Matt 11:11 | victorA | 122712 | ||
Greeting to you Hank, I'm glad you asked, and my answer is certainly. I've been a witness of Jehovah since 1959. Before that I was in the air force and it was then that I decided I would search for God. I looked into dozens of religions and what the witnesses had was the best I could come up with out there. I personally don't like to argue the Bible or run any one's religion down or especially the person because he's of a certain religion because I think that's his choice, or his circumstances. If I were born in China I don't think God would condemn me if I never hear differently. My life's about through though in this old world but my comfort comes from the Bible's hope of living again and seeing all my family that's died. I'm not alone though, I have my God, Jehovah and his Son Jesus, and love to read his Holy Word. I have lots of time for it, too. I enjoy sharing what I learn with others but don't push it on them. If they like what I tell them then we talk, it not then that's fine too. May I ask what faith you profess, Hank? You seem to know a lot about the witnesses since you concluded what you did from what I wrote about the Bible's two rewards, heavenly and earthly. And it does seem to me, as you pointed out in sort of a way, that the witnesses are pretty unified in their beliefs and too I must say, quite different than most others that believe in the Bible. Christian Love |
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