[QUOTE="PaulThomson, post: 5357701, member: 327121"]John the Baptist"s and Jesus' ministries were fulfilling the last week of Daniel's 70 weeks of years determined on Daniel's people as the custodians of the Word of God. Seven years after John the Baptist came preaching to the Jews, during the persecution that followed Stephen's stoning, the interpretation of the word of God through the Holy Spirit was given to Gentiles, beginning with those living in Samaria. During Jesus' first 2.5 years of teaching ministry among the Jews, before His death and resurrection, the Gentiles were outside of the mandate given Him by the Father, even though some Gentiles did eavesdrop on Jesus' preaching to the Jews and did believe He was a prophet with miracle-working authority from God. Jesus was speaking the truth to the Syro-Phoenician woman. she was unclean by Torah standards, but the Father commanded Jesus to breach his official mandate in her case, because God appreciated her humble faith. Clearly, it is not true that the ONLY salvation available to Gentiles was to become Jews, because this woman, though according to Torah a dog, was heard by God and her Gentile daughter was saved/made whole, i.e. the Gr.eek word sOzO.
Ephesians 3:5 makes it clear that Paul's gospel was also understood and being preached by Peter and the other apostles, not just Paul.
3 ...the mystery; (as I wrote afore in few words, ...
5 Which in other ages was not made known unto the sons of men, as it is now revealed unto his holy apostles and prophets by the Spirit;
6 That the Gentiles should be fellowheirs, and of the same body, and partakers of his promise in Christ by the gospel:
"His holy apostles and prophets" includes the twelve. Philip and Peter had already learned the mystery of this new phase of the Gospel, soon after the stoning of Stephen in Acts 7, through God's dealings with the Ethiopian eunuch in Acts 8 and the Roman Cornelius in Acts 10. Paul learned and began to teach to Jews in the synagogues that Jesus is the Messiah in Acts 9, but he did not reach out to Gentiles until He had learned to see the mystery "that the Gentiles should be fellowheirs, and of the same body, and partakers of his promise in Christ by the gospel" in the Old Testament when He spent time alone learning it from Jesus in Arabia. This eventual extension of the offer of family membership to the Gentiles was part of Jesus' message during His ministry. It was not a Gospel given to Paul that competed with a different Gospel given to the Twelve.
It is argued by some that James was not claiming that Abraham and others are justified before God by their works, but that James is saying that the man who claims to have faith in God justifies himself and his claim by what he does. If he behaves like a man who loves and seeks to please God, he will be judged by men as speaking the truth when he claims to believe God. If he lives like the devil, but claims to trust God, men will assess him as a deceiver and self-deceived regarding his claims to trust God.
Do you not think that interpretation of James makes sense and meshes with Pau, who said that if Abraham is justified by works, he has something to boast about [before men] but not before God. Our works don't earn us good standing with God. It is our faith occurring, before the obedience which flows out of our genuine faith, that God recognises and reckons to us as righteousness.
I don't see any difference between the gospel taught by Jesus, by the Twelve and by Paul. I do see the Twelve's and Paul's and our own understanding of that same gospel growing over time as we study God's word and practise it.[/QUOTE]
Close but no cigar. Jesus' death on the Cross took him to just the first half of the 70th week. The last half of the 70th week was not fulfilled until 70 A.D. It seems that so many miss what this text in Daniel says that deals with the scope of the prophecy:
Dan 9:24
24 "Seventy 'sevens' are decreed for your people and your holy city to finish transgression, to put an end to sin, to atone for wickedness, to bring in everlasting righteousness, to seal up vision and prophecy and to anoint the most holy.
NIV
While Daniel 9 is certainly a messianic prophecy, it also includes the people of Israel AND the fate of Jerusalem, and this city is certainly included in the prophecy itself (vv. 26b). Verse 26 talks about the Messiah being "cut off", which occurred in the middle of the seven (v. 27a) at the Cross -- i.e. in the middle of the 70th Week. This interpretation harmonizes beautifully with the Mt. Olivet Discourse and the fact that Revelation itself contains a few passages that speak to this last half of the 70th week in "half week" language, which strongly indicates that last half of the last week was not fulfilled until 70 A.D. That's when the Holy City and its Temple were destroyed, which would have been within the scope of "this generation" spoken of in Matthew 24.