.
• Heb 10:21-22 . . Since we have a high priest over the house of God, let us
draw near to God with a sincere heart, in full assurance of faith, having our
hearts sprinkled to cleanse us from a guilty conscience
The Greek word translated "guilty" is okay as far is it goes, but what it really
means is condemned, i.e. rejected, defective, unacceptable, disqualified.
This goes all the way back to the forbidden-fruit incident where it's said:
"The man has now become like one of us, knowing good and evil." (Gen
3:22)
The man didn't become one of them, rather, he became "like" one of them,
i.e. supreme in his own mind, viz: the man became independent and self
reliant.
For example: upon tasting the forbidden fruit, Adam immediately perceived
that full frontal nudity is indecent. Well, his creator hadn't said a word about
decency; Adam came to a decision about it on his own, viz: a dress code
was something Adam felt proper rather than something he was instructed.
Sprinkling was a common ritual in the Old Testament-- sometimes with
water, sometimes with oil, and sometimes with blood --for example: Ex
29:16, Ex 29:21, Lev 14:7, Lev 14 16, and Num 8:7, et al.
Sprinkling typically serves to sanitize things in order to make them suitable
for God's purposes; and some sprinklings are only good for the moment,
requiring additional sprinklings from time to time. The sprinkling spoken of
herein is a one-time sprinkling that never needs repeating. (Heb 10:1-14)
_
• Heb 10:21-22 . . Since we have a high priest over the house of God, let us
draw near to God with a sincere heart, in full assurance of faith, having our
hearts sprinkled to cleanse us from a guilty conscience
The Greek word translated "guilty" is okay as far is it goes, but what it really
means is condemned, i.e. rejected, defective, unacceptable, disqualified.
This goes all the way back to the forbidden-fruit incident where it's said:
"The man has now become like one of us, knowing good and evil." (Gen
3:22)
The man didn't become one of them, rather, he became "like" one of them,
i.e. supreme in his own mind, viz: the man became independent and self
reliant.
For example: upon tasting the forbidden fruit, Adam immediately perceived
that full frontal nudity is indecent. Well, his creator hadn't said a word about
decency; Adam came to a decision about it on his own, viz: a dress code
was something Adam felt proper rather than something he was instructed.
Sprinkling was a common ritual in the Old Testament-- sometimes with
water, sometimes with oil, and sometimes with blood --for example: Ex
29:16, Ex 29:21, Lev 14:7, Lev 14 16, and Num 8:7, et al.
Sprinkling typically serves to sanitize things in order to make them suitable
for God's purposes; and some sprinklings are only good for the moment,
requiring additional sprinklings from time to time. The sprinkling spoken of
herein is a one-time sprinkling that never needs repeating. (Heb 10:1-14)
_