Tag Archive: Bible


The Bible’s Protagonist

When we stop thinking along the lines of some particular religious group of believers, we never hear of the Bible read like any other book, from beginning to end telling a single story in the form of a saga. A saga is generally a long story with a series of smaller stories, for example, the Game of Thrones or the Lord of the Rings, to name two. The Bible is also a saga. With 66 books that deal with the fall of man into sin and the resurrection of man through redemption. The particular genre is Dramatic Comedy since it begins in sorrow and ends in joy. 

Now that we have established the Bible as a book telling a story, we can examine the Bible as a literary work with elements common to other literary stories. First, we shall look at all accounts, whether in written, theatre, or film form establishes a setting for the story. A tale about St. Patrick would take place in Ireland and the 5th century. Therefore, a story has a background, a time, and a place where the story takes place. In the movies, the first scene is that of a location, a shot of the Empire State Building to suggest New York City. The Bible does the very same thing. It tells us the story takes place near the Tigers and Euphrates rivers, the Red Sea, the Jordon River, and the Sea of Galilee. Therefore, the Bible account area is where those rivers flow and the locations of those seas. The general site for the saga is from the Eastern portion of Egypt through Israel north to Turkey and west to include Jordon, Syria, Iraq, and Iran. In the Bible, this area would become known as Babylon. The only time this changes is when we read about Paul and Peter traveling through the Roman Empire and dying in Rome. 

The Bible also deals with how the people and the area change during the long period of the saga. First is a period before the flood. Next is the period after the flood and the period of slavery through conquest and destruction. We read the arrival and rejection of the Messiah, and finally, the Bible ends with Israel’s return and the building of the Third Temple and the return of the Messiah and God’s throne on earth. All of these various periods that place in the same area with the same people. Since the people in the saga are from the same bloodline, they are the survivors of the flood of the descendants of Shem, the patriarch of Abraham, the patriarch Jacob, the father of the twelve tribes of Israel. The twelve tribes of Israel and the tribe of Judah becoming the focus in the final chapters provides the reader of the Biblical saga with the protagonist-main character of the Biblical tale. The book of Revelation speaks of two prophets speaking in Israel in the final days. Therefore from beginning to end, the main character is always the nation of Israel.

Throughout the Bible story, the people of Israel no sooner are taken out of slavery by the Lord God turn and build an idol to worship. Time and time again, they turn their back on God. In the end, before the return of Jesus, they will worship a false messiah who will proclaim to be God in the final Temple. Some of those who claim to be Jewish are like Hamlet having a tragic ending, while those who accept Jesus Christ experience the joy of being together in a New Jerusalem with God.  

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One of the theologians’ most significant problems and their congregation is the pick and choose verses to create some doctrine based on putting a few verses and random sentences together and saying this is what the Bible is saying. No one would go through Hamlet and randomly pick out several verses without reading the complete text and summarize the story. Also, would you pick out a couple of sentences from each book of Game of Thrones and tell people this is the saga. People would laugh at you; however, it is done every day with the Bible. 

The Bible is a Saga of many books that are episodes to one complete story. It has a setting, an antagonist, and a conflict. Since the episode extends over centuries with many characters, the protagonist is not a single person but a bloodline, leading to Israel as a nation. It is a tragic love story between God and this one nation of Israel. Jesus himself brought the message to the tribes of Israel. Yet, it ends as a comedy happy full of joy with a New Bride the Church, forever. It is not until Paul brought the Gospel of Jesus to the Gentiles, who many had Israeli DNA. The ten tribes of Israel were cast out of their homeland. They intermarried with the Gentiles, first with the Assyrians, then the Greeks and the Romans. Through Paul, the Gentile becomes part of God’s children in the Saga. Keep in mind that the whole Saga is always about the people of Israel. The first Christians were Jewish and many today have Hebrew blood, DNA.   

Another often misused component is the sitting of the Saga. Only when Paul and later Peter enter Rome is the Saga outside the Babylon area. Another is with the 12 tribes as slaves in Egypt, which are the only times outside the original Biblical setting. We can identify this by two major rivers, the Tigers and the Euphrates. They are both first mentioned in Genesis. Today’s Middle East covers this very same area once called Babylon. From this literary standpoint, when we begin to read the Bible, very different pictures develop concerning the end-time events. The Saga ends where the story started. The resolution of any great story must resolve the conflicts of the story. The solution must be the acceptance of Yeshua HaMashiach, Jesus Christ as Israel’s Messiah. It is a tragic love story because many of Israel’s descendants and those converted to the Jewish faith will never come to Jesus and die not believing. Throughout the Saga, the people of Israel have turned their back on God many times. Exodus shows the first example of turning away from God by creating an idol, a golden calf. The Biblical history account shows how God punishes Israel, and they repent only to sin again. 

A brief look at where the Saga ends in Israel, a part of the land once called Babylon. An angel is let loose from the bottomless pit in Gaza, a plague comes out of the Euphrates. Two prophets appear in Jerusalem, the last chance for the Jewish Israeli and the Muslim to come to Jesus Christ before He arrives. There are also 144,000 virgins called to Heaven, 12,000 from each tribe. John sees Jesus standing on Mount Moriah. The Third Temple is built, and the false messiah claims to be god there. Can there be any doubt that the setting is in Israel and Jerusalem? What group of people will suffer the most in that area, but those that live there. There is nothing to suggest any other place outside of this one. Yet things could be happening all over the earth, but the Bible is not mentioning those settings.

There is another clue as to the setting of the Saga. Much of the commentary of Daniels’s interpretation of Nebuchadnezzar’s dream stops at the two legs made of iron and clay and with the idea that the Roman Catholic church becomes the Roman Empire, but they ignore the feet. Let me add the this is one statue, and it is in Babylon. It represents what happens to this area called Babylon. The feet each have five toes. Therefore each foot still is the same area, only divided into five nations, with one foot being Sunni and the other Sufi, all within today’s five Muslim countries. 

Animal sacrifice does not remove the condition for sin. Rabbis during the exile in Babylon created many rules and regulations. Due to the destruction of the Temple and the inability to sacrifice an animal for sin. However, the Talmud is a man-made creation and not one from God. Therefore even the most practicing individual to live by the rules cannot remove sin, nor can animal sacrifice. It is for this reason that Jesus Christ comes as a sacrifice for the removal of sin.

When we fail to use literary concepts in reading the Bible, we come to erroneous conclusions creating false teaching. The final events will be similar to those that foreshadowed events to come. The beast of the sea, the beast of the earth, and the Harlot will be from that setting. The protagonist is Jacob’s bloodline. The beast will be in Joseph’s character, who took care of his family while putting the Egyptians into slavery. An essential aspect never mentioned as to how the Israelites became slaves. Joesph, by the permission of Pharaoh, took possession of the food supply. The Egyptians forced to sell everything, they had to eat until they volunteered to sell themselves into slavery to purchase food. Once the new Pharaoh saw what had happened, he reversed the situation. (Genesis 47:13-46) Joseph is not a benevolent leader but a cruel one. He made himself and the Pharaoh wealthy at the expense of the people while feeding his family. The final world leader will do the same. 

In conclusion, when viewing the Bible from the literary position using a story’s elements to guide us, the reader, we get a clearer picture of the past, present, and future events. The story is always first about Israel. The setting is always within the borders of Babylon. The individual characters are from the tribes of Israel with Gentile sub-characters that interact with the Israelites. 

 

How often have you heard from a fellow believer or even a none believer in Jesus Christ says, “You are not to judge.” Those who are familiar with Matthew 7:1 or know the quote will throw it in your face quoting Jesus, “Dot not Judge or you will be judged.” It is their way of silencing your comment about their behavior or attitude. Very often when this is done you stopped from saying anything further and made to feel guilty for making a judgment. However, did Matthew share just this one brief sentence to be the total of Jesus Christ’s lesson on Judgment or was there more. Did Jesus merely imply that He would judge you as a result of judging others? Based solely on that simple command it would appear that Jesus does not want us to judge, but was that all Jesus Christ had to say on the issue?

Satan knows scripture better than most Christians, and even theologians for that matter. Since he is a witness to all that God has done and said and in the very language that God spoke, we have evidence from Genesis Chapter 3 verse 4 he merely added the word “not” and he changed the whole meaning of God’s command from “You shall die, to you shall not die.” Today Satan has the clergy twisting the meaning of a verse or taking a single verse and creating a false doctrine around just a few words. Satan also has people overlook and ignore verses from the Bible to further distort the truth and to lead people astray. The fact is that Jesus Christ had more to say on the subject of judgment. The lesson in Matthew does not end with chapter seven verse one but continues.

Let’s examine what Jesus continues to say in this lesson. “Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother’s eye and pay no attention to the plank in your eye? 4 How can you say to your brother, ‘Let me take the speck out of your eye,’ when all the time there is a plank in your own eye? 5 You hypocrite, first take the plank out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye.” (Matthew 1:3-5 NIV) The example Jesus is using her if your brother can’t see he has commented a minor sin make you sure you have stopped doing a greater sin before offering judgment for correction.

Let’s reexamine verse 2, “For in the same way you judge others, you will be judged, and with the measure you use, it will be measured to you.“ Here is an example of what Jesus is saying, Someone steals a dollar, and you call him a thief, while you just took 10 dollars. Jesus will no Judge you for being a bigger thief, but if you were a thief and stopped stealing and you called out someone for being a thief to stop stealing than the Lord would not Judge you for being a thief because you are not one. Therefore, before calling someone unrighteous, examine yourself as to how the Lord would see you.    

The Lord’s teaching does not end there. After giving us the lesson to first examine our faults before judging the failures of others in verse six the Lord adds, “Do not give dogs what is sacred; do not throw your pearls to pigs” Now we are told not to give dogs something sacred. Who then are the dogs? “Outside are the dogs, those who practice magic arts, the sexually immoral, the murderers, the idolaters and everyone who loves and practices falsehood.” (Revelation 22:15 NIV) Jesus has ordered us not to give these types of sinners anything scared. Now, who are the pigs? The pig in the first century was regarded as unclean and worse than a dog. Jesus here is teaching that the Word of God is Holy and Good and we can expect to encounter some people who will not see the value of it. These are the people who will mock and ridicule you and God’s Word and despise you for presenting it to them. Therefore the Lord’s command is not to provoke such people to mock the Holy Gospel of God.verse 15-17 Jesus warns us, “Watch out for false prophets. They come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ferocious wolves. 16 By their fruit, you will recognize them. Do people pick grapes from thornbushes or figs from thistles? 17 Likewise, every good tree bears good fruit, but a bad tree bears bad fruit.” Jesus is teaching how to judge correctly. How are we to discern who are the “dogs” and “pigs” and “false prophets”? The answer is by making a judgment call based on the Word of God and the result of living His Word. Good fruit is the living example of God’s Word, while bad fruit is not. In essences, the theme of Christ’s teaching is how to judge right from wrong, good from evil, and to be an example of Good Fruit based on God’s Holy Word.

The Bible, the Word of God, teaches what is the truth, righteous and good. Anything that contradicts God’s Word is a lie. To call something a “lie” is to pass judgment for having discerned between God’s Word and a contradiction. When we base our Judgement on God’s Word, it is God’s Word that judges and therefore we have judged correctly. Our Judgement is not based on our standard. We have removed the plank to see as God would see. It is the Holy Spirit that provides the Judgement. It is the Word of God that provides the bases of good and evil. 

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Take a Journey through the book of Revelation without any form of doctrine, but by a literal reading of the information. A book will soon be available.

This Shows topic is a journey through the Book of Revelation. There are number of videos, articles, lectures, and books on the subject. Now do they actually follow the chronological order that John witnessed? Part 1 will deal with the Chapters from Revelation that deal with the Seals. Doc will also investigate if Rome is the correct city that many theologians seem to focus on.

Also be sure to watch the rest of the series. There is a blessing when you listen to the Words of Revelation.