Christian Churches of God
No. A1
Statement
of Beliefs
of
the Christian Faith
The Statement is a summary of the biblical position as held by the Apostles during the first century. It presents the Bible position in a clear, coherent form. It is comprised of seven chapters covering the Godhead, the Plan of Salvation, Doctrines Concerning Human Responsibility, Doctrine Concerning the Messiah, The Problem of Evil, The Church and The Kingdom of God. There is an introduction which deals with the question of the divergence between modern and ancient Christianity. There is also an Appendix which deals with the development of Trinitarian doctrines.
Christian Churches of God
PO Box 369,
WODEN ACT 2606, AUSTRALIA
Email: secretary@ccg.org
(Copyright © 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2001,
2007, 2017 Wade Cox)
This paper may be freely copied and distributed provided it
is copied in total with no alterations or deletions. The publisher’s name and
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This paper is available from the World
Wide Web page:
http://www.logon.org and http://www.ccg.org
Statement of Beliefs
Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1.
The Godhead
1.1 God
The Father
1.2 Jesus
the Son of God
1.3 The
Holy Spirit
1.4 The
Relationship of the Holy Spirit to Christ and Humanity
1.5 The
Relationship of Christ, Satan and the Host to God
1.5.1 Christ
as the Son of God
1.5.2 The
Doctrine of Antichrist
1.5.3 The
Name and Sovereignty of God
Chapter 2.
The Plan of Salvation
2.1 The
Fall of Mankind
2.2 The
Salvation of Humanity
2.3 The
Bible as Inspired Truth
2.4 Repentance
and Conversion
2.5 Baptism
Chapter 3.
Doctrines Concerning Human
Responsibility
3.1 Prayer
and Worship
3.1.1 God
as the Object of Prayer and Worship
3.1.1.1 The
Object of Worship
3.1.1.2 The
Object of Prayer
3.1.1.3 Individual
and Collective Prayer on Behalf of Others
3.2 The
Relationship Between Salvation and the Law
3.2.1 God
is Our Rock
3.2.2 Salvation
by Grace
3.2.3 Obligation
under the Law
3.2.3.1 Why
Christians Keep the Law
3.2.3.2 Christians
as the Temple of God
3.2.4 The
Ten Commandments
3.2.5 Other
Laws Governing Human Conduct
3.2.5.1 The
Food Laws
3.2.5.2 The
Sabbath
3.2.5.3 The
New Moons
3.2.5.4 The
Annual Holy Days
3.2.5.5 Marriage
3.2.6 Financial
Stewardship
3.2.6.1 Towards
God
3.2.6.2 Towards
Others
3.2.7 Warfare
and Voting
3.2.7.1 Warfare
3.2.7.2 Voting
Chapter 4.
Doctrine Concerning the Messiah
4.1 The
Pre-existence of Christ
4.2 The
Crucifixion and Resurrection
4.3 The
Second Coming of Christ
4.4 The
Millennial Reign of Christ
Chapter 5.
The Problem of Evil
5.1 The
Existence of Evil Through the Rebellion of the Host
5.2 The
Doctrines Concerning Predestination
5.3 The
State of the Dead
5.4 The
Resurrection of the Dead
5.5 The
Punishment of the Wicked
Chapter 6.
The Church
6.1 Who
or What is the Church?
6.2 Church
Organisation
6.3 Aims
and Objectives of the Church
6.4 Sanctification
Chapter 7.
The Kingdom of God
7.1 The
Establishment of the Kingdom of God
7.1.1 The
Spiritual Kingdom
7.1.2 The
Millennial Reign of Christ
7.1.2.1 The
Return of the Messiah
7.1.2.2 The
Gathering of Israel
7.1.2.3 The
Day of the Lord
7.1.3 The
Eternal Kingdom of God
7.1.3.1 The
Coming of God
7.1.3.2 The
New Earth and the New Jerusalem
7.1.3.3 The
Destiny of Mankind
Appendix
Introduction
For seventeen hundred years Christianity
has been tied to a theological system, which has been based on Greek Philosophy
and a system related to neo-Platonism. The Unitarian simplicity of the biblical
message and the cohesiveness of God’s revelation to man over both Testaments
has been altered and obscured for the sake of power and domination of the then
known world.
The end result was what was understood to
be the structure as laid down in the councils of Nicaea (325AD), Laodicea (c.
366AD), Constantinople (381AD) and Chalcedon (451AD). The structure altered the
understanding of God along metaphysical lines ultimately producing the Trinity.
The Council of Laodicea (canon 29) also outlawed the Sabbath, under penalty,
introducing accepted pagan festivals from Sunday worship (with the December
Sun festivals later in 475 CE)
and the Easter system in place
of the Passover. What was also altered was the way the understanding of the
biblical system and law was to be interpreted. The law given to Moses was held
to be no longer relevant and the New Testament passages were re-interpreted to
justify existing pagan practices.
For example, the food laws were held to be
eliminated by misapplying Acts 10 and other texts. The effect on human health
was immediate. However, the end result for the environment could only really be
seen after some two thousand years. The breakdown in the food chain is
contributed to, in a large degree, by the consumption of foods prohibited under
biblical law.
The degradation of the land systems can
only be seen fully after the lands have been exhausted by failure to observe
the jubilee systems and the land Sabbaths because they are inextricably
interlinked with the calendar based on the nineteen year moon cycles. The introduction
of the solar calendar was itself a major step in destroying the understanding
of the patterns and cycles God had established for natural harmony.
Modern Christianity by and large has very
little if anything in common with original Christianity. The rise of Islam and
the later wars with Islam were arguably the direct result of the false
Christian system set up in Europe and West Asia by the Greek theological
systems using the Cappadocian theology based on the Triune God and attempted
mystical union with God and as God.
The Triune system simply does not work. The
end result of seventeen hundred years of this erroneous doctrine has been the
near destruction of the planet and the persecution of people genuinely trying
to obey biblical laws.
The purpose of this work is to isolate in
the clearest and simplest possible way the original message of the Bible and
the New Testament Church under Jesus Christ and the apostles. No doubt some
cherished fables will be challenged and demolished by what is stated herein.
The work has been written so that it is as near as possible a series of
biblical statements or paraphrases, which have the supporting text quoted. In
that way it is considered that the work is ultimately less ambiguous and the
intent is clear. Where possible the complete range of texts on a subject is
listed so as to avoid the all too prevalent practice of quoting in isolation or
quoting misconstructed texts. Some biblical texts are plain forgeries (e.g.
1Jn. 5:7 KJV; 1Tim. 3:16 KJV from Codex A), or mistranslations (1Cor. 15:28 RSV
etc; Rev. 3:14 NIV among numerous others), designed to negate contrary texts or
misconstrue texts so as to appear to support the Triune or Cappadocian system
when viewed in isolation.
When Messiah comes again he is going to
introduce in total the system of law that he gave to Moses at Sinai. Every
Christian has an obligation to identify and to implement the system of living
and worship that is laid down in the Bible. The Christian is obligated to
emulate the way of life of Jesus Christ and to live by the systems that Christ
introduced and lived by as a man and pre-incarnate. This work is dedicated to
producing the whole system in a coherent and identifiable manner so that the
false systems of seventeen hundred years can be swept aside and the original
and true way can be identified and implemented in the lives of all people no
matter what they have done in the past. Our task is to call people to
repentance and newness of life.
Chapter 1
The
Godhead
1.1 God the Father
The Supreme Deity of the universe is God.
He is the Almighty, the Creator and Sustainer of the heavens, the earth and all
things therein (Gen. 1.1; Neh. 9:6; Ps. 124:8; Isa. 40:26,28; 44:24; Acts
14:15; 17:24-25; Rev. 14:7). He alone is immortal (1Tim. 6:16). He is our God
and Father and the God and Father of Jesus Christ (Jn. 20:17). He is the Most
High God (Gen. 14:18; Num. 24:16; Deut. 32:8; Mk. 5:7) and the One True God
(Jn. 17:3; 1Jn. 5:20).
1.2 Jesus the Son of God
Jesus is the first begotten (prototokos) of the creation (Col. 1:15)
hence the beginning (arche) of the
creation of God (Rev. 3:14). He is the onlyborn (monogene) Son of God (Mat. 3:17; Jn. 1:18; 1Jn. 4:9), conceived of
the Holy Spirit and born to the virgin, Mariam
(Lk. 1:26-35). He is the Christ or Messiah (Mat. 16:16; Jn. 1:41), sent
from God to be our Saviour and Redeemer (Mat. 14:33; Jn. 8:42; Eph. 1:7; Tit.
2:14). He is called the Son of the Most
High God (Mk. 5:7). He was designated Son of God in power according to the
Spirit of holiness by his resurrection from the dead (Rom. 1:4). He is given
the throne of David to rule over the House of Jacob forever and of his Kingdom
there shall be no end (Lk. 1:32).
1.3 The Holy Spirit
The Holy Spirit (Acts 2:4) is that essence
or power of God which Christ promised to send to the elect (Jn. 16:7). It is
not a person but the extension of the living power of God. It is the means
whereby we become partakers of the Divine Nature (2Pet. 1:4), being filled with
the Holy Spirit (Acts 9:17; Eph. 5:18) and hence all Sons of God (Job 38:7; Rom. 8:14; 1Jn. 3:1-2) and co-heirs with
Christ (Rom. 8:17; Gal. 3:29; Tit. 3:7; Heb. 1:14, 6:17, 11:9; Jas. 2:5; 1Pet.
3:7). It is given by God to those who ask (Lk. 11:9-13) and obey him, dwelling
in those who keep God's commandments (1Jn. 3:24; Acts 5:32). The Holy Spirit is
the comforter that leads God's servants into all truth (Jn. 14:16,17,26). The
Holy Spirit confers the power to witness (Acts 1:8). It administers gifts as
recorded in 1Corinthians 12:7-11 and has fruits as described in Galatians
5:22-23 not being given by measure (Jn. 3:34 RSV; Rom. 12:6). It is the means
by which God can finally become all, in all (1Cor. 15:28; Eph. 4:6).
1.4 The
Relationship of the Holy Spirit to Christ and Humanity
The Holy Spirit operates from before
baptism. The Spirit draws the individual to God through Christ (Heb. 7:25).
The firstfruits of the Spirit are given to
the individual at baptism, from Romans 8:23, which clearly states that the adoption does not occur until the redemption of the body.
Thus we are born again but continue to grow in the Spirit daily in Christ Jesus
until we come into the glory of God. The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of Truth
(1Jn. 4:6, 5:6) and by speaking the Truth in all things we grow into Christ our
head in all respects (Eph. 4:15). The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of God (Rom.
8:14) and the Spirit of faith (2Cor.
4:13) which searches all things and knows all things (1Cor. 2:10-11, 12:3 ff).
Thus the Holy Spirit is not an independent
aspect of a triune God but is the means by which we become elohim (Zech. 12:8). The Spirit conveys to God an understanding of
our thoughts and very being. Being routed through Jesus Christ as our mediator
and intermediary elohim or theos (Ps. 45:6-7; Zech. 12:8; Heb. 1:8-9) it
enables Christ to help, teach and comfort us and to enable us to exercise the
power of God. The Spirit gives to each person the attributes God desires in
order to benefit the body as outlined in 1Corinthians 12:7-11.
The Spirit can be quenched (1Thes. 5:19) by
being neglected or grieved (Eph. 4:30) and thus admits of gains and losses in
the individual.
The fruit of the Holy Spirit is love from
Galatians 5:22. Therefore, if we do not love each other the Holy Spirit is not
evident.
The Spirit is the means by which we worship
God as stated in Philippians 3:3. Thus, it cannot be God as an object of
worship and, hence, equal to God the Father. It is a force which empowers
Christ. Christ is thus an Everlasting
Father (Isa. 9:6) of which there are many
fatherhoods in heaven and on earth (Eph. 3:15). Christ becomes Everlasting Father by delegation.
All of these fatherhoods or families are named for God the Father which is the
reason we bow before God the Father, worshipping Him (Eph. 3:14-15).
Christ was the firstborn or firstbegotten
of the creation. For him all things were created in heaven and on earth,
visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or principalities or
authorities, all things were created through him and for him. He is before all
things and in him all things hold together (Col. 1:16-17). But it was God who
generated him and who willed that the creation exist and subsist in Christ.
Therefore, Christ is not God in any sense that God the Father is God and who
alone is immortal (1Tim. 6:16) existing in abiding perpetuity.
Christians are called out of this world to
a life of service and dedication. Many
are called but few are chosen (Mat. 20:16, 22:14). Christians are the chosen,
as Christ was the chosen of God (Lk. 23:35). The elect were chosen by Christ
(Jn. 6:70, 15:16,19), under direction of God (1Pet. 2:4).
To assist the Church, the elect who are the
Church, or ecclesia, are given understanding of the mysteries of God. The Holy
Spirit was the mechanism by which they were given to understand the mysteries
of God and the Kingdom of God (Mk. 4:11). For the wisdom of God is spoken in a
mystery (1Cor. 2:7), which is explained by the servants of God (1Cor. 2:7,
15:51). For God's will is explained as a mystery (Eph. 1:9) which God gave to
His servants by revelation. Further the mystery is in the stewardship of Christ
through the elect. Paul wrote
...assuming that you have heard of the
stewardship of God's grace that was given to me for you, how the mystery was
made known to me by revelation, as I have written briefly. When you read this
you can perceive my insight into the mystery of Christ, which was not made
known to the sons of men in other generations as it has now been revealed to
his holy apostles and prophets by the Spirit; that is, how the Gentiles are
fellow heirs, members of the same body, and partakers of the promise in Christ
Jesus through the gospel (Eph. 3:2-6).
1.5 The Relationship of Christ, Satan and the
Host to God
There are multiple entities referred to in
the Bible as Elohim or Theoi, meaning gods. Christ was one of those subordinate
entities referred to in the Old Testament as Elohim (see Zech. 12:8). Christ is
referred to in the New Testament as being the new Morning Star at his return to
earth. He will share this rank with his elect (Rev. 2:28, 22:16).
God is held by the Bible to be the God and
Father of Christ (from Rom. 15:6; 2Cor. 1:3, 11:31; Eph. 1:3,17; Col. 1:3; Heb.
1:1 ff; 1Pet. 1:3; 2Jn. 3; Rev. 1:1,6, 15:3). Christ derives his life, power
and authority by command of God the Father (Jn. 10:17-18).
Christ
subordinates his will to that of God, who is the Father (Mat. 21:31, 26:39; Mk.
14:36; Jn. 3:16, 4:34). God gave the
elect to Christ and God is greater than Christ (Jn. 14:28) and greater than all
(Jn. 10:29). Thus God sent his only born
(monogenes) Son into the world that
we might live through him (1Jn. 4:9). It is God who honours or glories Christ
(Jn. 8:54), God being greater than Christ (Jn. 14:28).
God is the Rock (sur) as a Quarry or Mountain from which all others are quarried,
the flint of Joshua 5:2 which circumcises Israel, the principal and effective
cause (Deut. 32:4). God is the Rock of Israel, the Rock of their salvation
(Deut. 32:15), the Rock that bore them (Deut. 32:18,28-31). 1Samuel 2:2 shows
that Our God is our Rock, an everlasting Rock (Isa. 26:4). It is from this Rock
that all others are hewn, as are all the descendants of Abraham in the faith
(Isa. 51:1-2). The Messiah is hewn from this Rock (Dan. 2:34,45) to subjugate
the world empires. God is the Rock
or base upon which the foundation is laid and upon which Christ will build his
Church (Mat. 16:18) and upon which he himself rests. Messiah is the Chief Cornerstone of the Temple of God,
of which the elect are the Naos or
the Holy of Holies, the repository of the Holy Spirit. The Temple stones are
all cut from the Rock that is God, as was Christ, and given to Christ, the
spiritual rock (1Cor. 10:4), the rock of offence and stone of stumbling (Rom.
9:33) to form the Temple.
Christ is constructing the Temple so that
God may be all, in all (Eph. 4:6). God has given Christ to be all and in all (panta kai en pasin Col. 3:11) putting
all things under his feet (1Cor. 15:27) giving him to be the head over all
things to the Church which is his Body, the fullness of him that fills all in
all (Eph. 1:22-23). When God put all things under Christ, it is manifest that
God is excepted, being the One who put things under the feet of Christ (1Cor.
15:27).
When Christ subdues all things then shall
Christ himself be subject to God who put all things under Christ that God may
be all in all (panta en pasin 1Cor.
15:28 not as per RSV). Thus the Platonist doctrines that seek to merge God and
Christ in the Trinity contradict Scripture. Christ will sit on the right hand
of God, by direction of God (Heb 1:3,13, 8:1, 10:12, 12:2; 1Pet. 3:22) and
share God's throne as the elect will share the throne given to Christ (Rev.
3:21) which is a throne of God (Ps.
45:6-7; Heb. 1:8) or God is thy Throne
translated Your throne O God (see
footnote to annotated RSV).
God, who sends, is greater than he who is
sent (Jn. 13:16), the servant not being greater than his Lord (Jn. 15:20).
Christ was challenged in the desert by
Satan, and in effect the trial of Satan commenced. Satan, who was the Morning Star, The Lucifer or Light Bringer of
this planet (Isa. 14:12) as its guardian and teacher, was in effect one of the
Elohim who was subordinate to God the Father.
Christ was to be the Star that should come
out of Jacob (in Num. 24:17). Thus it was signified in the Books of Moses that
one of the Morning Stars that are mentioned as being present at the completion
of this planet (in Job 38:7), one of the elohim, was to become a human being of
Jacob and from David (Rev. 22:16).
This elohim we know as Jesus Christ was not
yet the Morning Star of this planet. That rank was held by Satan (from Isa.
14:12 and Ezek. 28:2-10).
Christ had been anointed as the elohim of
Israel from Psalm 45:7 and anointed above his companions or partners. However, Christ was not in fact in the
position of Morning Star and will not assume those duties until his second
coming. The rank and duties are to be shared with Christ by the elect, who
share his nature as Morning Star in their hearts (translated Day Star in 2Pet. 1:19). The elect are
promised to share in this power from Revelation 2:28.
Satan, as Morning Star, had challenged God
Most High or God the Father as we are told in Isaiah 14:12. He tried to ascend
or exalt his throne, a throne of God, above the Stars of God or the Council of
Elohim. This Council is the Congregation of the Elohim or Gods referred to in
Psalm 82:1. It is of interest to note that Irenæus, the disciple of Polycarp,
disciple of John, held that Psalm 82:1 referred to the Theoi or gods which
included also the elect, namely those of
the adoption (Against Heresies,
Bk. 3, Ch. 6, ANF, Vol. 1, p. 419).
There are multiple Sons of God (from Job
1:6, 2:1, 38:7; Ps. 86:8-10, 95:3, 96:4, 135:5) who are identified as the Bene Elyon or Sons of the Most High. The human elect are also included with the
heavenly Host as Sons of God (from
Rom. 8:14). Thus, Christ and the elect as Sons of God are one with God through
the Holy Spirit, predestined from the foundation
of the world. Christ laid down his power to become a man. He and all the
elect receive the Sonship in power according to the Spirit of holiness by the
resurrection from the dead (Rom. 1:4).
From Acts 7:35-39 it was an angel that
spoke to Moses on Sinai and this angel was Christ. In Galatians 4:14 Paul
likens himself to an angel of God even Christ Jesus.
Also we will become like angels (Mat.
22:30) as an order or isaggelos (from
Lk. 20:36), being co-heirs with Christ (Rom. 8:17; Gal. 3:29; Tit. 3:7; Heb.
1:14, 6:17, 11:9; Jas 2:5; 1Pet 3:7). The Old Testament identifies the Angel of
YHVH as both Yahovah and Elohim
(Ex. 3:2,4-6) where the God or elohim here was an angel; cf. Zech. 12:8).
Psalm 89:6-8 shows that there is a Council
of Holy Ones (qedosim or qadoshim, also used of humans) comprised
of both an inner and outer council. This is understood to be a celestial
Council of the Elohim of Justice.
1.5.1
Christ as the Son of God
Satan attempted to tempt Christ in a number
of ways. Firstly Satan referred to Christ as the Son of God (in Mat. 4:3, 4:6;
Lk. 4:3). The demons also referred to Christ as the Son of God (in Mat. 8:29;
Lk. 4:41; Mk. 3:11). Satan tried to have Christ prove his position as Son of
God by a display of power, in that God had promised that He would give His angels
charge of him (in Ps. 91:11-12). Satan omitted to keep thee in all thy ways and added at any time. Thus, by garbling Scripture, Satan attempted to take
Christ's life.
Christ did not at any time correct Satan or
the demons by asserting that he was God instead of the Son of God. Indeed, no
demon attempted to assert the deception that Christ was Supreme God until after
his death in order to establish a doctrine that said that Christ was God in the
same way that God the Father was God and thus achieve, after his death, a
deception that Christ would have refuted in life. In each of the temptations
the aim was to undermine the obedience of Christ to God and to, in effect,
break Scripture. Satan attempted to have Christ worship him. He promised Christ
the rulership of the planet then if
Christ would worship him.
Christ did not challenge his right to
transfer his rulership of the planet or indeed that he was ruler. Christ
instead replied
...it
is written: You shall worship the Lord your God and Him only shall you serve.
Christ did not tell Satan that Satan should
worship Christ but rather referred him to the law. Christ never at any stage of
his ministry claimed to be God. He said he was the Son of God. It was for this
reason that he was placed on trial.
As stated in Matthew 27:43
He
trusts in God. Let God rescue him now if He wants him, for he said, 'I am the
Son of God'.
It was here that Christ cried out to fulfil
the scripture in Psalm 22:1.
My
God, my God, why have you forsaken me?
Christ clearly did not consider himself
God. To suggest that he was part of the entity to which he appealed, in an
equal form, part of which was impassable, is absurd.
1.5.2
The Doctrine of Antichrist
The doctrine of Antichrist is stated in
1John 4:1-2. The correct ancient text for 1John 4:1-2 is reconstructed from
Irenæus, Chapter 16:8 (ANF, Vol. 1,
fn. p. 443).
Hereby
know ye the spirit of God: Every spirit that confesseth Jesus Christ came in
the flesh is of God; and every spirit which separates Jesus Christ is not of
God but is of Antichrist.
Socrates the historian says (VII, 32, p.
381) that the passage had been corrupted by those who wished to separate the humanity of Jesus Christ from his divinity.
Christ
as Son is not the One True God (Jn. 17:3).
Also in Luke 22:70 they all said: Are you then the Son of God?
He replied: You are right in saying I am.
He was recognised as the Son of God in
* Matthew 27:54 where
they said, Truly this was the Son of God.
* Mark 1:1 holds the
Gospel to be that of Jesus Christ, The
Son of God.
* Luke 1:35 states that
the Holy one to be born was to be called the Son of God.
To understand that Christ is the Son of God
is a revelation from God.
Simon
Peter answered and said, "You are the Christ, the Son of the living
God." Jesus answered and said to him, "Blessed are you Simon
Bar-Jonah, for flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but MY FATHER who
is in Heaven. (Mat. 16:16-17)
Also Matthew 11:27 states
All
things have been delivered to me by MY FATHER and no one knows the Son except
the Father. Nor does anyone know the Father except the Son and the one to whom
the Son wills to reveal him.
Thus the Father reveals things to
individuals and gives them to Christ who then reveals the Father to them.
1.5.3 The
Name and Sovereignty of God
There is no doubt that God is singular and
sovereign. Proverbs 30:4-5 shows the name of God and that He has a son.
Who
hath gone up to heaven, and come down?
Who
hath gathered up the wind in the hollow of His hands?
Who
hath wrapped up the waters in His cloak?
Who
hath established all the ends of the earth?
What
is His name and the name of His son? Tell me if you know.
Every
word of God [ELOAH] is flawless: He is a shield to those who take refuge in
Him.
Do
not add to His words, or He will rebuke you and prove you a liar.
The Bible interprets itself and the name of
God is directly supplied following the question and it is clear that this
entity is not a composite of Father and Son but, rather, He has a son.
Further, the New Testament states clearly
that it is the Father who is the object of worship. Christ warned the Samaritan
woman in John 4:21 that there was a time coming when they could not worship the
Father either on her mountain (Samaria) or in Jerusalem. But he distinctly says
in John 4:23
Yet
a time is coming and has now come when the true worshippers will worship the
Father in spirit and truth, for they are the kind of worshippers the Father
seeks.
Christ here identifies the object of
worship as the Father and not himself. It is thus quite blasphemous to assert
that one should worship the uplifted Christ from a perversion of John 3:14
where the Son of man was to be lifted up as Moses had lifted up the serpent in
the wilderness. The purpose of the crucifixion was so that man would have
eternal life, not that Christ could become an object of worship as is falsely
asserted. From this false premise, it is also falsely asserted that Christians
worship Christ's body and blood in the Eucharist.
Eloah is the God of the Old Testament and
the Temple and the God of Jesus Christ of the New Testament. The Temple at
Jerusalem was the House of Eloah (Ezra 4:24; 5:2,13,15,16,17; 6:3,5,7,8,16,17;
7:23). He was the Eloah of Israel (Ezra 5:1; 7:15), the Great Eloah of Heaven
(Ezra 5:8,12). He was the object of sacrifice at the Temple (Ezra 6:10) where
He had caused His name to dwell (Ezra 6:12). He ordered the Temple’s
construction (Ezra 6:14) and the priesthood stand in His service (Ezra 6:18;
7:24) and do His will (Ezra 7:18). The law is the law of the Eloah of Heaven (Ezra
7:12,14). Those that know the laws of Eloah are to teach those that know them
not (Ezra 7:25) and judgment is to be by the laws of Eloah (Ezra 7:26). This
being is the Father who is the singular Eloah and God Most High, the Father of
Messiah and all the sons of God.
Chapter 2
The Plan of Salvation
2.1 The Fall of Mankind
Mankind was created in the image and
likeness of God (Gen. 1:26-27). Adam and Eve were cursed because of
disobedience (Gen. 3:16-19). As a result of this rebellion, sin and consequently
death came upon all humanity (1Cor. 15:22; Rom. 5:12).
2.2 The Salvation of Humanity
God does not want any flesh to perish
(2Pet. 3:9). In order that humanity might escape the penalty for sin, which is
death, God instituted a plan of salvation involving a sacrifice in the death
and resurrection of His son Jesus Christ (Jn. 3:16). The plan is of a
sequential harvest of which Christ is the firstfruits of those who have died
(1Cor. 15:20). The plan of salvation is mirrored in the annual Holy Days of the
Bible (Lev. 23).
2.3 The Bible as Inspired Truth
Christ said: It is written Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that
proceeds from the mouth of God. (Mat. 4:4; Lk. 4:4). The Bible is known as
Scripture (Dan. 10:21), and is directed towards the salvation of mankind and
the manifestation of the power of God (Ex. 9:16; Rom. 9:17). The means of
salvation is Jesus Christ (Rom. 10:11) who was foretold by Scripture from Moses
and the prophets (Lk. 24:27), prophecy being Scripture (Mat. 26:56; Rom. 1:2).
All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for
correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be
complete, equipped for every good work (2Tim. 3:16).
The Scriptures, at the time of Christ and
the apostles were the Old Testament (Mat. 21:42; Mk. 12:10; Acts 17:2). The Old
Testament is the Scripture referred to as God
breathed or inspired in 2Timothy
3:16. The New Testament is additional to the Old Testament. It does not replace
the Old Testament.
The Old Testament was written in earlier
days for our instruction, so that by steadfastness and the encouragement of the
Scriptures we might have hope (Rom. 15:4). Error proceeds from a poor knowledge
of those Scriptures (Mat. 22:29; Mk. 12:24). The Beroeans (or Bereans KJV)
examined the Scriptures daily, proving whether what was said was in fact
correct. This was measured as being noble (Acts 17:11). The whole picture of
the Bible is taken from all parts of the Scripture, precept upon precept, line
upon line (Isa. 28:10). The Scriptures show that Jesus was the Messiah or
Christ (Acts 18:28). It is Christ, by means of the Holy Spirit, who opens the
mind of all the elect beginning with the apostles, so that the Scriptures can
be understood (Lk. 24:45).
The Scriptures of the Old Testament must be
fulfilled (Mat. 26:54,56; Mk. 12:10, 14:49) and cannot be broken (Jn. 10:35). Much Scripture was directed towards
and was fulfilled in Christ, or will be fulfilled in Christ at his second
coming (Rev. 1:7, 12:10, 17:14, 19:11-21), which will be in power and glory
(Mat. 24:30).
2.4 Repentance and Conversion
For humanity to live, or have eternal life,
God requires that it repents. Unless it repents it will perish (Lk. 13:3,5).
Christ was sent to call mankind to
repentance (Lk. 11:32). Christ began his ministry after the imprisonment of
John the Baptist (Mat. 4:12,17). John's imprisonment took place some time after the Passover of 28 AD (Jn. 3:22-24;
Mat. 4:12) being the Passover after the commencement of John's ministry in the
fifteenth year of Tiberius (Lk. 3:1). From that time, Jesus began to preach
saying Repent, for the kingdom of heaven
is at hand (Mat. 4:17). Christ charged his disciples to preach the gospel
of repentance, giving them authority over the demons or unclean spirits (Mk.
6:7,12; Lk. 10:1,17-20).
Repentance was taught as the prelude to the
blotting out of sin (or wickedness) (Acts 8:22) so that the time of refreshing
may come from the presence of the Lord, so that He might send the Christ who was
appointed for us (Acts 3:19-20).
The times of ignorance, as it is called,
God overlooked but, after Christ, He commands all people to repent, having
fixed a day of judgment for them (Acts 17:30). Thus repentance is extended to
the Gentiles (see also Acts 15:3).
From repentance and turning to God, the
repentant sinner must then perform deeds worthy of repentance (Acts 26:20).
The Church in Ephesus was called on to
repent and remember what it was from which they had fallen, and to do again the
works they did at first (Rev. 2:5). Likewise the Church in Pergamum was called
upon to repent (Rev. 2:16). So also was the Church in Thyatira (Rev. 2:21-22)
which had apostates thrown onto a bed with the false religious teachers. The
Church in Sardis was also called on to repent or Christ would come on them like
a thief in the night and they would not know what hour he was coming (Rev.
3:3). Those who Christ loves he reproves and chastens. He demands that they (in
this case the Laodiceans), are zealous and that they repent (Rev. 3:19).
Repentance is thus ongoing for all the Churches of God, being the
responsibility of all (Jas. 5:19-20).
2.5 Baptism
All authority was conferred on Christ
following on from his resurrection (Mat. 28:18). He commanded that his disciples
go and make disciples of all nations baptising them in the name of the Father,
and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit (Mat. 28:19). Teaching them to do all
that Christ commanded. Thus he would be with them always until the end of the
age (Mat. 28:20).
Repentance must be accompanied by baptism
for the conferring of the gift of the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:38). You cannot
receive the Holy Spirit unless you repent and are baptised, thus being born
again. Unless you are born anew you cannot enter the Kingdom of God (Jn.
3:3,5). Repentance is conditional to baptism and receipt of the Holy Spirit.
Thus infant baptism is logically precluded as contrary to the Bible. The
precondition of repentance was emphasised by the mission of John the Baptist
who was the precursor to the baptism of the Holy Spirit in Christ (Mk. 1:4,8).
John stated that Christ would baptise with the Holy Spirit and with fire,
concerning the unrepentant (described as chaff)
(Lk. 3:16-17). The Holy Spirit is conferred at the direction of God. By request,
signified by the laying on of hands, the Holy Spirit enters the individual. The
Spirit is thus conferred for every aspect of the work. The Holy Spirit operates
from before baptism in dealing with each individual. The Spirit draws the elect
to God through Christ (Heb. 7:25). The firstfruits of the Spirit are given to
the individual at baptism, from Romans 8:23, which clearly states that the adoption does not occur until the redemption of the body. Thus we are born again but continue to grow in the
spirit daily in Christ Jesus until we come into the glory of God.
This conferring of the Holy Spirit on
baptism is the water of the wells of
salvation promised by God through His prophets (Isa. 12:3). This water of
the Holy Spirit was God's promise to Jacob recorded in Isaiah 44:3. The Lord
God is the fountain of living water (Jer. 2:13, 17:13; also Zech. 14:8). This
is the river of the water of life
(Rev. 22:1). Christ, speaking of the Spirit (Jn. 7:39), said from him living waters flow (Jn. 4:10-14, 7:38
cf. Isa. 12:3, 55:1, 58:11; Ezek. 47:1). Israel is spiritually cleaned by water
from Ezekiel 36:25, which is the water of life or the Holy Spirit. The elect
take of this water without price (Rev. 22:17).
Chapter 3
Doctrines Governing Human
Responsibility
3.1 Prayer and Worship
3.1.1
God as the Object of Prayer and
Worship
3.1.1.1
The Object of Worship
The primary position and the principal sign
of the elect is and always has been that of absolute monotheism and a belief in
the subordinate relationship of Jesus Christ.
We worship no other Elohim other than God (Ex. 34:14; Deut. 11:16) or we
will be destroyed (Deut. 30:17-18). God gave His First Commandment as
I
am the Lord your God who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the land
of slavery. You shall have no other God(s) (elohim) before me (Ex. 20:2).
The concept of before here is that of beside
as in place of or without the authority of the God we
understand to be God the Father.
We are to love the Lord our God and to
serve Him with all our heart and all our soul, i.e. our being, and in return we
will have rain in due season giving crops and pasture for our flocks. In other
words, we will be fed with plenty (Deut. 11:13-15). But we have a New Covenant
where the Lord establishes His laws in our minds and writes them on our hearts.
He is our God and we are His servants, worshipping Him, by keeping His laws in our very
nature (Heb 8:10-13).
We are to worship before the Lord our God
(Deut. 26:10; 1Sam. 1:3, 15:25). This God is the One True God who is God the
Father. The requirement for eternal life is that we know Him and His son Jesus
Christ (Jn. 17:3). We ascribe to the Lord, the glory of His name; we worship
the Lord in holy array (Ps. 29:2, 96:9). All the earth worships Him and sings
praises to His name (Ps. 66:4). This is prophecy and will come about. All
nations which He has made will come and bow down, trembling (Ps. 96:9) before
Him, glorifying His name, for He alone is God (Ps. 86:9-10), the Lord our
maker. He is our God and we are the sheep of His hand (Ps. 95:6-7). He is Holy
(Ps. 99:5,9). The understanding of whom we worship is also demonstrated by two
signs which together with the understanding of the nature of God form the basis
of the sealing of the elect. The two signs are:
1. The Sabbath (from Ex. 20:8,10,11; Deut. 5:12). The Sabbath is the sign between us and God
who makes us holy (Ex. 31:12-14); and
2. The Passover. The Passover is a sign or seal where, from Exodus 13:9,16, the Passover, including
the Feast of Unleavened Bread, is the sign of the law of the Lord (Deut. 6:8)
and of His redemption of Israel (Deut. 6:10) which, from the New Testament,
extends to all those in Christ (Rom. 9:6, 11:25-26).
These signs of the law, the Sabbath and
Passover, are specifically intended to guard against idolatry (Deut. 11:16).
These two signs are the seal on the hand and the forehead of the Lord's elect
and, with the Holy Spirit, will form the basis of the sealing of the 144,000 of
the last days in Revelation 7:3. They lead into the rest of the Holy Days.
Christ said: You shall worship the Lord your God and Him only shall you worship (or
serve) (Mat. 4:10; Lk. 4:8). Thus service is worship in biblical terms.
Worship of God through the precepts of men
is worship in vain (Mat. 15:8-9). For the Father desires men to worship Him in
spirit and in truth (Jn. 4:21-24). For we are the true circumcision, who
worship God in spirit and glory in Christ Jesus (Phil. 3:3). All of the Council
of the Elders, including Christ, worship before God who created all things and
by whose will they were created and existed (Rev. 4:10). By command of Christ,
both in the law (Ex. 20:3) and by revelation, we worship God (Rev. 22:9).
3.1.1.2
The Object of Prayer
Humanity prays to the Lord God (Ps. 39:12,
54:2) who hears. Whatever you ask in prayer you will receive if you have faith
(Mat. 21:22). Christ was the example to mankind of prayer to his God and our
God who is the Father (Lk. 6:12). The example of how to pray is found in The
Lord's Prayer which is a blueprint of the structure of prayer given by Christ
(Lk. 11:2-4).
The primary objective of the elect and the
ministry is prayer and the ministry or service of the word (Acts 6:4). The
Council of the Elders is given responsibility for the monitoring of the prayers
of the saints (Rev. 5:8).
3.1.1.3 Individual and Collective Prayer on Behalf
of Others
Collective prayer of one accord is an
example of the apostles (Acts 1:14). This is taken up by the whole Church (Acts
12:5).
Prayer is not just for the Church; it is for
those who have a zeal but are not enlightened and do not submit to God's
righteousness. For Christ is the end (or objective) of the law that everyone
who has faith may be justified (Rom. 10:1-4).
Prayer renders assistance. Blessings
granted in answer to many prayers are appropriately given thanks for, also by
many prayers (2Cor. 1:11). Prayer must be in the spirit (Eph. 6:18). It must be
persevering prayer (Col. 4:2-4) and this is an aid to the ability to stand firm
in truth and righteousness (Eph. 6:14).
The prayer of a righteous person is of
great power in its effect. The prayer of faith will heal the sick and ensure
the forgiveness of sin. Therefore, we confess our sins one to another and pray
for one another that we may be healed (Jas. 5:15-16).
3.2 The Relationship Between Salvation and the
Law
3.2.1
God is Our Rock
God is our rock, our strength and our
salvation, in whom we take refuge (Ps. 18:1-2). We trust in Him and are not
afraid (Isa. 12:2). The knowledge of salvation is a function of Christ and the
prophets (Lk. 1:77). This knowledge is extended to the Church where the saints
are stewards of the mysteries of God (1Cor. 4:1). Salvation is from the Jews
(Jn. 4:22), but was extended in Christ to those who worship God in spirit and
in truth (Jn. 4:23-24). There is salvation in no other name under heaven given
among men that we might be saved (Acts 4:12). Thus salvation was given by the
gospel, being the power of God for salvation to everyone who has faith, first
coming to the Jews and then to the Gentiles. In the gospel, the righteousness
of God is revealed through faith for faith, for he who through faith is
righteous shall live (Rom. 1:14-17). God did not destine humanity for wrath but
to obtain salvation through Jesus Christ (1Thes. 5:9).
The understanding of God results in godly
grief, which produces repentance that leads to salvation (2Cor. 7:10). Thus the
gospel is the word of truth and is, hence, the gospel of salvation, resulting
in the sealing of the repentant with the Holy Spirit (Eph. 1:13). Salvation is
obtained from the sacred writings or Scripture. Being inspired by God,
Scripture is able to instruct the repentant for salvation through faith in
Jesus Christ (2Tim. 3:15-16). Although he was a Son, he learned obedience through what he suffered. Being made perfect, he became the source of
eternal salvation to all who obey him (Heb. 5:8-9).
Thus, he was offered once to deal with sin
and will appear a second time, not to deal with sin but to save those who
eagerly await him (Heb. 9:28). Salvation is thus common to all and was once and
for all delivered to the saints (Jude 3). Thus, there is no revelation after
that given to Jesus Christ by God and handed to John. All that is required for
the salvation of mankind is contained in the Bible. Salvation and power and
glory belong to God and He has revealed it to His servants through Christ and
it is not to be altered (Rev. 22:18-19).
The final sealing of the saints is thus
through the Holy Spirit being based on the law of God as revealed in the Bible
from the Old Testament commencing with revelation in the law.
Christ gave the law at Sinai as the Angel
of the Covenant or Presence, the Angel of Yahovah. He said that
...
till heaven and earth pass away, not an iota, not a dot, will pass from the law
until all is accomplished. Whoever then relaxes one of the least of these
commandments and teaches men so, shall be called least in the kingdom of
heaven; but he who does them and teaches them will be called great in the
kingdom of heaven ... (Mat.
5:18-19).
Thus Christ in no way diminished the law.
He kept the law and commanded people to do likewise. The law and the prophets
were until John. From John, the good news of the Kingdom of God is preached,
and everyone enters it violently (or is pressed into it) (Lk. 16:16).
But
it is easier for heaven and earth to pass away, than for one dot of the law to
become void (Lk. 16:16-17).
The law was given through Moses, yet it was
not kept (Jn. 7:19). Those who sin without the law, will perish without the law.
Those who sin under the law will perish under the law (Rom. 2:12) for sin is
lawlessness or transgression of the law (1Jn 3:4). Circumcision is of the heart
and the keeping of the tenets of the law is the measure of circumcision. He who
keeps the law is circumcised of heart, while he who is circumcised and does not
keep the law is as though he is an infidel. Those who are Jews are those who
keep the law from their hearts being Jews inwardly. However, those who say they
are Jews, and are not, come into condemnation (Rev. 3:9) and will be made to
prostrate themselves before the saints. (This prostration is also translated as
worship and is applied to Christ and
the elect).
The law is holy and the commandments are
holy and just and good (Rom. 7:12). The law, then, does not cause death but
rather sin, which is transgression of the law, working within the individual
(Rom. 7:13).
The law is spiritual but humanity is
carnal, sold under sin (Rom. 7:14). The truly converted person delights in the
law of God in their inner selves (Ps. 119:1ff.; Rom. 7:22). For the law leads
men to Christ, who is the end of the law (Rom. 10:4). Being led by the Spirit
liberates the individual from being under the law (Gal. 5:18). Not because it
does away with the law but rather it enables the law to be kept from inner
desire and right action, being in our very nature (Heb. 8:10-13). The law of
God is pursued by faith and not by works (Rom. 9:32). Obedience to the
commandments is a necessary prerequisite to the retention of the Holy Spirit
which dwells in those who keep God's commandments (1Jn. 3:24; Acts 5:32). Thus
it is impossible to be a Christian and love God and Christ without keeping the
law. This, of necessity, involves keeping the Sabbath as the Fourth
Commandment.
3.2.2
Salvation by Grace
The grace of God has appeared for the
salvation of all men, training us to renounce all irreligious and worldly
passions, and to live sober, upright, and godly lives in this world, awaiting
our blessed hope and appearance of the glory of the great God and the saviour
of us; Jesus Christ (Tit. 2:11 see Marshall's RSV Interlinear Greek-English New Testament). Christ is thus the
appearance of the glory of the Great God who is our Saviour (Tit. 2:10). Grace
is thus a product of the activity of Jesus Christ.
The Church is guarded by God's power
through faith for a salvation ready to be revealed in the last time (1Pet.
1:5). The outcome of faith is the salvation of the soul. The prophets
prophesied about the salvation but did not know the time or the person of
Messiah when they predicted his suffering and subsequent glory (1Pet. 1:9-10).
Sin came into the world through Adam and
reigned from Adam to Moses. Death was the result of sin (Rom. 5:12). Sin
existed before the law was given to Moses (Rom. 5:13). Thus the consequences of
the law were already known from Adam, as sin is not counted where there is no
law. Grace thereby abounded because of the redemption of man from sin and the
law. Where sin increased, under the law, grace abounded (Rom. 5:15-21). By one
man's obedience many will be made righteous by grace which reigns through
righteousness to eternal life in the anointed Jesus (Rom. 5:20-21).
There is thus no condemnation for those who are in Christ (Rom. 8:1). The law is thus fulfilled in us who walk according to the Spirit (Rom. 8:4).
The Spirit directs the mind according to
its purpose (Rom. 8:5). The mind that is set on the flesh is hostile to God. It
does not submit to God's law and indeed cannot submit to the law (Rom. 8:7).
Thus, the carnal or unconverted mind is identified by its resistance to the
keeping of the laws of God.
The Spirit of Him who raised Christ from
the dead lives in the Christian, giving life through the Spirit dwelling in the
individual (Rom. 8:11). All who are led by the Spirit of God are sons of God
(Rom. 8:14) and this is by the grace of God. The law was given through Moses,
grace and truth came through Jesus Christ (Jn. 1:17). We thus cry Abba or Father developing the same Sonship (Rom. 8:15) as was given to our
brother Jesus Christ.
The law itself does not provide
justification. A person is justified through faith in Jesus Christ (Gal. 2:16).
The life they live is by faith in the Son of God (Gal. 2:20). Through the law,
we die to the law that we might live to God (Gal. 2:19). But we do not nullify
the grace of God by keeping the law because we are not justified by the law
(Gal. 2:21). We keep the law because the Spirit directs us and the law proceeds
from the very nature of God which we have put on and of which we are partakers
(2Pet. 1:4), as is Christ.
We are saved not by law but by the grace of
Jesus Christ (Acts 15:11). Sin has no dominion over the elect because they are
not under the law but under grace and are slaves to God (Rom. 6:14,15).
Nevertheless, we do not sin by transgressing the law because we are slaves of
God and righteousness and not of sin, becoming obedient from the heart to the
standard of teaching to which we were committed (Rom. 6:17-18). Whereas, before
we were dead through our trespasses, we are now made alive together with Christ
by grace (Eph. 2:5). We have been raised up with and seated with Christ in the
heavenly places so that God may show in the coming ages the extent and richness
of His grace and kindness to us through Christ Jesus (Eph. 2:6-7). For by grace
we have been saved through faith. This is not the doing of the individual; it
is the gift of God and not because of works so that no person can boast (Eph.
2:9). Thus, we keep the law through the Spirit of God by grace.
3.2.3 Obligation under the Law
There is an ongoing obligation to keep the
law which does not pass away, nor is it altered as we have seen (Mat. 5:18; Lk.
16:17). It was not kept correctly by the Jews at the time of Christ (Jn. 7:19),
being altered by tradition (Mat. 15:2-3,6; Mk. 7:3,5,8-9,13) into a burden or
yoke by the Jewish teachers of the day, making a trial of God (Acts 15:10).
There is, from above, a continuing
obligation to keep the commandments of God. It is extant and will not pass away
until the end of the ages which concern human existence.
3.2.3.1
Why Christians Keep The Law
Christians are saved by grace and not by
the law. Why then is it axiomatic that they acknowledge and keep the law?
Because:
The
Law of God emanates from the abiding goodness of His nature.
The law of God proceeds from the nature of
God and thus it stands forever because God Himself is unchangeable, being
essentially Good as the centre of ultimate goodness. In Mark 10:18 Christ said:
Why call me good? God alone is good or
Why ask me about what is good? One there
is who is good. If you would enter life keep the commandments (Mat. 19:17).
God's goodness leads each of us towards repentance (Rom. 2:4). The nature of
God is of unchangeable goodness. The heavenly Host partake of His nature. Thus,
they become constant in the divine nature and goodness.
In this way, Christ is the same yesterday,
today and unto the ages (aioonas)
(Heb. 13:8). The elect, by partaking of the divine nature (2Pet. 1:4), become
part of a divine priesthood, that of Melchisedek which is intransmissible (aparabaton) or unchangeable unto the age
(aioona) (Heb. 7:24). Christ is able
to save in entirety those approaching God through him (see Heb. 7:25 Marshall's
Greek-English
Interlinear). But he is not the object of worship nor the God that
commands by will.
The law of God is to be pursued by faith and not by works (Rom. 9:32). We
have a New Covenant where the Lord establishes His laws in our minds and writes
them on our hearts. He is our God
and we are His servants, worshipping
Him, by keeping His laws in our very
nature (Heb. 8:10-13). Thus, outward signs are nothing. It is the keeping the
commandments of God within us that circumcises us (1Cor. 7:19) as Christians
and members of spiritual Israel. It is those who enrage the dragon by keeping
the commandments of God. The keeping of the commandments of God identifies them
in the persecutions (Rev. 12:17). These are the saints who keep the
commandments of God and endure (Rev. 14:12).
3.3.2. Christians as the Temple of God
The saints are the Temple or shrine, the naos, of God and God's Spirit dwells in
them. If anyone destroys God's Temple, God will destroy him. For God's Temple
is holy and that Temple we are (1Cor. 3:16-17). For this reason, there are
obligations on Christians to maintain their own bodies in a healthy state as
fit receptacles for the Spirit of God. For God has said that He will live in
us, and move among us, and He will be our God. We are to be kept holy and
separate. God is to be our Father and we are to be His children (2Cor. 6:16-18
loosely quotes a number of OT texts; Lev. 26:12; Ezek. 37:27; Isa. 52:11; 2Sam.
7:14).
For this reason, the Christian should not
be mismated with unbelievers (2Cor. 6:14). They should cleanse themselves from
every defilement of body and spirit, making holiness perfect in the fear of God
(2Cor. 7:1). They are thus chosen from the beginning and saved through
sanctification by the Spirit and belief in the truth (2Thes. 2:14). Truth is
thus mandatory to mental health and a mark of the elect. It can be seen from
this development that the general laws of the Bible have specific meaning and
purpose. The measurement of the Temple of God takes place in accordance with
these laws (Rev. 11:1).
3.2.4 The
Ten Commandments
The Church is committed to the keeping of
the Ten Commandments as found in Exodus 20:1-17 and Deuteronomy 5:6-21.
The First Commandment is
I
am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the
house of bondage. You shall have no other gods before me.
God the Father is the one true God (Jn.
17:3) and there is no elohim that is before, or equal with, Him. It is
impermissible to worship or to pray to any other entity including Jesus Christ.
The Second Commandment is
You
shall not make for yourself a graven image, or any likeness of any thing that
is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water
under the earth; You shall not bow down to them or serve them; for I the Lord
your God am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the
children to the third and the fourth generation of those who hate me, but
showing steadfast love to those who love me and keep my commandments.
It is thus impermissible to make figures or
likenesses of any description for use in religious worship or symbolism. The
crucifix is thus forbidden to the church as a symbol.
The commandments themselves form part of
the identification of the religious system and are thus all entrenched.
The Third Commandment is
You
shall not take the name of the Lord your God in vain; for the Lord will not
hold him guiltless who takes his name in vain.
The name of the Lord God confers authority
and, hence, this law deals not only with simple profanity but extends to the
misuse of the authority of the Church and all those who purport to act at the
direction of God through Jesus Christ.
The Fourth Commandment is
Remember
the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days you shall labour, and do all your
work; but the seventh day is a Sabbath to the Lord your God; in it you shall
not do any work, you, or your son, or your daughter, or your manservant, or
your maidservant, or your cattle, or the sojourner who is within your gates;
for in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that is in them,
and rested the seventh day; therefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day and
hallowed it.
The seventh day Sabbath is thus mandatory
to the faith. No Christian can serve God and fail to honour the Sabbath, known
in the current calendar as Saturday. The establishment of another day of
worship other than the seventh day not only breaches this commandment it
becomes itself a symbol of idolatry being external to the express will of God.
It is an act of rebellion and hence the equivalent of witchcraft (1Sam. 15:23).
Linked with the Second Commandment which entrenches the Fourth it becomes
idolatry. The establishment of a calendar which adjusts the week on a
rotational basis has the same effect.
These first four commandments determine the
relationship of man to God and are identified under the first and major head of
the law, namely: you shall love the Lord
your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind
(and with all your strength Mk. 12:30). This is the Great and First Commandment (Mat. 22:37-38).
The absolute identification with God stems
from the faithful adherence to these commandments and the avoidance of any
action which would prejudice them.
The Second Great Commandment is
You
shall love your neighbour as yourself. There is no other commandment greater
than these (Mat. 22:39;
Mk. 12:31).
The Second Great Commandment is embodied in
the relationships advanced under the last six commandments of the ten and these
relate to humanity.
The Fifth Commandment is
Honour
your father and your mother, that your days may be long in the land which the
Lord your God gives you.
The family relationship is the fundamental
building block of any people and reflects the attitudes displayed in the wider
religious structure.
The Sixth Commandment is
You
shall not kill.
Christians are judged by the higher law of
not being angry with their brother. To harbour anger is to do violence to your
neighbour. Whoever is angry with his brother shall be liable to judgment;
whoever insults his brother shall be liable to the council, and whoever says,
'You fool!' shall be liable to Gehenna (or the grave or hell) (Mat. 5:22).
The Seventh Commandment is
You
shall not commit adultery.
Christians are judged by the higher law of
lust after another person who is not their spouse (Mat. 5:28).
The Eighth Commandment is
You
shall not steal.
To steal is to do violence to your
neighbour and to breach your relationship with God.
The Ninth Commandment is
You
shall not bear false witness against your neighbour.
Righteousness and justice are essentially
the same concepts being the same word in Hebrew. Thus, a Christian cannot be
righteous without being just. The perversion of justice by false testimony
interferes with the salvation of the Christian.
The Tenth Commandment is
You
shall not covet your neighbour's house; you shall not covet your neighbour's
wife, or his manservant, or his maidservant, or his ox, or his ass, or anything
that is your neighbour's.
Covetousness is a process which places
material goods or a sexual relationship above one's relationship with God. It
is in this sense idolatry. It makes another object the focus of desire and is
in contravention of the other commandments. In this sense, the commandments are
circular in that covetousness becomes a precursor to the breach of the others
and, hence, the breach of one aspect of the law breaches it entirely. There is
thus no relativity of sin. Sin is the transgression of the law. Christ gave an
explanation of the true understanding of the law in Matthew 5:21-48; dealing
with Exodus 20:13; Deuteronomy 5:17, 16:18 and also Luke 12:57-59.
The commandments are to be taught by all
parents to their children on an ongoing basis. They are to be a sign on the
hand and the forehead (by thought and action) and placed on the door posts of
the house (Deut. 11:18-20).
3.2.5
Other Laws Governing Human
Conduct
3.2.5.1
The Food Laws
The food laws are found in Leviticus
11:1-47 and Deuteronomy 14:4-21. They are based on the regulation of the human
body in a proper state of health and are based on sound physical principles.
The command is to be holy and the body rendered as a fit receptacle for the
Holy Spirit. There is a sound scientific basis for the food laws. Consumption
of blood is prohibited by Deuteronomy 12:16 and together with fat is prohibited
by Leviticus 3:17. Nothing that dies of itself or is torn is to be eaten (Ezek.
44:31). The prohibitions on the eating of fruit in the laws governing fruit are
found at Leviticus 19:23-26. These laws have spiritual implications.
3.2.5.2
The Sabbath
The seventh day Sabbath is to be kept (from
Ex. 20:8-11; Deut. 5:12-15) as an express commandment of the Lord and one of
the Ten Commandments. These are inviolate statutes forever to all people. The
Sabbath is holy. Anyone who profanes the Sabbath suffers death and is cut off
from their people (Ex. 31:14-15). It is a perpetual covenant between the people
of Israel and is a sign forever between them and God, acknowledging Him as
creator (Ex. 31:15-16). All Christians are spiritual Israel and all Gentiles
are ultimately to come into the nation of Israel. Therefore, the Sabbath is a
sign between God and His people for all time. The punishment for profaning the
Sabbath is the death entailed in forfeiting the Holy Spirit and being consigned
to the second resurrection (see Rev. 20:5). The Sabbath is a delight and is to
be honoured as the Holy Day of the Lord. It is not a day of idle pleasure but
of sacred assembly (Isa. 58:13-14). No work or burdens are to be carried on it
(Jer. 17:21-22).
Our Lord kept the Sabbath during his life
(Mk. 6:2). The apostles kept the Sabbath (and Holy Days) and we are to keep the
Sabbaths. The Lord will reintroduce the Sabbath, New Moons and Holy Days by
force of law again in the millennial restoration of the last days under
Messiah's government, punishing the nations which do not comply (Isa. 66:22-23;
Zech. 14:16-19).
3.2.5.3
The New Moons
The New Moons are required to be kept under
the law (Num. 10:10, 28:11-15; 1Chron. 23:31; 2Chron. 2:4, 8:13, 31:3). Trading
is suspended at this time as for the Sabbath (Amos 8:5). Israel kept the New
Moons (Isa. 1:13-14; Ezra 3:5; Neh. 10:33; Ps. 81:3; Hos. 2:11) as did the
Church over the centuries. The Church
kept the New Moons with the Sabbath and Holy Days (Col. 2:16). The New Moons
will be kept in the restoration under Messiah as a Sabbath (Isa. 66:23; Ezek.
45:17, 46:1.3.6).
3.2.5.4
The Annual Holy Days
The annual Holy Days are found at Leviticus
23:1-44 and Deuteronomy 16:1-16. These annual Holy Days mirror the plan of
salvation of the Lord. The Holy Days consist of:
*
The Passover and the Feast of Unleavened Bread
*
Pentecost
*
The Feast of Trumpets
*
The Day of Atonement
*
The Feast of Tabernacles or Booths
*
The Last Great Day.
They are mandatory and carry specific
requirements as signs between God and His people. The Holy Day is treated as a
Sabbath.
3.2.5.5
Marriage
Marriage is an holy institution. It
represents the union of Christ and the Church under God (Rev. 19:7,9). This
parable is explained in Matthew 22:2-14. It is a progressive institution with
Christ (Mat. 25:10) based on spiritual readiness. From the time of the final
reconciliation there will be no more marriage. Marriage was made for man and is
not an institution of the Host (Mat. 22:30). Thus, when humans rise from the
dead they neither marry nor are given in marriage (Mk. 12:25). This is when
they are counted worthy to attain to the next age through the resurrection.
They are then equal to angels and are Sons of God (Lk. 20:34-36).
Thus, marriage is an institution designed
for humans and will cease to exist after the human phase of the creation is
finished. From the creation of Adam, the institution was established so that a
man leaves his father and his mother and cleaves to his wife, and they become
one flesh (Gen. 2:24).
A wife is a wife by covenant and the Lord
desires godly offspring from this. The Lord hates divorce, which is violence
(Mal. 2:16). Divorce was permitted by Moses but Christians are not to put away
their spouse except for unchastity (Mat. 5:31-32). What God has joined is not
to be separated by man (Mat. 19:3-12). While an unbelieving spouse consents to
live with a believing spouse then the marriage should remain (1Cor. 7:10-16).
3.2.6
Financial Stewardship
3.2.6.1
Towards God
Financial responsibilities towards God are
found from Deuteronomy 12:5-19. It is the responsibility of every Christian to
support the activities of the Church. The principle is derived from the tithe
as offered to God through the priesthood and the Levites from the occupation of
Israel (Deut. 12:9-14) and precedes the Temple. The temple tax was taken up on
Atonement. A levy was taken up as recorded in Nehemiah 10:32. The work is
ongoing through the establishment of the millennial reign of Messiah (Mal.
3:1-6). At Malachi 3:7, God orders the return of the nation to Him and He will
return to them. The return is effected with the work of God and the funding of
that work by tithes (Mal. 3:7). Failure to pay tithes is equated to robbing God
(Mal. 3:8-10).
The payment of tithes, where collectively
followed, ensures that the work of God can go on and the fruits of the land are
ensured by God in return (Mal. 3:10-12).
The responsibility of the Church to God is
extant from the apostles even if not always exercised, or it is waived by the
ministry (2Cor. 12:13-18). For Christ despatched elders, two by two, and they
were to be supported in the work by the congregation with which they worked
(Lk. 10:1-12). Those who are employed in the temple services and proclaim the
gospel should be supported by the gospel (1Cor. 9:13-14). It is the
responsibility of the Church to provide for those who labour in teaching and
evangelism on a full time basis (1Tim. 5:17-18; cf. Deut 24:14-15).
Tithes are
acceptable to God except where expressly stated as being from dishonest gain or
where sacrificed to idols (1Cor. 10:27). Tithes are paid to the Church so that
is may assist those of its number in need (1Tim. 5:9-10,16). Tithes are to be
collected on a local conference basis and the tithe of the tithe is to be paid
to the headquarters conference as carried out from Numbers 18:26 and Nehemiah
10:37-39. The law on firstfruits
requires prompt payment (Ex. 22:29). The first of the firstfruits is to be
brought before God immediately at the beginning of the feasts; and particularly
on the first evening of Ingathering
or Tabernacles (Ex. 23:19). The firstborn is also holy to the Lord (Num.
18:15-18).
3.2.6.2
Towards Others
He who does not provide for his relatives
and especially for his own family denies the faith and is worse than an infidel
(1Tim. 5:8).
No Christian is to oppress or withhold the
wages of any person (Deut. 24:15). They are to pay all moneys owed and, in the
Sabbath year, to forgive debts owed by another of the faith (Deut. 15:1-3; Neh.
10:31).
Tithing for the feasts is regulated by a
number of texts. The second tithe is not to be consumed within the domicile but
at the place which the Lord shall choose (Deut. 12:17-19).
In the third year of the sabbatical cycle,
tithes are to be paid for the welfare of the poor (Deut. 14:28, 26:12). Third
tithe years fall on the years 1994-95, 2001-02, 2008-09, 2015-16, 2022-23,
2030-31. The sacred year 2030-31 is the first third tithe year of the new Jubilee cycle or the new Millennium.
This is based on the Jubilee years falling in 27-28 and 77-78 years from
Ezekiel 1:1. The third tithe obligation may be waived or varied according to
the Church constitution in areas where the social security system is adequate.
The Sabbath year is a year of rest for the
land, the vineyards and the orchards so that the poor may eat and the natural
fauna may eat (Ex. 23:10-11). Sabbath years fall on the sacred years 1998-99,
2005-06, 2012-13, 2019-20, 2026-27 with the Jubilee year falling in 2027-28.
He who is kind to the poor lends to the
Lord and He will repay him for his deed (Prov. 19:17) and he will not want
(Prov. 28:27), also having treasure in heaven (Mk. 10:21). God is able to
provide so that you may provide for every good work not only supplying the
wants of the saints but overflowing in thanksgiving to God (2Cor. 9:6-12).
3.2.7
Warfare and Voting
3.2.7.1
Warfare
The saints are priests of the Most High
God. It is unfitting for any Christian to take the life of another (Ex. 20:13;
Mat. 5:38-48; Lk. 6:27-36). If Christ's servants were of the world they would
fight that they might not be handed over to the worldly authorities (Jn.
18:36). Although they live in the world, they are not carrying on a worldly war
(2Cor. 10:3). The weapons used by the elect have divine power to destroy
strongholds (2Cor. 10:4). Thus, it is the obligation of Christians to support
the government of their country and to work in prayer and honest obedience to
the well being of their nation, that God may protect them through His power.
3.2.7.2 Voting
Christians are to uphold the laws of the
land except where in direct conflict with biblical law. Where required by law
to vote, Christians may exercise witness by voting where there is no conflict
with biblical principle. The choosing of leaders by election is derived from
Deuteronomy 1:9-14 and the end time or millennial prophecy of Hosea 1:11. The
involvement in political struggle is seen as an extension of warfare.
Chapter 4
Doctrine
Concerning the Messiah
4.1 The Pre-existence of Christ
Jesus Christ had pre-existence as a
spiritual being. He existed from the beginning of the creation (Jn. 1:1) being
the first begotten of the creation (Col. 1:15) and, hence, the beginning of the
creation of God (Rev. 3:14). He was the being referred to in the Old Testament
as the Angel of Yahovah, the Angel of the Presence or the Covenant. He was the
Angel who brought Israel out of Egypt and through the Red Sea. He was the Angel
in the Cloud and the Angel that spoke to Moses at Sinai (Acts 7:35-38). He was
the El Bethel or the El, the God or High Priest of the House of God (Gen.
28:17,21-22, 31:11-13; Heb. 3:1). Christ was the Angel of HaElohim (Gen.
31:11-13). He was appointed as elohim by his elohim (Ps. 45:6-7) who was God
the Father. He was faithful to Him who appointed him, as a son, just as Moses
was also faithful in God's house (Heb. 3:2), but as a servant.
Christ came into the world to bear witness
to the truth (Jn. 18:37). His Kingdom is yet to come to the earth. He was
destined before the foundation of the world but was made manifest at the end of
times for our sake (1Pet. 1:20).
4.2 The Crucifixion and Resurrection
Christ was sent into the world to save
mankind by taking away the sin of the world (Mat. 1:21, 9:6; Mk. 3:28) as the
lamb (Rev. 5:6-8). He was slain from the foundation of the world as an exercise
of God's divine prescience (Rev. 13:8).
Unless humanity believes that Christ is
Messiah they will die in their sins (Jn. 8:24).
Christ died for our sins in accordance with
the Scriptures and he was buried and raised on the third day in accordance with
the Scriptures (1Cor. 15:3-4), appearing to more than five hundred brethren
(1Cor. 15:5-6). Christ was already risen before the day called Sunday or the
first day of the week (Jn. 20:1; see also the questionable Mk. 16:9-10, note
tense re after he had risen). He was
stated to have been three days and three nights in the heart of the earth as
the Sign of Jonah (Mat. 12:39-40; see also Lk. 24:6-8).
Christ was
crucified (Mat. 27:32-50; Mk. 15:24-37; Lk. 23:33-46; Jn. 19:23-30) at about
the third hour, i.e. 9am (Mk. 15:25), until the ninth hour, i.e. 3pm (Mk.
15:33), of 14 Nisan. There is no proof as to whether this was on a stake or the
later development of a T cross. Regardless of this, the cross is not taken as a
symbol of the faith, stemming from ancient non-Christian superstition.
Christ was crucified and is risen (Mk.
16:6). On his resurrection he ascended to his Father and our Father and his God
and our God (Jn. 20:11-18). He sits on God's right hand with angels,
authorities and powers subject to him (1Pet. 3:22).
Christ gave the power to forgive and retain
sins to the Church through the apostles (Jn. 20:22-23).
4.3 The Second Coming of Christ
Christ came first as the sacrifice for the
redemption of sin. He did not come first as King Messiah and this was
misunderstood by the Jews of his day. They expected a conquering king (Mat.
27:11,29,37; Lk. 23:2-3, 37-38; Jn. 19:14-16). Nevertheless, he was
acknowledged by some through the Holy Spirit as the King of Israel (Jn. 1:49,
12:13-15) thus fulfilling prophecy (Zech. 9:9).
Jesus will come again in power, accompanied
by the Host of heaven (Mat. 25:31) as King Messiah (Rev. 17:14). His coming
will be clearly visible as lightning in the heavens (Mat. 24:27). He will reign
in power with the resurrected saints (Rev. 20:4).
He will destroy the man of sin at his
coming (2Thes. 2:8) and subsequently the world powers. The man of sin will come
to power through the activity of Satan with power and pretended signs and
wonders (2Thes. 2:9). This apostasy is sent upon the Temple of God because they
did not love the truth and so be saved. Therefore, God sends upon them a strong
delusion to make them believe what is false because they do not hold fast to
the truth in the first place (2Thes. 2:10-12). The Lord will destroy this
apostate system with the breath of his mouth and the appearance of his coming
(2Thes. 2:8).
4.4 The Millennial Reign of Christ
Christ will establish a reign on this
planet for a thousand years with the resurrected saints (Rev. 20:3-4). Satan
will be bound for a thousand years and sealed in the bottomless pit or tartaroo, the place of the fallen angels
(2Pet. 2:4). The saints, those beheaded for the testimony of Jesus and the word
of God and those who had not worshipped the beast and its image or received its
mark on their foreheads or hands, will be resurrected and will reign with
Christ for the thousand years (Rev. 20:4). This is the first resurrection (Rev.
20:5). The rest of the dead do not come to life until the thousand years are
ended (Rev. 20:5). This is the second or general resurrection.
During this thousand-year period, Christ
will re-establish the Kingdom according to the biblical laws he gave at Sinai.
This will occur from the day that he stands on the Mount of Olives (Zech.
14:4,6 ff). The nations will wage war against Jerusalem and will be destroyed
(Zech. 14:12). Everyone that survives of the nations shall go up every year to
worship the Lord of Hosts and keep the Feast of Booths or Tabernacles (Zech.
14:16). The Sabbath, New Moons and Holy Days will be mandatory and the law will
issue from Jerusalem. Those nations which do not send their emissaries to
Jerusalem for the Feast of Tabernacles will receive no rain in due season (Zech. 14:16-19).
At the end of the Millennium, Satan will be
released again to deceive the nations over all the earth (Rev. 20:7-8). They
will again be gathered for battle, but will be destroyed by fire (Rev. 20:9);
and then Satan will be destroyed. The general resurrection will then occur, and
the Judgment (Rev. 20:13-15).
Chapter 5
The
Problem of Evil
5.1 The Existence of Evil through the Rebellion
of the Host
Satan was cast out of heaven for the sin of
rebellion, which because it seeks to establish a will equal to or superior to
God the Father, is idolatry (or witchcraft as stated in 1Sam. 15:23). Satan
sought to make himself equal to the Most High or God the Father. Christ, on the
other hand, did not seek to make himself equal to God, subordinating his will
(Jn. 4:34).
[He]
being in the very nature of God did not consider equality with God something to
be grasped. But made himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant,
being made in human likeness, And being found in appearance as a man, he
humbled himself and became obedient to death - even death on a cross! Therefore
God exalted him to the highest place and gave him the name that is above every
name... (Phil. 2:6)
Thus God exalted Christ through obedience
because he did not seek equality with Him and did not seek to depose God, as a
third of the elohim and bene elohim had indeed sought to do.
In Luke 10:18 Christ said that he saw Satan
fall, like lightning, from heaven. Satan drew a third part of the Angels or
Stars of Heaven (Rev. 12:4). These angels were cast out with Satan to the earth
(Rev. 12:9). This desolation is symbolised by the desolation referred to in
Revelation 8:10 where the third angel demonstrates again the desolation caused
by the fall of a Star of the Host desolating a third of the creation. The Host
was desolated by the rebellion. The Host are the Tabernacle of God in heaven.
The rebellion saw a third of that tabernacle removed and the system of the
earth utters blasphemy against the name of God and His dwelling, that is, those
who dwell in heaven (Rev. 13:6). Thus, God dwells in both the heavenly
tabernacle which is the heavenly Host and also the elect, who are the earthly
dwelling of God.
5.2 The Doctrines Concerning Predestination
It is God through Christ, by means of the
Holy Spirit, who opens the mind of all the elect beginning with the apostles,
so that the Scriptures can be understood (Lk. 24:45). Christ spoke in parables
so that those who were not chosen would not understand. Thus, they would turn and
be saved (Mat. 13:10-17) before they were capable of entering into judgment.
God is merciful and does not wish anyone to perish. Thus by His divine
prescience each is called according to His purpose. For those He foreknew, He
predestined to be conformed to the image of His Son in order that he might be
the firstborn among many brethren. And those whom He predestined He also
called; and those whom He called He also justified; and those whom He justified
He also glorified. What then shall we say to this? If God is for us, who is
against us? (Rom. 8:28-31).
5.3 The State of the Dead
The state of the dead is silence (Ps.
115:17) and darkness (Ps. 143:3). There is no eternally existing soul. One fate
comes to all people (Eccl. 9:3). The dead know nothing (Eccl. 9:5).
Some of the ancient dead have no
resurrection (Isa. 26:14; see Companion Bible notation and Interlinears).
The dead of the saints are termed sleeping or those who have fallen asleep (see Mat. 9:24; Jn. 11:11; 1Cor.
11:30, 15:6,18,51; 1Thes. 4:13-15; 2Pet. 3:4).
5.4 The Resurrection of the Dead
God does work wonders for the dead and
those who are dead will rise up to praise Him (Ps. 88:10). His steadfast love
is declared from the grave (Ps. 88:11) when the dead are resurrected. For Job
knew that his redeemer lives (Job 19:25) and at last he will stand upon the
earth. After Job had been destroyed, he knew that from his flesh he would see
God, who would be on his side, and his eyes should see Him and not another['s
eyes] (Job 19:25-27).
Christ raised the dead that we might know
that he is the Messiah (Mat. 11:4-5). Lazarus was an example of this power (Jn.
11:11). This concept of the resurrection as attributed to the Messiah was well
known and expected by the authorities of his day (Mat. 14:2).
It was understood
that we should not all sleep but that we should all be changed, at the last
trumpet (1Cor. 15:51). Thus, the brethren will pass over generations and fall
asleep, but at the last days the Messiah will come while others of the saints
live. Thus all will be changed into immortal spiritual bodies (1Cor. 15:44 ff).
Those who have fallen asleep will be raised. Those who are alive who are left
until the coming of the Lord will not precede those who have fallen asleep
(1Thes. 4:13-15). The Lord will descend from heaven with the archangel's call
and the sound of the trumpet of God, and the dead will rise first, and those
who are alive, who are left, shall be caught up together and thus always be
with the Lord (1Thes. 4:16-17).
From the resurrection, the millennial rule
of the saints will commence. The saints will rule the nations with a rod of
iron (Rev. 2:26-27).
In the resurrection there will be no
marriage (Mat. 22:30). The saints are to be raised as spiritual entities.
Christ died for us so that when we wake from sleep we might live with him
(1Thes. 5:10).
It is important that we understand that
only the righteous pertain to the first resurrection. Righteousness (zedek) and
Justice in Hebrew are the same word. They are understood to be the same thing.
Thus, the unrepented perversion of justice precludes the elect from the first
resurrection.
5.5 The Punishment of the Wicked
Mankind is subject to a system of righteous
training. It is God's desire that no flesh should perish but that all should
reach repentance (2Pet. 3:9).
If God took back His spirit then all flesh
would perish together and man would return to dust (Job 34:15), thus the soul
is non-existent.
The whole of mankind not raised at the
first resurrection, which is a better resurrection (Heb. 11:35), will be raised
from the dead at the second resurrection after the millennial reign of Messiah.
This process is a period of judgment which appears to extend over one hundred
years (Isa. 65:20). The resurrection of judgment (Jn. 5:29) is one of
correction and teaching so that all mankind might be prepared to receive
eternal life. The word for judgment (kriseoos)
(rendered damnation in the KJV) has
the meaning of decision.
The sense is that of correction stemming
from opinions or decisions given concerning actions. It can carry the concept
of punishment or of retribution. However, the general populace that has not had
the opportunity of knowing God can hardly be punished for that fact. The wicked
shall be subjected to intensive training. If they do not repent after the
period of one hundred years allowed from the second resurrection, they will be
allowed to die and their bodies will be destroyed by Gehenna fire (translated hell)
(Mat. 5:22,29,30, 10:28, 18:9, 23:15,33; Mk. 9:43,45,47; Lk. 12:5; Jas.
3:6).
There are three words in the New Testament
which are translated as hell. These
are SGD 86 hades which approximates
SHD 7585 Sheol, or the pit or the
grave, the place where dead bodies are placed. The two other texts are SGD 1067
Gehenna, which is of Hebrew origin
for the Valley of Hinnom. This was a rubbish pit where refuse and dead animals
from Jerusalem were burnt. Thus, Christ used it figuratively in referring to
the disposal of the dead, both body and soul (Mat. 10:28), after judgment. The
third is SGD 5020 tartaros which is
the abyss where the angels were confined after the rebellion.
The eternal punishment (kolasin, a penal infliction) referred to
in Matthew 25:46 is in opposition to eternal life. It is simply death. The
sense of punishment such as in timoria
in Hebrews 10:29, stems from the sense of vindication. 2Corinthians 2:6 uses
the word epitimia from esteem as citizenship. Hence, punishment has this sense of removal of esteem
as a citizen.
Thus, there is no place of eternal torment
of the dead. The saints will be called to the first resurrection to do a job of
teaching in the Millennium so that the demons might be judged against their
performance and the world might have a comparative standard by which it might
measure the results. These will not die, in the sense that they are judged now.
They are referred to as falling asleep.
The rest of the world, not being part of
the elect, is not being judged now. The rest of the world will be raised and
corrected under supervision at the second resurrection (Rev. 20:12-13). There
is no other resurrection or punishment other than the second or general
resurrection. The repentant will be granted eternal life with the saints of the
first resurrection and the unrepentant will simply die and their bodies will be
burnt. After this, the state or condition of death and the grave, or Hades,
will be done away with (Rev. 20:14). The wicked who are alive at the return of
Messiah will be killed (Mal. 4:3) and consigned to the second resurrection.
The second resurrection was the punishment
inflicted on Judah because of their rejection of Christ. They were the sons of
the kingdom who were thrown into outer darkness (Mat. 8:12). They were
consigned as a nation to the second resurrection instead of partaking of the
divine nature (2Pet. 1:4) and the first resurrection. Apart from the allocation
as a tribe within the elect (Rev. 7:5), Judah was not chosen to partake of the
first resurrection. Many are called but few are chosen to undertake this task
(Mat. 22:13-14). Many who espouse Christ, but mistreat his elect, or who are
not diligent (Mat. 25:30) will in fact be consigned to the second resurrection
(Mat. 24:51, 25:30) for there are many excluded (Lk. 13:26-28) and even those
in the first resurrection are relocated in order of precedence (Lk. 13:30).
Chapter 6
The
Church
6.1 Who or What is the Church?
Christ said that he would build his Church
on the rock and the powers of death would not prevail against it (Mat. 16:18).
God is the rock upon which the Church is built. The Church is a collection of
individuals. It is not a building or corporate structure. The Church of God is
the name by which individual Churches are called (1Cor. 1:2; 2Cor. 1:1 and also
1Cor. 11:22 in reference to the Church at Corinth). Collectively they are known
generically both as the Church of God (Acts 20:28; Gal. 1:13; 1Tim. 3:5) and
the Churches of God (1Cor. 11:16; 1Thes. 2:14; 2Thes. 1:4). 1Corinthians 14:33
refers to the Churches of the saints, referring to the individuals of which
they are composed. The Churches were multi-locational and each was responsible
for its own affairs.
Individuals are called by God and given to
Christ (Jn. 17:11-12; Heb. 2:13, 9:15). The Lord adds to the number of the
Church day by day according to those being saved (Acts 2:47). The Churches were
identified by location (Rom. 16:1; 1Cor. 1:2; 1Thes. 1:1; 2Thes. 1:1; 1Pet.
5:13) and were often small or house Churches (Rom. 16:5,23; 1Cor. 16:19; Col.
4:15; Phm. 1:2). Christ was made the head of all things for the Church (Eph.
1:22). God reveals to the heavenly powers, His wisdom through the Church (Eph.
3:10). Christ is the head of the Church, which is his body, and it is subject
to Christ. Christ gave himself for the Church, as the head of each household is
required to do for that unit (Eph. 5:23-26). The Church is required to be
presented to Christ without spot or wrinkle being holy and without blemish
(Eph. 5:27). The Church is nourished by Christ (Eph. 5:29). Christ, as head of
the Church, was the firstborn from the dead so that he might have pre-eminence.
Thus the Church, being the body of Christ, is married to Christ as a group at
the first resurrection when the bridegroom comes (Mat. 25:1-10; Col. 1:18,24).
The Church comprises the Church of the firstborn and their names are written in
heaven (Heb. 12:23). The House of God
is the Church of the Living God, the
pillar and ground of the truth. Thus, the Church of God is founded on truth
(1Tim. 3:15).
6.2 Church Organisation
The Church as an entity is responsible for
the welfare of its people (1Tim. 5:16). This is on a local basis.
The Church is pastored by elders and
deacons who are chosen by the brethren (Acts 1:22,26, 6:3,5-6, 15:22; 1Cor.
16:3; 2Cor. 8:19,23), and who pray and anoint the sick brethren in the name of
the Lord (Jas. 5:14). The Holy Spirit makes them overseers of the flock which
is the Church of God (Acts 20:28). The Churches have great autonomy (3Jn.
1:9-10). The administrative work of the Churches is to be undertaken by deacons
and deaconesses (Rom. 16:1), who may be proved by this office (Phil. 1:1; 1Tim.
3:8-13). There are, in the Church, various functions including those of
prophets and teachers (Acts 13:1), then miracles, healings, helps, governments
and diversities of tongues (1Cor. 12:28). The teaching of the Church is by
known languages, or tongues that are ordered and understood, being interpreted
by those present (1Cor. 14:4-5).
The Churches are responsible for helping
the work of the disciples or evangelists who are appointed to work over larger
areas than that of individual Churches (Acts 14:23,27, 15:3,4,22, 18:22, 20:17;
1Cor. 4:17).
Christ gave specific messages to individual
Churches and the angels in charge of each of them to serve as examples to the
elect (Rev 2:1,8,12,18, 3:1,7,14).
The functions of judgment and determination
of day-to-day affairs are to be made by the ordinary members of the Church,
that they might be developed for their roles in judgment of the Host (1Cor.
6:4).
6.3 Aims and Objectives of the Church
The first objective of the Church is to
continue the proclamation of the gospel of the Kingdom of God as it was
commissioned to Jesus Christ (Mat. 4:17, 10:7, 11:1; Mk. 1:38-39; Mk. 3:14,
16:15; Lk. 4:43, 9:60).
The Church is to preach good tidings unto
the meek, to bind up the broken hearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives,
the opening of the prison to them that are bound (or bruised) (Isa. 61:1), and
the recovery of sight to the blind (Lk. 4:18). It is to heal the sick (Lk.
9:2).
It is to preach the acceptable year of the
Lord (Lk. 4:19) and to testify that it was Christ who was ordained of God to be
the judge of the living and the dead (Acts 10:42).
The feeding of the Churches is the second
objective of the elders (Acts 20:28) who endeavour to teach everywhere in every
Church (1Cor. 4:17). The gifts of 1Corinthians 12:28 are utilised to assist the
development of the Church. These spiritual gifts are to be developed with zeal
to the development of the Church (1Cor. 14:12). The rulership of a person's own
house is a guide to the effective rulership of the Church of God (1Tim. 3:5).
6.4 Sanctification
Those of the Church called by the Holy
Spirit (Rom. 15:16) to be saints are sanctified (1Cor. 1:2) by God the Father
and preserved in Jesus Christ (Jude 1).
The saints are sanctified by God through
the blood of the covenant (Heb. 10:29) and the body of Jesus Christ (Heb.
10:9-10). The saints are then saved in baptism (1Cor. 6:11). Thus the Holy
Spirit is a spirit of our God, and through the name of Jesus Christ the elect
are then sanctified and washed by his sacrifice continuing in the faith through
God (Acts 26:18).
The elect are granted forgiveness through
grace and maintain their position through faith thus sanctifying each other
both in the Church and in families (1Cor. 7:14). Thus, the unbelieving spouse
and the children are sanctified in the elect. The elect are sanctified into the
body of Christ being one body in Christ (Rom. 12:5; 1Cor. 12:20-27) and, thus,
sanctification is not dependent upon corporate structures.
Chapter 7
The Kingdom of God
7.1 The Establishment of the Kingdom
The establishment of the Kingdom of God was
foretold as eliminating the governments of this world by the advent of Messiah
at the end of the age (Dan. 2:44). The Kingdom of God was preached by Christ
who said that it was then at hand (Mk. 1:14-15). Thus the Kingdom is in two
phases; firstly, the spiritual Kingdom, and secondly the physical millennial
Kingdom under Messiah.
7.1.1
The Spiritual Kingdom
Up until Pentecost 30 CE only a few of the
prophets and leaders of Israel were given the Holy Spirit and for specific
purpose. No other nation, up until the admission of the Gentiles to the Church
from 30 CE, had the Holy Spirit. Thus all are confined to the second or general
resurrection in Revelation 20:4ff.
The Holy Spirit was given to mankind, from
the death of Christ, as the first phase of the Kingdom from Pentecost 30 CE
(Acts 2:1-4) which they saw come with power (Mk. 9:1). It is to be received in
humility and in a zeal for knowledge as a child (Mk. 10:15). Unless a person is
born again, through water and the Spirit, they cannot see the Kingdom of God
(Jn. 3:3-5).
The mysteries of the Kingdom of God were
confined to the elect and understanding is given by the Holy Spirit, thus the
Bible is written in parables (Lk. 8:10). The Kingdom of God is not meat and
drink, but righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit (Rom. 14:17). It
is not in word, but in power (1Cor. 4:20).
Repentance is an absolute prerequisite to
admission to the Kingdom. Repentant sinners will be admitted before the
self-righteous (Mat. 21:31-32). The calling of the elect is by the general
scattering of information likened unto seed (Mat. 13:3-9). It is scattered and
is received with great zeal through the Spirit (Mat. 13:44-46). Hence, many are
called but few are actually chosen (Mat. 20:16, 22:14). The calling gathers
others, as well as those of the elect, who are sifted at the end of the age,
either at the coming of Messiah or, for those who are dead, at the
resurrections (Mat. 13:25-30,36,38-40,47-50). The elect are predestined to be
called and hence justified and glorified (Rom. 8:29).
When the Kingdom
is given through the Holy Spirit, it is like a mustard seed which grows into a
mighty tree, or like leaven which leavens the whole being (Mat. 13:31-32), thus
enabling God to become all in all (1Cor. 15:28) (see Marshall’s Interlinear (Eph. 4:6).
The prerequisite is to seek first the
Kingdom of God and His righteousness and all other things will be added unto
you (Mat. 6:33). The power over the demons is a sign of the Kingdom of God in
the individual (Mat. 12:28). The execution of the will of God is the essential
prerequisite to retention of the Kingdom through the Holy Spirit. If it is not
utilised properly it is taken and given to others showing the fruits of it
(Mat. 21:31,43).
The Kingdom comes not by observation, but
is within the individual (Lk. 17:20-21). The Kingdom of God, also termed the
Kingdom of Heaven, is gained not by the profession of Christ as Lord, which is
one aspect of the elect, but by the execution of the will of God the Father
(Mat. 7:21). Through the humble execution of the will of God one becomes great
in the Kingdom of God (Mat. 18:3-4).
Those precluded from partaking of the
Kingdom are specifically mentioned in 1Corinthians 6:9-10, Galatians 5:21 and
Ephesians 5:5.
7.1.2
The Millennial Reign of Christ
The millennial reign of the Messiah is
specifically mentioned in Revelation 20:2-7. The thousand year period is
referred to as a Millennium or Chiliad.
7.1.2.1
The Return of the Messiah
The restoration of the biblical system
through the advent of Messiah is found in Zechariah 14:4. Christ said by
parable that he had to go away and then return (Lk. 19:12).
The Messiah will come to the Mount of
Olives. With his elect he will establish his government. He will rebuild the
Temple (Acts 15:16). He will reintroduce the biblical system including the
Sabbath, New Moons and annual Holy Day periods. All nations will be required to
send their emissaries to Jerusalem for the Feast of Tabernacles or they will
receive no rain in due season (Zech. 14:16-19).
The coming will be
with great signs and wonders, in power and great glory (Mat. 24:27,30; Rev
1:7). His return will be obvious and accompanied by heavenly signs (Rev. 6:12).
The powers will be shaken. The sun will be darkened and the moon will not give
its light (Mat. 24:29; Acts 2:20). He will be seated on the right hand of power
and will come on the clouds of heaven. God thus gives Christ power (Mat. 26:64;
Mk. 14:62; Lk. 21:27; Acts 1:11).
Christ will come with the shout of the
archangel Michael and at the last trumpet blast (1Thes. 4:16-17; Rev. 11:15).
When the son of Man comes in all his glory,
to be glorified in his saints (2Thes 1:10), with his angels, he will separate
people and deal with them (Mat. 25:31-46).
The elect, those of the Kingdom of God,
given the Holy Spirit through repentance and adult baptism, keeping the
commandments, will be resurrected at Christ's coming. This is the first
resurrection. The rest of the dead will not live until the end of the
Millennium. This is the second resurrection (Rev. 20:4 ff). The elect are the
hope and reason for the coming of the Messiah (1Thes. 2:19; Rev. 22:20). The
elect are to be established blameless in holiness ready for the coming of
Christ and the Host (1Thes. 3:13; 1Thes. 5:23). The love of the truth is
essential to be saved (2Thes. 2:10). The Lord will slay the wicked one at his
return with the breath of his mouth (2Thes. 2:8). The Church is admonished to
stay awake and not sleep because it does not know the hour the Lord comes (Mk.
13:35-37; Rev. 3:3,11). Christ returns in righteous judgment and makes war with
all those who refuse to keep God's commandments (Ps. 96:13; Rev. 19:11). Christ
will return and deal with mankind for all their activities (Rev. 22:12).
7.1.2.2
The Gathering of Israel
On the return of the Messiah the elect and
the survivors of physical Israel, some of whom will be used as priests, will be
gathered to Jerusalem from the four corners of the earth (Isa. 11:12,
66:19-21).
7.1.2.3
The Day of the Lord
Before the Day of the Lord, there will be a rebellion or apostasy, a falling
away (from apostasia) from the truth
and the law among the elect. The man of lawlessness (anomias), so named for the falling away from the laws of God
through his teaching among the elect, is revealed (2Thes. 2:3-8). He sits in
the Temple of God and is called God. He will be killed by Messiah at his
coming.
The Lord will
destroy those who war against Jerusalem. People, being destroyed, will panic,
turning against their fellows (Zech. 14:12-13). This will happen unexpectedly
(1Thess. 5:2).
The devastation will traumatise the earth.
Mankind will hide in the mountains and rocks because Christ has come in wrath
and no one will be able to stand (Rev. 6:15-17), given the trumpets and plagues
God will pour out in the last days (Rev. 8:7-9:21; Rev. 16:1-20). The end of
the Day of the Lord, which extends through the Millennium, will see the end of
the earth as we know it. The planet will be destroyed by fire (2Pet.
3:7-10,12), thus removing all trace of human habitation.
The entire process of the Day of the Lord
is geared to judge the earth and correct humanity (Jude 14-16). Those of the
elect who sin are given back into the world system so that they can be saved in
the Day of the Lord, by being corrected in the second resurrection (1Cor. 5:5).
Thus there are only two resurrections.
7.1.3
The Eternal Kingdom of God
7.1.3.1
The Coming of God
When Christ has subjugated every rule and
authority, he will hand back to God the entire system (1Cor. 15:24,28). Then
God will come to the earth and transfer the administration of the heavens here.
The whole earth is then full of His glory (Isa. 6:3) and God and the Lamb are
the lights of the system (Rev. 21:23).
7.1.3.2
The New Earth and the New
Jerusalem
Isaiah 65:17 states that there shall be new
heavens and a new earth created. The seed of Israel will remain before God within
this new system (Isa. 66:22) until the end of the Millennium when all flesh
shall be obsolete. God will dwell in Zion and it will be called the faithful
city (Zech. 8:3). The city of New Jerusalem will come out of heaven (Rev.
3:12). This New Jerusalem is the Holy City which comes down on the creation of
the new heaven and the new earth (Rev. 21:1-4,7,10). Then God will be with all
men. The former things will no longer be remembered (Isa. 65:17). We await the
new heaven and the new earth, in which righteousness dwells, according to the
promise (2Pet. 3:13). Many of the elect who overcome will be made pillars in
the new Temple of God (Rev. 3:12). Thus it is a spiritual edifice.
7.1.3.3 The Destiny of Mankind
The elect will be given administration of the
planet for the Millennium (Lk. 19:17,19), being like angels (Mat. 22:30),
inheriting the earth and ultimately seeing God, being Sons of God (Mat.
5:3-11). This position is extended to all nations (Mat. 8:11). This is the
pleasure of God the Father (Lk. 12:32). For all who are led by the Spirit of
God are Sons of God (Rom. 8:14).
The millennial Kingdom of Messiah is merely
the teaching vehicle to prepare mankind for their final responsibilities, thus
fulfilling their potential and the plan of God which was laid out before the
foundation of the earth.
The ultimate destiny of mankind is to be
prepared to take their place in the new integrated system of the Host and to
take up their rightful inheritance which is the development and rulership of
the earth (Ps. 8:1-9; Dan. 2:44-45) and the newly ordered universe (Dan. 7:27,
12:3).
Appendix
The
Spirit within Trinitarianism
The Trinitarians separated theology from
the so-called economy of salvation in
the Incarnation of Jesus Christ. LaCugna (GOD
FOR US The Trinity and Christian Life, Harper, San Francisco, 1991), in
dealing with the development of the doctrine of the Trinity and the separation
of theology from the Plan of Salvation (or soteriology) as revealed in the
Incarnation of Christ, noted that the Cappadocians oriented theology in a
direction which further contributed to the separation of economy and theology.
This trajectory, or course, led to
the
via negativa of Pseudo-Dionysius and,
finally, to the theology of Gregory of Palamas (Chapter 6).
In the Latin West, in the period immediately
following Nicaea, theologians such as Hilary of Poitiers and, perhaps to an
extreme degree, Marcellus of Ancyra, retained the connection between the divine
hypostases and the economy of
salvation. Augustine inaugurated an entirely new approach. His starting point
was no longer the monarchy of the Father
but the divine substance shared equally by the three persons [emphasis
added]. Instead of inquiring into the nature of theologia as it is revealed in the Incarnation of Christ and deification by the Spirit [emphasis
added], Augustine would inquire into the traces of the Trinity to be found in
the soul of each human being. Augustine's pursuit of a 'psychological' analogy
for the intratrinitarian relations would mean that trinitarian doctrine
thereafter would be concerned with the relations 'internal' to the Godhead,
disjoined from what we know of God through Christ in the Spirit (LaCugna, p.
44).
The Medieval Latin theology followed
Augustine and the separation of theology from economy or soteriology. The
entire structure became embroiled in neo‑Platonism and Mysticism.
The important notations of LaCugna are that
from Augustine the Monarchy of the Father was no longer paramount. The Trinity
assumed co-equality. This was the second step following on from the false
assertion of co-eternality. The correct premise was the concept of the
manifestation of the Godhead in each individual, namely the operation of the
Father by means of the Holy Spirit which emanated from Him through Jesus
Christ. This direction through Jesus
Christ enabled Christ to monitor and direct the individual in accordance with
the will of God who lived in each of the
elect.
Christ was not the origin of the Holy
Spirit. He was its intermediary monitor. He acted for God as he had always
acted for and in accordance with the will of God. But he was not the God. The Trinitarians lost sight of
this fact, if indeed they ever really understood the matter. As LaCugna says
the
Theology of the triune God appeared to be added
on to consideration of the one God (p. 44).
This affected fundamentally the way
Christians prayed. That is, they no longer prayed to the Father alone (Mat.
6:6,9) in the name of the Son as the Bible directs (from Lk. 11:12),
worshipping the Father (Jn. 4:23), but to the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
Further, the scholars developed a metaphysics of theology itself. But the
entire edifice was built in disregard or manipulation of the Bible. That is why
Trinitarians never address all Bible texts on a subject and mistranslate and
misquote other key texts ignoring the ones they cannot alter. But their system
is based on Mysticism and Platonism. LaCugna states that
The Cappadocians (and also Augustine) went
considerably beyond the scriptural understanding of economy by locating God's
relationship to the Son (and the Spirit) at the 'intradivine' level
(p. 54).
The One God existed as ousia in three distinct hypostases.
We have seen (Cox, The Elect as Elohim) that the Platonic term ousia and the Stoic term hypostases mean essentially the same
thing.
The relegation of the Spirit to operation
at the intradivine level means that the elect can never participate in the
nature of God as Christ participates in that nature. This assertion is contrary
to Scripture. The elect participate in the divine nature (2Pet. 1:4).
In Ephesians 1:22 God put all things under
the feet of Christ and made him head of all things to the Church. God raised
Christ
from the dead and He made him sit at His
right hand in the heavenly places, far above all rule and authority and power
and dominion, and above every name that is named, not only in this age but in
that which is to come; and He has put all things under his feet and has made
him the head over all things for the Church, which is his body, the fullness of
him who fills all in all.
Christ is thus given authority over every
name, as the name itself constitutes authority. He is given authority over all
things so that the Church might come into its inheritance through Christ in
whom the fullness of the Godhead dwelt bodily (Col. 2:9). This word translated Godhead here is theotetos meaning deity
or the state of being God.
Now, Thayer says that deity (theot) differs from divinity (Theiot) as essence differs from quality
or attribute (Thayer’s, p. 288). The
meaning here is that the fullness of the essence of God dwelt bodily in Christ.
It is this fullness of essence that is given to us so that all men put on the
new nature of God (Col. 3:10). They become neither Jew nor Greek but all are
Christ’s because he is in all (Col. 3:11). He develops men, through the power
of the Holy Spirit, in order to finally make God all in all (1Cor. 15:28).
When all things are subjected to him, then the Son himself will also be
subjected to him who put all things under him, that God may be [all in all KJV] (panta en pasin) [see Marshall's
Interlinear and also Col. 3:11 (panta
kai en pasin)].
The Trinitarians have begun to translate
this text as everything to everyone
to avoid the logical extension of God as essence extending to all men as it did
to Christ from these texts.
It is Christ who fills us with the fullness
of God (Eph. 3:19); the fullness of Christ being an image of the Father (Eph.
4:13). It is, thus, that we become an image or eikon of the Father as was Christ and thus we are Children of God
and co-heirs with Christ to the Kingdom of God (Rom. 8:17; Jas. 2:5); heirs
according to the promise (Gal. 3:29) of salvation (Heb. 1:14) and heirs
together of grace (1Pet. 3:7).
The Son of God in turn becomes an Everlasting Father (Isa. 9:6) being the
head of the fatherhood of the human Host thus taking its place alongside the
other fatherhoods in heaven of which there are many (Eph. 3:14).
For this reason I bow my knees before the
Father, from whom every family in heaven and on earth is named.
The word family here is patria or fatherhood. Thus the title
father, whether of households or of the household of God, is a delegated title
demonstrating the ultimate responsibility of each leader of each unit down to
families. Thus the order is from God to Christ to the male head of the
household (1Cor. 11:3) who must discharge his responsibility as God does to
Christ and the other Sons of God who are elohim
and the way those elohim in turn
discharge their responsibilities to those under them.
The Holy Spirit is the mechanism which ties
all of these entities to each other and confers the capacity to be elohim on
each of the Host. There is no question that the Holy Spirit is God in any sense
that makes it distinct from the individual and confined to an intradivine relationship of three
entities. All are Sons of God and, hence, co-heirs with Christ in the same
sense. The worship of the Holy Spirit would be, in a sense, that of
self-adoration as it is the means by which God becomes all in all.
Hence, its worship is logically prohibited
as self-adoration in the sense that it is a part of the individual. It is
properly a power or conferring attribute and not God Himself. The Holy Spirit
confers on us the ability to be Elohim or Theoi.
The Godhead is a structure which is extended into a Council. That
Council is referred to in the Psalms and other texts referred to below and the
Throne of God and the Council of Elders are described in Revelation 4:1 to
5:14. This Council which includes Jesus Christ as the Lamb, and High Priest
(from Heb. 8:1-2), serve and worship the Lord God Almighty (Rev. 4:8-11). In
serving God, Christ offered his life, as each priest must have something to
offer God by way of sacrifice (Heb. 8:3).
Revelation 4:8-11 notes that the Lord God
Almighty is enthroned above the elders who are also enthroned. Yet their crowns
are subordinate to the Lord God Almighty by whose will He created all things.
He is the Lord God of Jesus Christ and the Council.
There are multiple Sons of God comprising
the Host (from Job 1:6, 2:1, 38:7; Ps. 86:8-10, 95:3, 96:4, 135:5) who are
identified as the Bene Elyon or Sons
of the Most High (see also Sabourin SJ, The
Psalms: Their Origin and Meaning, Alba House, NY, pp. 72-74). The human elect
are also included with the heavenly Host as Sons of God (from Rom. 8:14).
Christ was the firstborn or firstbegotten
of the creation. For him, all things were created in heaven and on earth,
visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or principalities or
authorities, all things were created through him and for him. He is before all
things, and in him all things hold together (Col. 1:16-17). But it was God who
generated him and who willed that the creation exist and subsist in Christ.
Therefore, Christ is not God in any sense that God the Father is God and who
alone is immortal (1Tim. 6:16) existing in abiding perpetuity.
God is held by the Bible to be the God and
Father of Christ (from Rom. 15:6; 2Cor. 1:3, 11:31; Eph. 1:3,17; Col. 1:3; Heb.
1:1 ff; 1Pet. 1:3; 2Jn. 3; Rev. 1:1,6, 15:3). Christ derives his life, power
and authority by command of God the Father (Jn. 10:17-18). Christ subordinates
his will to that of God, who is the Father (Mat. 21:31, 26:39; Mk. 14:36; Jn.
3:16, 4:34). God gave the elect to Christ and God is greater than Christ (Jn.
14:28) and greater than all (Jn. 10:29).
Thus God sent his only born (monogene) Son
into the world that we might live through him (1Jn. 4:9). It is God who honours
Christ, God being greater (Jn. 8:54).
Christ laid his
power as a Son of God in the Host aside and became a man, being descended from
David according to the flesh (Rom. 1:3). He
was designated Son of God in power according to the Spirit of holiness by his
resurrection from the dead, as Jesus Christ our Lord (Rom. 1:4)
God is the Rock (sur) as a Quarry or Mountain from which all others are quarried,
the flint of Joshua 5:2, which circumcises Israel, the principal and effective
cause (Deut. 32:4, see Maimonedes, Guide
of the Perplexed, University of Chicago Press, 1965, Ch. 16, pp. 42 ff).
God is the Rock of Israel, the Rock of their salvation (Deut. 32:15), the Rock
that bore them (Deut. 32:18,30-31). 1Samuel 2:2 shows that Our God is our Rock,
an everlasting Rock (Isa. 26:4). It is from this Rock that all others are hewn,
as are all the descendants of Abraham in the faith (Isa. 51:1-2). The Messiah
is hewn from this Rock (Dan. 2:34,45) to subjugate the world empires. God, not Peter, nor Christ, nor anybody
else, is the Rock or foundation upon which Christ will build his Church (Mat.
16:18) and upon which he himself rests as a foundation.
Messiah is the Chief Cornerstone of the Temple of God, of which the elect are the Naos or the Holy of Holies, the
repository of the Holy Spirit. The Temple stones are all cut from the Rock that
is God, as was Christ, and given to Christ, the spiritual rock (1Cor. 10:4),
the rock of offence and stone of stumbling (Rom. 9:33) to form the Temple.
Christ will construct the Temple so that God may be all, in all (Eph. 4:6). God
has given Christ to be all and in all (panta
kai en pasin Col. 3:11) putting all things under his feet (1Cor. 15:27)
giving him to be the head over all things to the Church which is his Body, the
fullness of him that fills all in all (Eph. 1:22-23). When God put all things
under Christ, it is manifest that God is excepted being the One who put things
under the feet of Christ (1Cor. 15:27).
When Christ subdues all things, then shall
Christ himself be subject to God who put all things under Christ that God may
be all in all (panta en pasin 1Cor.
15:28 not as per RSV). Thus the Platonist doctrines that seek to merge God and
Christ in the Trinity contradict Scripture. Christ will sit on the right hand
of God, by direction of God (Heb. 1:3,13, 8:1, 10:12, 12:2; 1Pet. 3:22) and
share God's throne as the elect will share the throne given to Christ (Rev.
3:21) which is a Throne of God (Ps.
45:6-7; Heb. 1:8) or God is thy Throne
translated Your throne O God (see
footnote to annotated RSV).
God, who sends, is
greater than he who is sent (Jn. 13:16), the servant not being greater than his
Lord (Jn. 15:20). It is the utmost absurdity to suggest that a Being could be a
sacrifice unto itself. Such an act, logically, is suicide, or, within
Trinitarianism, a partial mutilation. Hence, the doctrine denies the
resurrection, especially from 1Corinthians 15.
Thus the distinction in the crucifixion and
resurrection is mandatory and complete. The resurrection had to be in the flesh
involving translation as the Wave Offering, otherwise there is no salvation and
no ongoing harvest. The preparation of Christ for the ascension to his God and
our God who is our Father (Jn. 20:17), was real and distinctive.
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