Can't wait for season 3.
Peter needs to wipe the doofus smirk off his face.Fishing Fools said:
Can't wait for season 3.
Saul's conversion was A miracle in a moment, "who are you, Lord"? Another prove that God does choose his followers?Zobel said:
I'd say it was the order even before. St Paul suggests all creation was precisely to save Man.
My goodness you have strayed so far away from the KJV.Zobel said:
St Paul never converted and he never changed his name. The Lord never changes his name, either. He was Saul also called Paul in Acts before he saw the Lord, and the Lord calls him Saul. It was common for men to have Roman nicknames (Saul/Paul, John/Mark) especially if they lived in Roman areas or were Roman citizens.
At no point does he say he changed religions - there was no religion for him to change to. In fact he says he is continuing in the religion of his fathers.
St Paul understood himself as a prophet, describes his calling in prophetic language, in some cases explicitly using language from places like Jeremiah.
The only thing that happened on the road to Damascus was St Paul had a vision of Yahweh - another mark of a prophet - which revealed two things to him: that Christ was the Word incarnate and Yahweh, and that the Messianic timeline was in a different place than he understood.
It's weird. It sounds like you are saying the KJV is the Bible and the Bible is the KJV, and that to use something other than KJV means one is rejecting the Bible or using something other than the Bible.Quote:
My goodness you have strayed so far away from the KJV.
PA24 said:My goodness you have strayed so far away from the KJV.Zobel said:
St Paul never converted and he never changed his name. The Lord never changes his name, either. He was Saul also called Paul in Acts before he saw the Lord, and the Lord calls him Saul. It was common for men to have Roman nicknames (Saul/Paul, John/Mark) especially if they lived in Roman areas or were Roman citizens.
At no point does he say he changed religions - there was no religion for him to change to. In fact he says he is continuing in the religion of his fathers.
St Paul understood himself as a prophet, describes his calling in prophetic language, in some cases explicitly using language from places like Jeremiah.
The only thing that happened on the road to Damascus was St Paul had a vision of Yahweh - another mark of a prophet - which revealed two things to him: that Christ was the Word incarnate and Yahweh, and that the Messianic timeline was in a different place than he understood.
After his encounter with a living Christ, Paul believed the gospel of Christ and continued in the teachings of the God of his fathers. That is a common phrase in the KJV, example, Antichrist will be known as one who didn't follow the teachings of the God of his fathers. Those teachings would be the first 5 books of the Holy Bible written by Moses which would have eliminate the book of Jeremiah except the gospel of Christ probably enhanced the other books especially those of the prophets.
Paul also considered himself a wretched soul as he wrestled with his sanctification toward glorification. He would have been the last person to call himself a saint and his repentance was a daily occurrence thru prayer, Paul was guilt ridden and like all of us, as he grew in Christ he sinned less but his conscience continue to convict.
You follow some kind of hybrid Catholicism or that is what I gather from your writings, I am not n the least bit interested in knowing what they are teaching you.
The good news for those reading or studying Jesus outside the KJV are from the words of Jesus, Mark 9:38-41 reads on the line of "those who are not against us are for us and their will be rewards in heaven". Even for the ones that dress in colorful costumes, practicing silly rituals, resembling a Pharisee of old, there is everlasting hope.
Paul's conversion event would make an excellent remote viewing target IMO. Specifically, the source of that blinding light.PA24 said:Saul's conversion was A miracle in a moment, "who are you, Lord"? Another prove that God does choose his followers?Zobel said:
I'd say it was the order even before. St Paul suggests all creation was precisely to save Man.
Before his conversion, Saul had an interesting life. I saw this clip a few years ago, a few minutes of the story of Saul, from the tribe of Benjamin before he became Paul the apostle. Highly educated, a Roman citizen that was a Jewish Pharisee.
to the first part, if you spent any amount of time hear listening to what he had to say, it would be no question what he "follows". it comes up often enough.PA24 said:
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You follow some kind of hybrid Catholicism or that is what I gather from your writings, I am not n the least bit interested in knowing what they are teaching you.
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