We may not be on the same page here..... I believe that the Father has a son. The Son has an assembly of people whom make up his two wives.For you smartipants theologians here:
We believe and follow that the Father has Israel, Jesus has the Church, husbands has his wife(wives) but what does the Holy Spirit have?
I think I am pretty much on the same page as you. I think it is the Son that has the assembly of people who make up the Bride and/or Brides. I don't think the Father or the Holy Spirit have a marital relationship with anyone.We may not be on the same page here..... I believe that the Father has a son. The Son has an assembly of people whom make up his two wives.
The Holy Spirit is from the Father and is shared by all those in the covenant with the Son. The Holy Spirit does not have a marital relationship with anyone.....
That said.... I still respect that others may come to sincerely held beliefs that are not in agreement with mine....
This is how I see it as well....I think I am pretty much on the same page as you. I think it is the Son that has the assembly of people who make up the Bride and/or Brides. I don't think the Father or the Holy Spirit have a marital relationship with anyone.
When we see YAHWEH being married to Israel/Samaria and Judah/Jerusalem in the Old Testament, I think that is the Son. When we see the Pillar of fire, Column of smoke leading Israel in the wilderness, I think that is the Son. When Moses met with YAHWEH on Mount Sinai, and received the Law, I think that was probably the Son.
When we see God walking with Adam and Eve in the garden, I think that was probably the Son.
In the future, when the Lord wipes every tear from the eyes of the Redeemed, I think it will be the Son.
After all, He is "God with us".
I might be wrong of course. I am a small finite creature, and YAHWEH is far too wonderful for me to fully understand.
I believe that is how it was always taught to me growing up as well but, if you track scripture from front to back, you realize that these are the same two wives that Christ takes as part of the new covenant as his brides. That would be a violation of the law of God for the son to marry his fathers wives.I always thought it was The Father that had Ahola and her sister Aholiba (from memory) as his wives.
I always thought that too.I always thought it was The Father that had Ahola and her sister Aholiba (from memory) as his wives.
That seems to accord with Romans 7 where we read that the death and resurrection of the Son terminates one bond, and established a new union.I believe that is how it was always taught to me growing up as well but, if you track scripture from front to back, you realize that these are the same two wives that Christ takes as part of the new covenant as his brides. That would be a violation of the law of God for the son to marry his fathers wives.
With the understanding that Christ was the mediator between God and man from the beginning it all falls into place. All the stories of the fathers son getting married and him going back to prepare a place for his brides etc, it all makes perfect sense.
The son of a man dying in no way affects the marriage of the father and his wives but if the son himself is the one married to them, then his death has a direct and immediate effect on the wives marital status. For the one, House of Judah, she is instantly widowed. For the other, House of Israel, her marital bond is also broken. Hers prevented her from ever coming back to her first husband, Christ.
Both wives then need to come back into covenant with him. Thus the prophecy of the new covenant that is to come.
Yes! Come Lord JesusPersonally, I am looking forward to the marriage supper of the lamb.
I think we tend to have a vague impression that the Old Testament is about God the Father, and that the New Testament is about the Son.I always thought it was The Father that had Ahola and her sister Aholiba (from memory) as his wives.
I will render my understanding... As individuals, we are the children of Christ. Yes, through adoption / grafting in....He is another, and related question.
We often read about adoption/sonship. We read that God is our Father, and we are His children.
Does the language of adoption and sonship specifically refer to our relationship with the Father, while our language of marriage and lordship specifically refer to our relationship with the Son?
I respect that. And, I count your disagreement as good faith on your part. We all must be bereans.Humbly I disagree.
I do NOT conflate Jesus to his Father.I always understood that to mean Our Heavenly Father. Unless you conflate Yahweh with Jesus,
I believe that the church IS the ekklesia in the wilderness as is quoted here:In contrast, Jesus is the Bridegroom and the church(ekklesia- the called out ones) is the bride.
Is the church the new name for Israel and churches are the New Testament fulfillment of the Old Testament Israel? To me that starts to go down a wrong path.
I know that people call the messiah by many names. Jesus is the most common in the USA. Yeshua, Yehosah, Yehosawah and many many more.Accompanying that is the movement which declares itself non-christian but follows yehashua(sp) Jesus on the basis of the various names. If you don't hold to the "true" names of God then you are not following the "right" (little g)god. It is almost cultic in my opinion.
I start to bristle when someone tells me I am worshipping the wrong god because I mispronounce His name.
Not a bad pattern.I follow the pattern of Jesus's words as he taught, "Our Father Who art in Heaven, hallowed be Thy Name..." That verbiage rather excludes all the bad entities.
This has been the most convincing argument for me on the matter.Only the Son dying would cause/allow the need for a new covenant.
Ummmmm......do you remember Lord divorcing Israel in Old Testament.Only the Son dying would cause/allow the need for a new covenant.