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Featured All Israel Will be Saved. Romans 11:26

Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by asterisktom, Apr 6, 2016.

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  1. Yeshua1

    Yeshua1 Well-Known Member
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    I would think that all of us would know that for serious original language reseach/studying, good lexicons and grammars manditory!

    Just curious, i still us the BAGD, as you do, is that due to third edition appears to have some poitical correctness creeping into definitions?
     
  2. Yeshua1

    Yeshua1 Well-Known Member
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    never could understand why God seemed to always do a literal fulfillment of prophecy up until birth of Jesus, but now doing it all spiritually?
     
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  3. Covenanter

    Covenanter Well-Known Member
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    We've got a toddler to look after this week, so I can't give full attention.

    I'm not KJV only. I tend to use the NIV and check other versions and word usage in context as appropriate.

    Dictionaries give several meanings, so we need the context for right understanding.

    Paul in Corinthians shows the need for spiritual rather than literal understanding.
     
  4. Jope

    Jope Member
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    I don't think Paul was talking about interpreting the Abrahamic covenant, containing the land promises to the Jews, "spritually", though. That makes the covenant nothing. Will God make our covenant nothing?
     
  5. Covenanter

    Covenanter Well-Known Member
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    Paul was talking spiritual against carnal.
    Dare we accuse God of not keeping his covenant promises to Abraham? He is even now enjoying them. See Revelation 7.
    Was he disappointed with the apparent failure of God's promises? At times, maybe, but his faith never failed, and now he is enjoying them. See Hebrews 11-12. He is first among the great cloud of witnesses to the faithfulness of God.
    All the believing people of God are enjoying the promised covenant blessings. They, we, comprise the blessed holy nation. We come as individual repentant sinners with faith in Christ Jesus. Those claiming to be Jews are welcome when they repent and turn to Jesus, and the Covenant promises are theirs.
    There is no other gospel.
     
  6. John of Japan

    John of Japan Well-Known Member
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    Yeah, that and the fact that it costs so much!
     
  7. Jope

    Jope Member
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    In case you're not aware, your scholars do.



    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
     
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  8. John of Japan

    John of Japan Well-Known Member
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    Okay, that's good to know. I think it was a valid question, thought, since the only people I know besides you that oppose the use of Greek lexicons are the followers of radical KJVO advocate Gail Riplinger, author of Hazardous Materials (seen here: AVPublications - Thank you for visiting!). Riplinger is a woman preacher (she calls them lectures), has no degrees or training in Bible or theology, and is twice divorced, yet I'm ashamed to say that she has many Baptist followers.

    This I completely agree with, and I often prompt my Greek students with the phrase, "For this meaning we need to look at the...," at which point they know to yell at me, "Context!" (One girl likes to yell it in answer to any question at all. :))

    I completely disagree, and am mystified about how you got this position from Corinthians. I suspect you are not understanding the term "spirit" or "spiritual" from a trichotomy view.
     
  9. Jope

    Jope Member
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    ...How is Abraham right now enjoying God's promise of land, made to him personally (Gen. 17:8)?
     
  10. Martin Marprelate

    Martin Marprelate Well-Known Member
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    Abraham is right now enjoying the promise of Genesis 14:19, which is a whole lot better than a piece of real estate in the Levant.
    The promise to his seed will be fulfilled as per Matthew 5:5. I think Canaan is encompassed in 'the earth.' Abraham's seed, of course, is not his literal descendants (Matthew 8:11; John 8:44), but, quite literally, the children of promise (Galatians 4:28).
     
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  11. Jope

    Jope Member
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    So, your opinion that heaven is better than earth negates God's land promises to Abraham.

    That doesn't answer my question to Ian though.
     
  12. Martin Marprelate

    Martin Marprelate Well-Known Member
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    Not at all. Read Genesis 14:19 again.
    I think you'll find it does.
     
  13. Jope

    Jope Member
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    ...So Matthew 5:5 tells us that Abraham is right now enjoying his land promises, and is walking around on planet earth. And I also might add that flying kangaroos eat tortilla chips with hot spicy salsa.
     
  14. Yeshua1

    Yeshua1 Well-Known Member
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    Too bad Augustine broughti nto the Church that spiritualizing view on prophecy!
     
  15. Yeshua1

    Yeshua1 Well-Known Member
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    Is it really worth that much to update it. as it really made that much of an improvement?
     
  16. John of Japan

    John of Japan Well-Known Member
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    No kidding.
     
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  17. John of Japan

    John of Japan Well-Known Member
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    Not yet to me. :)
     
  18. Yeshua1

    Yeshua1 Well-Known Member
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    There seems to be not enough updating to really warrent it, unless you are a prof at a Seminary and teaching the language or using it as a scholar/theologian would be in citing it!
     
  19. Jope

    Jope Member
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    It is better to say that Origen, or even Clement brought this hermeneutic into the Church. Augustine made it more orthodox, since he recovered the Church from Origen's heresies (like Universalism, for example). This makes him look more orthodox. Augustine wasn't too concerned with reforming the Church's eschatology, though, and the allegorical or nonliteral method, which is almost fully linked with Origen's amillennialism, was not reformed. Roman Emperor Constantine's conversion to Christianity also left the Church with a question of how it was to operate regally and this must have been a driving factor in Augustine's neglect of reforming this doctrine, replacing the Jewish promised kingdom with the (Christian) Holy Roman Empire.

    "The Jewish hermeneutic of a literal, futurist interpretation was followed by the Jewish writers of the New Testament, and Jewish views of the Antimessiah influenced both early Jewish-Christian interpretation and the interpretation of the many of the early (ante-Nicene) church fathers. For example, Iranaeus (c. A.D. 185) wrote: 'But when this Antichrist shall have devastated all things in this world, he will reign for three years and six months, and sit in the temple at Jerusalem; and then the Lord will come from heaven in the clouds, in the glory of the Father, sending this man and those who follow him into the lake of fire; but bringing in for the righteous the times of the kingdom.' [Amillennial, very late father] Eusebius also mentions (scornfully) a Jewish-Christian writer named Jude (dated to A.D. 202-203) whose treatise on Daniel's seventy-weeks prophecy held out an imminent expectation of the advent of Antichrist in his generation (Ecclesiastical History 6:6).
    By contrast, the nonliteral interpretation, also seen in later rabbinic Judaism, does not fully appear until the third centry A.D. with Origen and Augustine, who were influenced by the allegorical interpretations of the Hellenistic idealist school of the Jewish philosopher Philo. While in reality both amillennial and premillennial interpretations had been influenced from Jewish sources, during the chiliast controversy the amillennial charge against millenarianism was that it was 'Jewish.' While apocryphal elements in Jewish eschatology are to be rejected, premillennialists should find support from the Jewish roots of their interpretation which attest to its proper biblical context" (Mal Couch, Dictionary of Premillennial Theology, pp. 49-50).

    "The school of Alexandria was influenced by the Jewish exegete Philo, who used and popularized the allegorical method to explain away the anthropomorphic portrayals of God in the Hebrew Scriptures so objectionable to Platonic philosophers. Clement of Alexandria, the founder of the school of Alexandria, adopted Philo's allegorical approach as an apologetic device to explain away elements in Scripture that were objectinoable to Greek detractors of Christianity (anthropomorphic portrayals of God, earthy Hebrew expressions that offended Greek sensibilites, low level of morality of many Israelites, and the annihilation of the Canaanites) and to demonstrate that Christian theology, the true philosophy, was compatible with Greek philosophy (e.g., Clement allegorized the two fish in the feeding of the five thousand as the merging of Greek philosophy with Christian theology). Clement believed that God intentionally placed stumbling blocks to the reader in the literal meaning to awaken people's minds to find the hidden truths buried beneath the surface of the text. Unfortunately, by using the allegorical method for his apologetical agenda, he distorted the meaning of Scripture.
    Origen (d. 254), the most influential teacher of the Alexandrian school, was drawn to the allegorical method of Philo because it allowed him to reconcile Scripture with Platonism, the foundational presupposition behind all of his thinking. Just as Philo used the allegorical method to reconcile the Hebrew Scriptures with Platonic philosophy, Origen used the allegorical method to reconcile the New Testament with Platonic philosophy.
    While Origen believed that spiritual truth was self-consistent and accurate, he argued that the historical accounts were sometimes inconsistent and inaccurate (e.g., Genesis describes days before the creation of the sun; Satan showed Jesus all the kingdoms of the earth from atop a mountain; the Gospels disagreed among themselves about the order of the events of the life of Jesus). From a modern hermeneutical perspective, these issues seem rather naive; however, to Origen, they were unresolvable with the literal method. Origen attempted to resolve these alleged inconsistencies and other historical-exegetical dilemmas through the allegorical method: the stories do not mean what they say; their real meaning lay in the allegorical level [yet, the very definition of an allegory is that the basis of the metaphor is a real tangible story that happened]. According to Origen, the difficulties of Scripture suggest the existence of a deeper meaning: 'Wherever in the narrative [of Scripture] the accomplishment of some particular deeds did not correspond with the sequence of the intellectual truths, the Scripture wove into the story something which did not happen, occasionally something which could not happen, and occasionally something which might have happened but in fact did not' (First Principles 4.2.9).
    Origen was the first to set forth a systematic method of biblical interpretation and hermeneutical theory utilizing the allegorical method (First Principles 4). ...According to Origen, the Bible must be interpreted in a special way because it was divinely inspired. Inspiration did not mean that the words recorded and the events recounted in Scripture were the true message from God; rather, inspiration meant that behind the words and hidden in the details of the text was a deeper meaning that was the true Word of God" (ibid., pp. 144-5).
    The distinction between Origen and Clement is that Origen reconciled the New Testament with Platonic philosophy. Clement's Greek (Christian) audience was concerned with Hebrew (Old Testament) irreconciliations with Greek sensibilites. Both adopted the (Greek) nonliteral hermeneutic, though.

    It is also worth pointing out that Philo adopted his nonliteral hermeneutic from Greek origins. Greek scholars in his day used allegory and non-literalism to apologize for irreconciliations in Homer's texts, like poor behaviour of the (Greek) gods (Cambridge History of the Bible, Vol. 1).

     
    #139 Jope, Mar 28, 2017
    Last edited: Mar 28, 2017
  20. Martin Marprelate

    Martin Marprelate Well-Known Member
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    :rolleyes:
     
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