Has anyone found secret messages in the bible?

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Bible_Highlighter

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Nov 28, 2023
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We have 2 options. Sin or don't sin. I choose don't sin. Doesn't mean that I considered/struggled/lusted to sin to come to that conclusion.

Jesus had the options set before Him and He chose not to sin.
Yes, we all agree Jesus did not choose to sin, but to say that He was internally tempted is also very problematic. It would mean He is not God if such were the case because James 1:13 says God cannot be tempted with evil.
 

Kroogz

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Thanks for the debate guys! Dino and Bible Highlighter I apologize for jumping in on some of your conversation. Give me a smack upside the head if this is frustrating you!
 

Bible_Highlighter

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Thanks for the debate guys! Dino and Bible Highlighter I apologize for jumping in on some of your conversation. Give me a smack upside the head if this is frustrating you!
I believe all believers should feel welcome to discuss what they feel the Word of God says here.

May God’s peace shine upon you.
 

NTNT58

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The Bible never speaks of a universal church. Catholics do. The true church is the body of believers who adhere to the Christian faith.

Catholics are all over the place and worship people before God.
I never said Catholics are correct or that they have spiritual authority, I said the Pope has the physical authority over the church according to Mathew 16:19 and Isiah 22.
 

NTNT58

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again, Peter was soundly rebuked by Paul for giving in to the Judaizers.

That is in the Bible. Not to mention his denying Jesus three times.
That is completely irrelevant. Peter being rebuked just means he didn't have the absolute authority that modern Catholics assign to themselves. And Peter denying Jesus just means he wasn't infallible, and I never claimed he was.

No human being can forgive sin.
That is incorrect. After His resurrection, Jesus told the disciples, “If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven them; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained” (John 20:23).
 

Nehemiah6

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I said the Pope has the physical authority over the church according to Mathew 16:19 and Isiah 22.
According to Matthew 16:19 "AS IMAGINED BY THE CHURCH OF ROME" should have been added. But not really according to Scripture, since Peter is not mentioned even once in the epistle to the Romans. Peter was the apostle to the "Circumcision" (Jews) and he focused on that. Even the Orthodox Church refuses to accept the position of the Vatican in this matter (since the Greek Orthodox Church existed long before the Roman Catholic Church).
 

Magenta

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Hey guys, is there a link or a tutor section I can reference to break my responses down to smaller quotes? I have tried copy and paste on the "
After quoting the whole post, following any section you wish to isolate, insert the end quote tag.

It looks like this: [ /quote] <= I put in a space so you can see the tag, otherwise it's invisible.

After you insert the end quote tag, put your response. Make sure not to mess with the coding.

After your response is the rest of the other person's post which you quoted.

Highlight the next part you wish to isolate to respond to, and then using the icon above the message box, the downward pointing arrow with three dots, select the second option which is "quote" and it will wrap your highlighted section in quote tags. You could also do this manually in two different ways, one which keeps the link back to the original post. After you have finished responding to the points you wish to address, make sure there is only one [ /QUOTE] at the end of what the other person said. You can check your post's format by using the Preview selection before sending it to post. You have a five minute edit window to correct any mistakes.
 

NTNT58

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I would say, however, that in the Matt. 11 discussion, Jesus was talking about John as a prophet, right? So, my thought has always been that John's role as a prophet was what Jesus had in mind when He says that he was the greatest.
There are no prophets in heaven, so Jesus was talking about John simply as a human being/soul.


As to John's and James' mother requesting that He place them in positions of greatness, I'm not sure that she was thinking about the Kingdom as being in the "afterlife". I don't think that anyone, including the 12 disciples, had any idea that Jesus' Kingdom was spiritual in nature. I just don't that indicated in Matt. 20.
Jesus revealed the truth about spiritual kingdom as early as Mathew 13 in parable of the sower, parable of wheat and tares etc.
 

Nehemiah6

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Yes, we all agree Jesus did not choose to sin, but to say that He was internally tempted is also very problematic. It would mean He is not God if such were the case because James 1:13 says God cannot be tempted with evil.
You are completely right. The fact is that Jesus of Nazareth DID NOT have the indwelling sin nature which responds to temptations. He was born of a virgin and His conception was supernatural. Therefore He COULD NOT SIN. So (1)He could not sin, (2) He would not sin, and (3) He had no sin. Temptations were "water off a duck's back" as far as Jesus was concerned.

Of course no one should expect Satan to be all knowing, and Satan imagined that because Christ is a Man, He can be tempted. And he discovered that Christ could not be tempted regardless of the temptation. Had the remotest possibility of Him being tempted existed, He could not have become the Savior of the world.

The Bible says that Jesus was "tempted in all points like as we are yet WITHOUT SIN". This needs to be interpreted in view of His being fully God and fully sinless Man at one and the same time.
 

Dino246

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Jun 30, 2015
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Satan imagined that because Christ is a Man, He can be tempted. And he discovered that Christ could not be tempted regardless of the temptation.
Just in case you missed these...

Matthew 3:1 Then was Jesus led up of the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted of the devil.

Mark 1:13 And he was there in the wilderness forty days, tempted of Satan

Luke 4:1-2a And Jesus being full of the Holy Ghost returned from Jordan, and was led by the Spirit into the wilderness, Being forty days tempted of the devil

Hebrews 4:14-15 ... Jesus the Son of God ... was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin.

I'm so biting my tongue right now....
 

Mem

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Sep 23, 2014
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before Cain had sin, God told him that sin was crouching at the door and its desire was for him and that he must rule over it. Unlike Cain, or anyone else, Jesus is Master over sin.
 

Bible_Highlighter

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Nov 28, 2023
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Nor is it that. It's a quotation from Psalm 82:6, the context of which is God speaking to divine beings (spiritual entities that are not God). It cannot mean mere men, because God warns them later in that verse that they will die "like men". Jesus' point is that calling an entity (other than God the Father) "god" is not the problem the Jews think it is.

All this aside, I see no relevance of this verse to our discussion about the temptation of Jesus.
That’s a very odd interpretation. I see it as in reference to the Israelites. Psalms 82:6 says, "all of you are children of the most High.” Just because it says they will die like men in verse 7 does not mean they are divine beings. My point by bringing this verse up is that you cannot read Jesus’ quote in John 10 as in reference to ”ye are gods” as a reference to deity. Even angels are not of the substance of deity like God. Only God is deity, and eternal and all powerful. There are no gods beside Him. So how does this relate to Jesus saying what He did to the Jews?
 

Bible_Highlighter

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Just in case you missed these...

Matthew 3:1 Then was Jesus led up of the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted of the devil.

Mark 1:13 And he was there in the wilderness forty days, tempted of Satan

Luke 4:1-2a And Jesus being full of the Holy Ghost returned from Jordan, and was led by the Spirit into the wilderness, Being forty days tempted of the devil

Hebrews 4:14-15 ... Jesus the Son of God ... was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin.

I'm so biting my tongue right now....
He is most likely talking about internal temptation and not external temptation. Jesus could face others trying to tempt Him to do things externally, but He was not internally tempted or interested in the temptation given by the outward party.
 

Bible_Highlighter

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before Cain had sin, God told him that sin was crouching at the door and its desire was for him and that he must rule over it. Unlike Cain, or anyone else, Jesus is Master over sin.
So do you believe Jesus took on our sins in the Garden within the cup from the Father gave to Him? I do.
Jesus was said to have bore our sins in his body according to the apostle Peter.
So…. If this is the case, how can He be a spotless Lamb if He Himself struggled with internal temptation to sin? It makes absolutely zero sense especially when James 1:13 says God cannot be tempted with sin. So this really comes down to whether or not you believe Jesus is God. Jesus said He is one with the Father, and so one cannot say that He is any less in deity or connection in the Godhead or Trinity. Spiritually speaking: Something unclean cannot clean that which is dirty. If we are to follow the conclusion of your wrong belief, Jesus would be dirty if one is saying He was internally tempted by sins like us. But Hebrews 7:26 says He was separate from sinners. Come on now. Figure it out. Jesus is God. Not just in name but in power and essence right down to His very core.
 

NTNT58

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According to Matthew 16:19 "AS IMAGINED BY THE CHURCH OF ROME" should have been added. But not really according to Scripture, since Peter is not mentioned even once in the epistle to the Romans.
Peter wasn't mentioned in the Romans because he wasn't in Rome.

Peter was the apostle to the "Circumcision" (Jews) and he focused on that.
That's true, but that doesn't disprove his authority over the other disciples, if anything that only proves my point. Jews are God's children and were always the main focus of God, that's why it was Peter who was assigned as chief for them, while the Gentiles were assigned Paul, who wasn't even one of the original 12 apostles.

Even the Orthodox Church refuses to accept the position of the Vatican in this matter (since the Greek Orthodox Church existed long before the Roman Catholic Church).
That is incorrect. The Catholic church existed as one church from the beginning. It wasn't until the 4th century when it became the official religion of Rome, and it wasn't until the 11th century that the Eastern Orthodox separated themselves from the Western Catholics. Up until that time they were one church.
 

Mem

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Sep 23, 2014
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So do you believe Jesus took on our sins in the Garden within the cup from the Father gave to Him? I do.
Jesus was said to have bore our sins in his body according to the apostle Peter.
So…. If this is the case, how can He be a spotless Lamb if He Himself struggled with internal temptation to sin? It makes absolutely zero sense especially when James 1:13 says God cannot be tempted with sin. So this really comes down to whether or not you believe Jesus is God. Jesus said He is one with the Father, and so one cannot say that He is any less in deity or connection in the Godhead or Trinity. Spiritually speaking: Something unclean cannot clean that which is dirty. If we are to follow the conclusion of your wrong belief, Jesus would be dirty if one is saying He was internally tempted by sins like us. But Hebrews 7:26 says He was separate from sinners. Come on now. Figure it out. Jesus is God. Not just in name but in power and essence right down to His very core.
This is the passage you referenced

Christ’s Example of Suffering
(Isaiah 53:1–8)
21For to this you were called, because Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example, that you should follow in His footsteps:
22“He committed no sin,
and no deceit was found in His mouth.”
23When they heaped abuse on Him,
He did not retaliate;
when He suffered, He made no threats,
but entrusted Himself to Him who judges justly.
24He Himself bore our sins
in His body on the tree,

so that we might die to sin
and live to righteousness.
“By His stripes you are healed.”
25For “you were like sheep going astray,” but now you have returned to the Shepherd and Overseer of your souls.

notice the qualification of when He bore our sins, on the cross He suffered ("for you" v. 21). Do you see this as His actually accumulating unclean spots on Himself?
 

Dino246

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Jun 30, 2015
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That’s a very odd interpretation. I see it as in reference to the Israelites. Psalms 82:6 says, "all of you are children of the most High.” Just because it says they will die like men in verse 7 does not mean they are divine beings. My point by bringing this verse up is that you cannot read Jesus’ quote in John 10 as in reference to ”ye are gods” as a reference to deity. Even angels are not of the substance of deity like God. Only God is deity, and eternal and all powerful. There are no gods beside Him. So how does this relate to Jesus saying what He did to the Jews?
Verse 1 sets the context. What does it say?
 

posthuman

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Jul 31, 2013
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Paul, who wasn't even one of the original 12 apostles.
this fact alone arguably makes him far more important than any other apostle.

remember the central priesthood/covenant argument of the epistle to the Hebrews: if tge first had been sufficient, there would be no need for another.

in Sinai was perfect JESUS OF NAZARETH would be utterly useless.
but the opposite is true.
 

posthuman

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Jul 31, 2013
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14 total named tribes.
always counted as 12 always depending on how you count.

same for apostles

Joseph, an incomparably important son, becomes Ephraim and Menassah, depending on how you count, 12, always, of 14

Judas, an incomparably important apostle, is replaced by Paul and Matthias, depending on how you count, 12, always, of 14


what if your utterly worldly focus on Peter 'apostle to the Jews' worship as apostle 'to the Gentile Romans ((self-contadictory much?))' makes you miss the actual Biblical pattern

what will you do if that is the case?