jgh7 wrote:
Elijah John wrote:
So the
entire focus of God's love is in "Christ"? And those before Christ, and those beyond the reach of Christ-preaching are outside of the "long arm of the" love of God?
That would include King David, and other OT heroes of faith? None of them "accepted Jesus Christ as their personal Lord and Savior". The only Savior they knew was the LORD YHVH, besides whom there is no Savior.
Interesting to note that King David in the Psalms says of YHVH, "His love endures forever"...with no mention of Jesus, Christ or the Messiah, or the Messiah's impending death on the cross as an expression of the John 3.16 love of God.
Seems King David for one experienced the love of God without "accepting Jesus as his personal Lord and Savior".
Do you really believe the love of God is confined by NT dogma? And the movement of the Holy Spirit bound by your religion?
In Matthew 22:44 Jesus quotes Psalm 110:1 from King David to show that David knew of Jesus.
I do believe the love of God is that which is expressed in NT teachings. Whether people are aware of God or not, I believe the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit of the NT are the Beings working behind the scenes
Father YHVH and the Father's spirit anyway. Behind the scenes in the OT and in other ethical religons as well. Judaism, Islam, Sikhism, Ba'hai, Zoroastrianism etc. All variants of Ethical Monothesim.
jgh7 wrote:
I do believe the movement of the Holy Spirit is solely that which is described in the NT (and the OT as well, it operated there too). I don't believe the Holy Spirit comes from any other religions.
Comes from God, not any given religion. And who is anyone to say where the Holy Spirit
goes? "The wind blows where it will, you can hear it, but you cannot tell where it comes from or where it is going".
Also, your view here is at odds with Pope John Paul II who taught that whatever is "beautiful good and true" in the other great world religions is also from the Holy Spirit. Though he held that the fullness of revelation belonged to Christianity in general, and Catholoicism in particular, he allowed for the probability that the Holy Spirit was present in the other religions as well.
And regarding Psalm 110.1. That is one interpretation. Based on the assumption that King David wrote that particular Psalm. A widespread assumptrion that NT authors wrote into Jesus own assumptions. And maybe he did. But Jesus was a man of his times. And "Jesus" has been wrong before. (Matthew 16.28).
The Psalm makes a whole lot more sense when the probability that someone beside David wrote it is considered.
Yahweh said to my Lord
.
Who is the Psalmist's (110) "Lord"? King David. Who is King David's LORD? Yahweh.
Makes a lot more sense. The author of Psalm 23 King David knew only
one LORD, Yahweh. Only
one Savior. Yahweh.
So it seems doubtful that David was the author of Psalm 110 too. He would never have called anyone else "Lord". He was the King, and his only LORD was YHVH.
The NT Evangelist "Matthew" took a verse out of context and made a mystical messianic reference out of it, and placed it on Jesus lips.
If this is not so, where
else do the Psamists ever refer to the Messiah? Can you give us one other indisputable (that even Jews accept) reference from the Psalms that refers to the Messiah?