Do jews cling to hatred?
Luke(yair) 11.
There were no Jews in Cain's day; everybody back then was a Gentile; up to
and including, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
_
Luke(yair) 11
[ 47 “Woe to you! You build tombs in memory of the prophets, but your fathers murdered them! 48 Thus you testify that you completely approve of what your fathers did — they did the killing, you do the building! 49 Therefore the Wisdom of God said, ‘I will send them prophets and emissaries; they will kill some and persecute others’; 50 so that on this generation will fall the responsibility for all the prophets’ blood that has been shed since the world was established, 51 from the blood of Hevel to the blood of Z’kharyah, who was killed between the altar and the Holy Place. Yes, I tell you, the responsibility for it will fall on this generation!]
I believe that inwardly there were many jews including noah through generations preceding and suceeding adam.
Blessings Always
Numbers 27:8.
There were no Jews in Cain's day; everybody back then was a Gentile; up to
and including, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
_
Look closer.
There were no Jews in Cain's day; everybody back then was a Gentile; up to
and including, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
_
Perhaps this message is comparably addressed to the wife of havel. A comfort and warning against seeking vengence..
• 2John 1:5-6 . . And now I beseech you, lady, not as writing to you a new
commandment, but the one which we have had from the beginning, that we love
one another. And this is love, that we walk according to His commandments. This is
the commandment, just as you have heard from the beginning, that you should
walk in it.
The precise identity of the "lady" of this epistle is impossible to know for sure.
Some have construed it to be Christ's mom, and yet others as a local church to
which John mailed his letter, while others believe it refers to the church as per Matt
16:18. I tend to think it was a local church since 2John 1:13 indicates the lady had
a sister; viz: a sister church.
The first of the two loves in the passage is agapao (ag-ap-ah'-o) which is a verb.
The second love is agape (ag-ah'-pay) which is a noun. Neither of those two words
specifically refer to either affection or fondness.
Things like courtesy, generosity, loyalty, sympathy, kindness, civility, and charity
can all be extended to one's fellow Christians without especially liking them; in
point of fact, we may even wholly despise them with every fiber of our being. But
we dare not allow our low opinion to dictate how we treat them.
Anyway, the bottom line is: though Christians obsess and chirp about love till the
cows come home, the bald fact is that if they are not complying with Christ's
commandments in their association with other believers, then as persons they have
little to commend them.
NOTE: Christianity is a very practical religion. It not only brings sinners into a right
relationship with their creator, but it also makes them better people; viz: makes
them more civil and humane.
_
I love this. Read it twice,.
I was once asked by an atheist why Christians have so many rules when all they
need is just one: the so-called Golden Rule.
Well; for many of us who grew up in dysfunctional families, broken homes, foster
systems, gangs, and/or orphanages et al; the concept of love doesn't resonate in
our thinking; viz: it just bounces off us like a sonar ping because we quite literally
have no points of reference in our minds to aid comprehending what Christ means
by love.
● John 13:35 . . By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one
another.
We know what Hollywood and contemporary music mean by love, but many of us
scarcely have a clue what Christ means by it in that verse.
This is why the epistles are so valuable-- those writings not only show Christ's
followers how to recognize love when they encounter it; but also how to exemplify
it in their own lives so that those of us who were deprived of love growing up are
not left to figure it out on our own.
So; I'm utilizing this thread to go thru the epistles a little at a time each day
commenting on Bible passages that put a face on love so we can get to know it
better.
Buen Camino
(Pleasant Journey)
_
I was once asked by an atheist why Christians have so many rules when all they
need is just one: the so-called Golden Rule.
Well; for many of us who grew up in dysfunctional families, broken homes, foster
systems, gangs, and/or orphanages et al; the concept of love doesn't resonate in
our thinking; viz: it just bounces off us like a sonar ping because we quite literally
have no points of reference in our minds to aid comprehending what Christ means
by love.
We know what Hollywood and contemporary music mean by love, but many of us
scarcely have a clue what Christ means by it.