The Coming Shock: Coda

Yesterday’s Bible lesson was already a bit long, but I need to add something that may not be obvious. In 2 Thessalonians 2, Paul quotes from Daniel’s description of a type of Antichrist. Daniel does the same thing we saw in Isaiah 14 and Ezekiel 28: A denunciation of some earthly figure echoes with the sins of the Devil in his fall from his high position as God’s bodyguard. It’s not about the Devil, but the nature of the human figures’ sins are the same kind of mistake the Devil made.

Daniel does the same thing regarding, near as we can tell, Antiochus IV. In the same way Isaiah and Ezekiel embellish and dramatize through exaggeration the evil of devilish human rules, so Daniel adds some dramatic extravagance to his portrayal of someone who would come in his future. And Paul does the same thing, warning that there would be an Antichrist figure at the close of the Church Age (the gathering of Gentiles into the New Israel) who carries echoes of previous figures like Antiochus IV.

What kind of man was Antiochus IV? How did he wreak havoc on the Judean kingdom of his day?

The man was very intelligent. He saw the political wrangling among the Judeans and took advantage of it. Over a period of some few years, he employed agents who would bribe or make promises, provoked all sides of the quarrels, etc. When they were internally weakened, he was ready to drop the bomb, technically making Judean religion illegal. He defiled the Temple and no one was there to oppose him. Then he launched his campaign to sweep across the whole territory.

The Judeans pulled together briefly under the Maccabees, but then promptly shattered again and one side invited Rome to get involved. And then came the Herods, etc. They never recovered their political independence because God had no use for it; they certainly had no use for His Son.

The inherent flaw in the system was that they mistook the Law of Moses for something else entirely. As we’ve already seen in the previous post, it was never about the ethnic nation, but about Abrahamic faith. God gave them the Law because the covenant people were encumbered with a large number of people who simply never got the covenant in their hearts. The Law would grant a certain level of order among the faithless, allowing the faithful to focus on what really mattered.

Thus, in the applicable Romans passages, Paul quotes where God told Elijah that it wasn’t time yet to destroy the Northern Kingdom because there were still 7000 faithful. He wanted to protect that small group. As the size of that remnant dwindled over a few generations, God was ready to finally divorce the 10 Tribes as just another Gentile horde to place under the hands of His Divine Council. He would later exchange them for the Gentile Elect He wanted to build up His new Israel.

But the churches have the same problem, loaded with faithless people, same as Israel was. While God is calling the fullness of the Gentiles out of the nations of the world, there has to be a system that will allow the faithful within the churches to keep operating. Churches have developed a system that accommodates those who lack Abrahamic faith. If they take this system too seriously and neglect the command of Christ to love each other as He does, then churches will spiritually atrophy the way the Northern Kingdom did.

And when the final Antichrist arises, it won’t be too hard to seduce the churches and bring about a loss of religion. He’ll be able to employ agents and bribes, provoking divisions and quarrels, and bring about an apostasy. That’s what Paul foresaw in 2 Thessalonians 2.

On the one hand, we know that God won’t send His Son back until He’s finished calling out enough Gentile Elect to rebuild the Lost Tribes. But We know that the close of that period will be marked by the rise of an Anitchrist that will attack genuine faith, making it illegal, so that he can be the new god of mankind. We can reasonably estimate that he will try to manifest himself as the Second Coming of Christ. That’s the question Paul was trying to answer there. We will need to see someone trying to deceive nominal Christians into proclaiming him Christ. There won’t be any justification for having churches when that succeeds.

It’s long past time for us to build a more accurate eschatology, taking these things into account.

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The Coming Shock

(I’m drawing here from both Heiser and Moreau, and they don’t precisely agree.)

In Romans 11, Paul says “all Israel” will be saved. We’ve established in a past lesson that this had a specific meaning in Paul’s day, referring not to ethnic Jews, but to the covenant structure of the 12 Tribes of Israel. This is consistent across the whole of Second Temple literature and the Dead Sea Scrolls. It’s a very specific covenant phrase that does not overlap cleanly with “ethnic Jews”.

So, when Pauls says “all Israel will be saved”, he’s not saying all Jews will be converted at some future date. Paul uses “all Israel” as a theological term. It refers to something God talked about from the very beginning: covenant people. It does not exclude ethnic Jews by any means, but it does include Gentiles.

Drop back to Romans 9 and you get the language where Paul makes this distinction painfully clear. But there’s a lot more to this. He mentions Isaac, who is the very symbol of the child who should not have existed. He was born of parents 90+ years old, and then almost died on Mount Moriah.

Later in the same chapter, Paul makes note of Jacob versus Esau. Jacob was renamed Israel, and the whole thing refers to the second-born as the progenitor of the covenant nation. How many anomalies accompany this special nation? How about Joseph’s children, all half-Gentile? And the numerous major figures in Jesus’ own genealogy who were Gentiles? Why were they included? Why break all the rules?

Galatians is probably Paul’s first published letter still in existence, and in chapter 3 he flatly says that those who inherit the promises of Abraham are both Jews and Gentiles of Abrahamic faith, not Abraham’s DNA. Jesus said the same thing when He told the Pharisees that God could raise up stones who were better children of Abraham. Isaac was born of faith. His son Jacob was a man of faith, whereas Esau was incapable of it. And every Gentile who was included was someone of Abrahamic faith.

By quoting Hosea in Romans 9, Paul flatly replaces the Northern Kingdom, the Lost 10 Tribes, with Gentiles. Consider the logic. Hosea was writing just before the exile of the Northern Kingdom, warning them that God was divorcing them. They were no longer His people. They would be scattered across the Assyrian empire and be assimilated. They would become Gentiles.

If God is going to keep His promises of restoring the whole 12 Tribes, where will He get the Lost 10 Tribes? Since they became Gentiles, He would just pull from that open stock to restore His covenant nation. Further, He would suspend the still extant Judean Kingdom for a time.

Back to Romans 11:25-26 — a partial hardening, meaning most Judeans would not come to Christ during the time God is restructuring the Northern Kingdom from among the Gentiles. If the Jews were still involved in the process, they would reject the Gentiles God had chosen. He isn’t giving them a choice. He’ll keep them out of the way until He’s finished.

This is biblical eschatology. What then are we to make of 2 Thessalonians 2? We’ve talked about this before quite a bit: What hinders the Antichrist from manifesting himself? What is the order of events required for the Devil’s last hurrah before Christ returns?

The sequence is Israel’s rejection > Gentile fullness > Israel’s salvation. The first had already come; Paul had been part of that. In his letters, he was then trying to play his part on the middle item. And the mark for the last item would be the rise of the Antichrist.

In good translations of 2 Thessalonians 2:6-7, you’ll notice two different hindrances to the Antichrist. In the Greek, the first is neuter — a “what” — and the second is a masculine — a “who”. The “what” is the fullness of the Gentiles. Paul has in mind Isaiah 66:18-20, where God promises He would send His people out into the nations. This began in Acts 2, where Jews from all over the known world gathered for Passover, witnessed the crucifixion of Christ, and then heard the gospel message. Some were converted and went back out whence they came to share that gospel with the nations.

Paul had in mind Tarshish in particular, the farthest nation on the Table of Nations in Genesis 11. He wanted to insure that the process was fully under way with bringing in the Gentiles who belonged in the Covenant. Paul was convinced he was the “who” that restrained the Antichrist, but that’s not the only thing. Paul knew he had to die in order to complete his role in the items of the sequence. Once he had fulfilled his mission of planting a witness in the last nation on the list, the actual harvest of Gentiles could begin in earnest.

Paul had warned in the verses before that (2 Thess. 2:3-4) of a falling away, echoed in Jesus’ words in Matthew 24. This is part of my persistent warning that the End Times must manifest in an attack on faith itself, not just religion. Paul comes close to quoting the several OT passages that echo God’s condemnation of the Devil (Isaiah 14, Daniel 11 and Ezekiel 28). Whether symbolic or literal, the only way some figure can claim the throne of God is to clear away faith in any kind of transcendent deity. Once that begins, people who lack genuine faith will fall away. We will be shocked at how many that turns out to be from among our church memberships.

To be continued…

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Hidden Church History

Here’s a little church history you won’t learn from any books or courses.

John was the last of the original Twelve Apostles. We believe he wrote his Revelation while in his 90s, right at the end of the First Century AD. One of the themes you can pick up when reading between the lines of his contributions to the New Testament is his disappointment that there were so few believers who were even aware of the uniquely Hebraic outlook of the Bible and the gospel message. He seems to lament the loss of that orientation as the churches are overtaken with Greek rationalism and the Judaizers. I’m convinced he saw it coming.

At the same time, the middle eastern churches were overtaken with a wild mythology that was already a problem in some of the Second Temple Jewish literature. The way so many of those branches of early churches embraced non-canonical books as part of their Bibles says a lot about their ability to discern the difference. They lacked the sobriety of the first disciples, becoming a sucker for Jewish fantasies. There was more than one kind of Judaizer at work destroying Christian doctrine.

While we cannot blame the Judaizers alone, they contributed to the early churches losing track of the broader mission of Christ and how the Covenant is supposed to work. The deep historical understanding of the Divine Council Worldview (AKA, thesis of the Unseen Realm) was lost rather quickly. We have no way of knowing why God would allow this to happen.

Nor is it really obvious why the tail end of the Boomer generation is the time God has appointed the restoration of that worldview. Suddenly, the long decades of labor by men like Michael Heiser has caught fire with a new generation of scholars and pastors.

For nearly two millennia, the church has been captured by a western focus on individual spiritual redemption, as if this was the whole gospel message. Today, in mainstream churches of all brands, the sole concern in actual practice is individual self-development. Whether it’s bluntly taught or not, most church people are convinced by the church atmosphere that personal moral improvement is going far enough to get to Heaven. You can get them to talk about the Kingdom of God and loyalty to Christ, but they seem to have no idea what that really means. They are especially ignorant of what “covenant” means.

Our society and most churches have this false assumption that humanity is born morally neutral. No, the Bible flatly says we are born mortal, and this means captive of Satan under sin. The Devil has you from birth; you are doomed. Only God can breathe life into your dead spirit, making a member of His family household. Everyone believes they can find a path that keeps them from the Devil’s chains.

All they know about is the Fall in the Garden of Eden (if that much). Only a tiny few today understand what was common knowledge among Second Temple rabbis: The Watchers in Genesis 6 crossing the boundary was a rebellion, giving birth to the Nephilim, today’s demons. This resulted in the corruption and depravity of the human race. Further, another rebellion was the failure of the Divine Council to faithfully carry out their duties as God’s satraps over the seventy nations listed in Genesis when God decided to parcel them out to His staff at the Tower of Babel. While those divine satraps are individuals with their own personal agendas, the net result of their shepherding of the nations was that God warned them they had failed their commission and they would eventually be destroyed like mortals.

Very few believers today understand that the Cross didn’t remedy only the Fall in the Garden, but has empowered us to go back and claim God’s Elect from the nations He had doled out to His staff, and that our service in building His Kingdom keeps the Nephilim in check. Believers today have almost no clue about the Covenant of Christ as a covenant. They don’t know what a covenant does and what comes with it. Even among those who get the Divine Council Worldview, we still have precious few who think of the Covenant as a covenant, a change of allegiance from the Devil to Christ.

When we obey that covenant by coming together as real family and loving each other despite all the fleshly reasons not to, we are breaking the bondage of the Enemy over this world. Our love for each other is spiritual conquest. It’s not our speculative theology or organizing, not our budgets and buildings, that do anything at all to weaken the Devil’s grip on our lives. It’s only when we conquer the fleshly nature, which inhibits the love of Christ in our hearts, that we begin to oust the Enemy forces in our world.

You can’t get the Kingdom simply by getting your own individual life morally straight. The only way you can bring the Kingdom to life is by getting involved in the lives of other believers. Help them wrestle their own demons; stabilize their lives by embracing the local covenant family; help them handle bad finances, etc. Build that bond of love with others, a love that defies secular law and society.

I can’t help but believe that the reason this has been unleashed at this time in human history is because we are about the enter a time of tribulation when nothing else will work. Without that vision of cosmic warfare against spiritual forces of great power, we cannot begin to understand the mission. Yes, there is something eschatological about this, though I’m in no position to claim that we are entering the End Times. We were flatly warned in Scripture not to get hung up on that. Rather, we must realize that things are going to get very ugly; we cannot hold our witness together without holding it together with others of like conviction.

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Ezekiel’s Final Vision

Re: Naked Bible 156: Ezekiel 40-48 Part 1 and Naked Bible 157: Ezekiel 40-48 Part 2

If you think of Ezekiel’s vision in chapters 40-48 as something more or less literal, you will miss the point entirely.

Heiser punches another big hole in Dispensationalism here. It’s common to see Ezekiel’s final vision (40-48) as a depiction of the Millennium. That’s simply not possible. Given a genuine knowledge of Hebrew prophetic literary conventions, the “millennium” refers to the long period between Christ’s Ascension and His Second Coming. Heiser also ties this passage to Revelation 20, pointing out how it’s the same event. Revelation is written in cycles, not chronological sequences. What’s in Revelation 19 does not come before Revelation 20 in chronology. Further, there is no literal millennium anywhere in Hebrew thinking.

In his previous podcasts on Ezekiel 38-39, Heiser had already shot down the idea that Gog/Magog had anything to do with Russia; it referred to people living in modern Turkey. Heiser talked about how the Valley of Dry Bones (AKA Travelers’ Valley) refers to some place on the eastern ridge above the Dead Sea. It’s the same place fire and brimstone fell on a previous occasion (Sodom and Gomorrah). The entire eastern ridge above the Jordan Valley all the way up to Mount Hermon is the homeland of the Watchers and the Nephilim clans, but the valley with the bones is a place also dotted with various shrines for death cults. It will become the graveyard of Satan’s army. It won’t be much of a battle, and nobody who understands Hebrew traditions could possibly take it literally.

The New Earth Kingdom is after the Second Coming, not some alleged Rapture followed by a literal Millennium. That’s an interpretive system, not the Bible. There will be no new Temple built in Jerusalem. Ezekiel’s description here cannot be taken literally. Why not?

1. The proportions are unbalanced, with the doors being half the length of the room inside.

2. There is no height indicated, no roof.

3. There are no instructions on building this thing, only measurements of something God Himself builds (for Eternity, not some resurrected Jewish kingdom). The whole point of this vision is to record symbols that would convict Ezekiel’s listeners of their sins.

4. There are no furnishings for a priestly offering, no place to wash, etc. The water flowing out of the Temple is a mere trickle at this point. This cannot represent a restored OT Temple with sacrifices.

5. After the Cross, there can be no purpose in a sacrificial system in a Millennium. Either Christ paid it all or He accomplished nothing.

Reminder: The OT sacrificial system was never about covering individual sins in the first place. Quoting Heiser —

People think this is about getting moral forgiveness and having your sins wiped away as an individual. In other words, they’re superimposing the talk about Jesus onto the Old Testament sacrificial system. If you have listened to our series on Leviticus, you know that doesn’t work because that’s not actually what Leviticus says ninety-nine percent of the time. The sacrifices are really about purifying objects and purifying sacred space and that sort of thing.

God would not commission a restoration of the sacrificial system since that pointed to Jesus, who would have already finished His redemptive work before any alleged Millennium. We are the sacred space; we are His Temple until He Returns. We are also the New Priesthood under Christ, who is High Priest under the Order of Melchizedek. Ezekiel does not envision a false Temple to a false worship.

6. You cannot separate the redrawn tribal boundaries from the Temple, and those tribal allotments in Ezekiel are clearly not literal. Indeed, the territory is considerably smaller than what David and Solomon held. Instead, it looks more like what Joshua conquered, minus everything on the East Bank of the Jordan, which land was never part of the promise in the first place.

7. The image of the Prince is not the Messiah if we take this literally. In Ezekiel’s vision, the Prince must offer sacrifices for himself; Christ is the Final Sacrifice. In the case of this Prince, there are places off-limits to him in the Temple. He also has a wife and children. There are restrictions on his land holdings, and he has no political authority to “rule the nations with a rod of iron” as the Messiah does. Making this figure the Messiah requires you start from an entirely different thought process, trying to see things the way the exiled Hebrew nobles would have, way before the New Testament imagery.

Saying something like this is a symbol does not mean, “It won’t happen.” It means what is coming cannot be understood in clinical terms. If you wipe away the awful nonsense of Dispensationalism and return to a genuine Hebrew Second Temple outlook, Ezekiel’s description says something totally different. The key here is restoring Eden, not some political-military state on the current earth.

Ezekiel’s verbiage here is the same as the ancient cosmic Mountain of God, the place where He resides and from which He reigns over Creation. The Garden of Eden is attached to that as His private space away from the courts. Ezekiel’s map of the future land of Israel is geographically impossible with earth as it now exists. The whole thing is realigned so that Jerusalem stands in the center of the territory, not in the south where the site stands now.

Ezekiel echoes the language of the global navel, the center of the universe, etc. The altar is at the “bosom of the earth” (literal Hebrew translation of 43:13). Nobody takes that literally. Instead, the description of the Tabernacle and Solomon’s Temple, as well as the construction of each, echoed the language of Creation. That’s not apparent to us from English translations, but Heiser digs into the details to show how this is all tied together in symbolism that would be obvious to an ancient Hebrew mind. Don’t think about a physical structure, but metaphorical construct that speaks the language of Edenic paradise.

As part of this symbolism, Ezekiel’s temple is loaded with images of the Jubilee. Everything about his vision is in terms of 25 (half-jubilee) and 50, the Year of Liberation. The whole vision in chapter 40 opens with a notice of the date: 571 BC, the 25th year of captivity (half-jubilee), on the tenth of the first month.

Side note: Israel had used two calendars at the same time for several centuries. The original was the “religious calendar” (Nisan Year, first month at Passover) starting in the spring. However, King David was crowned the first of Tishri. His son Solomon began organizing his reign under a “civil calendar” (Tishri Year, seventh month). When the Kingdom split, Israel went back to Nisan Year calendar, while Judah retained the Tishri Year. Ezekiel was using the Tishri Year calendar, so his first month was Tishri, and the tenth day was the Day of Atonement.

The only other mention of a tenth day in the Torah was the start of a Jubilee Year (Leviticus 25:8ff). Ezekiel is giving us a clue here — God is hitting the reset button. The numerology here would be kindled in a Hebrew mind, starting to watch for the Passover Lamb. Everything was here except the Lamb. That Jesus was born on the first of Tishri matters a lot here; we get that from Revelation 12. But Ezekiel’s audience didn’t know that yet, so we realize that it’s left hanging intentionally. The idea was to pre-load the Hebrew awareness of a Messiah yet to come on King David’s Coronation Day (in the ANE, this was a king’s “birthday”).

It was left hanging intentionally because God was keeping the Messiah a secret from His rebellious staff. Paul said, “If they had known…” Jesus had to explain it repeatedly, so it wasn’t obvious, but the existence of this huge blank spot in Ezekiel’s message was meaningful in itself. Heiser goes on to mention other obscurities, but you get the point. Even the dimensions of Ezekiel’s new map of Israel is offered in multiples of 50. The coming of the Messiah would be the Final Jubilee.

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So That’s What It Was!

Over the years I’ve often felt a strong move of the Spirit. In my youth, it was often quite confusing; no one around me could give a reliable answer. Frankly, most adults dismissed it as my own emotions. In the past three decades, I discovered that a few others I knew were getting the same sensations surging through their hearts, but not from their bodies. One person mentioned “raging convictions” that something was afoot in the Spirit Realm.

Looking back, I realize that some of those moments were answered by discoveries regarding what was in the Bible. For the longest time, I never put two-n-two together, but something as simple as a fresh revelation from the Lord to guide my understanding of His work in me was the target of those strong convictions that something was about to happen. I was too busy expecting external events.

Thus, in the past year or so one of the strongest ongoing storms in my spirit was answered by discovering Michael Heiser and his vast work in recovering the Hebrew intellectual traditions. It was something I had prayed about for years, longing for a better understanding. It’s not as if I have arrived at some terminal or end-point. Rather, it was simply a major shift in my expectations.

One of Heiser’s students has been Dale Moreau. While I sadly note that he tends to restrict his material behind a paywall on Substack, sometimes he drops hints for free. Try this one. You’ll get a prompt asking you to subscribe, but it’s not mandatory to read the article. You can read the first half of this “note” (an informal post) to learn how the symbol of “bright morning star” points to an official role in God’s divine court. Moreau traces several passages to clarify the issue.

The second half is him advertising about the longer version coming out in the fall. I can’t afford his paid subscription service, so it’s not a big deal if you ignore it. Take a look at what he does release for free. It’s generally more coherent to lay readers than Heiser’s stuff.

Keeping track of what is going on in the Unseen Realm — to the degree God allows us — will change your whole attitude about this life. It will give you a better place to anchor your faith and endurance in the coming tribulation.

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Not Bound by Lies

Re: Philosopher’s Corner (Jack Bowers) — “The Drama Behind the Darkness

Jack Bowers addresses a frequent objection people make to the gospel message:

Ask almost anyone why they find it difficult to believe in God, and the answer will come quickly: just look at the world. Childhood cancer. Genocide. The slow disintegration of a mind swallowed by dementia. If a God of unlimited power and perfect goodness exists, why does evil not merely persist but often appear to go unchecked, senseless, and grotesque?

The problem is that Bowers tends to be pedantic. Oops; I said that the way he would. Bowers uses academic language far too much and too often, alienating a lay audience. He uses too many words and, if you ask me, only touches on one kind of answer. That’s what “pedantic” means. The quoted sample above is pretty tame, but the rest of his post is too much saying too little.

Basically, he says that if you understand the Divine Council Worldview (thesis of the Unseen Realm) you should have no trouble recognizing the problem with the common secular answer. There’s a lot of players in the question besides humans and God. They have free will, they have power over us, and God has said they are doing a bad job of managing humanity.

He does raise the interesting issue that an expectation that God be accountable to human reasoning is way off the mark. Referring to the Book of Job, he points out that this is morally childish. God is under no obligation to satisfy our curiosity about what He’s up to.

This opens the door to something that he apparently does not address: Human existence is supposed to suck. We’ve been saying that for decades. Living in a mortal form is inherently awful and we should expect it so. This is not what God had in mind when He made us. We belong in a wholly different situation, but this is where we are now.

Thus, the only proper question is, “How do we get where we are supposed to be?” The answer is simple: die.

Of course, that answer is both symbolic and literal. It’s the symbolism part that most people refuse to discuss in this context. We are obliged to separate our conscious awareness from the fleshly nature. You must recognize that your mortal flesh is not the real you, but a burden you must drag around until you have accomplished the purpose God had in putting you here. You must learn to disregard the childish demands of the flesh and strive to live like someone who belongs in Eden.

And after a lifetime of fighting that war, your reward is to finally ditch that fleshly nature and go to a resting place in the afterlife until God is finished with the rest of the human race.

One thing you need to remember is that most people who complain about the apparent contradiction between our claims of a good God with unlimited power versus His apparent lack of concern for human suffering is that we aren’t confined by their definition of God. If they have the wrong concept of Him, we should point that out. No one can justify demanding that we discuss a God that doesn’t exist.

It’s simple; tell them, “You have the wrong ideas about God.” Proceed to explain the truth about who He is and what He does. You aren’t bound by some other “Christian” declaration about Him. We stand outside the church mainstream.

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The Role of Satan

The word “Satan” comes directly from Hebrew. However, it never appears by itself. The word is always prefixed to indicate it is a title — ha-satan, “the Satan”. The word is typically used to indicate a role, a position in a royal court. As we have taught in our community for several years, the role of the Satan is some ruler’s Black Hat, the Left-hand Man, the Accuser.

His job is to catch people who manifest disloyalty, to accuse them before the ruler, and he usually runs the jail, as well (Jailer). Yes, it’s easy for someone in that position to become corrupt. They could simply decide this or that fellow would make a good slave for his profit, so he could make up an accusation and provide fake evidence. Once in custody, the victim must serve a term of slavery from which the Jailer profits.

Among human rulers, it was common to give that role to the most powerful opposition figure. At other times, it was a position signifying demotion or punishment for offending the ruler. Some of these jailers were themselves required to live in their own jail.

This is the historic meaning of the Hebrew word ha-satan. It’s a specific role with certain powers and authority, making them accountable under the feudal system of government. I realize that in the English language, the word is used as a name, but that’s not how the Bible uses it. We need to get that part right.

We tend to use “the Devil” to indicate a specific person who started out as God’s Chief Bodyguard (cherub) and was demoted to the role of the Satan. He was put in a prison and became accountable for prisoners delivered into his domain. That would include the Watchers in permanent detention, the Nephilim who come and go, and every human born in mortal flesh except the Elect. God consigned them to confinement in the Devil’s hands. There’s nothing to prevent God having more than one Satan. Not every mention of a Satan points back to the Devil specifically, but points to a role, an office held by some elohim level creature.

Thus, for example, the Satan who shows up in Job may not have been the Devil. The identity of the Accuser doesn’t matter, only the nature of his mission. The prologue and epilogue are in drama format, meaning you cannot take the scene literally. The kind of conversation God has with His staff in Heaven would not be in any human tongue, and the scene as described only approximates the nature of the exchange. That’s how a Hebrew would read it. The whole point was the accusation and the results.

By the way, at no time did God explain to any human what was happening to Job. There is no answer to his questions. What mattered was his faithfulness, which God commended. Job’s buddies were condemned for trying to give a human explanation for something they could not comprehend in the first place. The explanation is that stuff happens in God’s courts and it affects us, but it seldom makes sense from what we can see down here. Get used to it.

When we see the title “Satan” in the Bible, focus on his role. Don’t get tangled up assuming it just has to be the Devil. The name “Lucifer” is also just a title or nickname, a mistaken translation of Scripture into Latin. Learn to recognize how the Hebrew language was written and how the Hebrews would read it, what they would make of it.

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Racism and Context

A cosmopolitan human population is not a society. It is multiple societies forced into a single geographic area. The division into tribes is automatic. People are social creatures but with limitations. If the peculiar hopes and needs for any one tribe is infringed or neglected, gang warfare is inevitable. No power on earth can stop it. It is typically expressed as turf wars, drawing boundaries that those in power sought to deny.

This is not a Caucasian thing. If anything, white people tend to try harder to find a compromise than almost any other racial identity. This is a fact you can suss out for yourself if you bothered to try. Northern Europeans were the quickest to accept wholesale intermarriage with other races. For only a very brief period in American history did we see a rollback of that ancient attitude. That rollback is virtually non-existent today.

Meanwhile, every other major ethnic identity residing in the US has been encouraged to keep their tribal instincts. There’s nothing wrong with that. The problem is that whites are officially discouraged from doing the same thing. Human nature is inherently racist. It’s there for a reason that has nothing to do with the Fall. The animal world is racist; animals in the wild recognize the differences between human races and have expressed preferences in some situations.

Humans are hard-wired to recognize the differences between tribes. We should invest time learning what it is supposed to do. God put it there; ask Him why He did that. Part of the answer will have something to do with how we should live as humans until Christ returns.

Racial consciousness need not lead to hatred. An awful lot of church folks have been chattering lately about Exodus 23:9 or 22:21 and taking it out of context. Israel was commanded not to oppress or be hostile to foreigners. The concept of “foreigner” means basically Gentile. This applied only to foreigners who had not already expressed enmity for Israel.

The various clans of Nephilim were not included in these admonitions. Amalekites were also not included, along with several other Canaanite tribes. Those were to be wiped out on sight. Furthermore, the Gentiles who passed through or wanted to live in the conquered lands must adhere to the Code of Noah. They could not worship their pagan idols openly, and must remain under the feudal control of the government of Israel, swearing allegiance to the king. They were obliged to observe certain parts of the ritual laws.

Gentiles were not required to convert. They were required to understand and respect the Law of Moses. They must assimilate to some degree. Anyone wanting to promote the same ethical standard today must not neglect the bigger picture. It’s not a bad recipe for any government today to follow. For Americans, it means folks can come and sample our liberties, but not to abuse them. They should be able to understand English at least well enough to learn and obey the laws of the land. They will remain second-class residents until they assimilate and become citizens. There are restrictions on what they can do and say. That’s pretty much what the Law of Moses required of Gentile residents in the Land.

Broadly speaking, the local church should have no trouble allowing outsiders to participate in worship and fellowship, as long as they agree to assimilate to some degree. If their presence is disruptive, give them a chance to understand. If they cannot agree to the rules, they need to be kept out. This is not necessarily something like written or memorized rules of behavior. Your church will naturally manifest a certain cultural alignment based on the people who are most active. The visitors should honor whatever that turns out to be. The church was never meant to be a public accommodation, but a private family gathering.

The distinction between culture and race is mostly artificial. The whole point is tribal identity. People form such an identity by the common experience of life in the local context. They have adapted according to their abilities and perspectives; there’s no sin in that. It’s the natural result of living in a mortal world.

Nothing in Scripture requires a cosmopolitan openness to folks who harbor hostility to your tribal identity.

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Imaging Eden

Not only does the common perception of Hell fail the biblical test, but so does the western mythology of Heaven.

As previously noted, the Hebrew imagery of a transcendent realm was based on the common Ancient Near Eastern concept of the sky. It was “up” for them and became the parable everyone used. Thus, we have the language of stars representing deities. Instead of simply popping in and out of this world, Jesus pointedly rose into the sky at the end of His time with His disciples. The literal meaning of such things was never the point; it was what it represented to them in the language of their own minds — the language God built for them.

God made us for Eden. The biblical language about Eden includes imagery of both garden and mountain. Trees and mountains have both served as parables for critical concepts of how God works in this realm of existence. Any attempt to wring out of such language a clinical description would fail almost immediately.

However, reading between the lines, we can certainly characterize things just a little bit: Eden was God’s private reserve away from His divine courts. It bore the imprint of His divine character. It wasn’t the place to do business, but to show His private familial side. The people He created to manage the garden on His behalf were capable of reading His character as personal servants who saw Him in a relaxed state. They were His imagers, ensuring the garden reflected His character.

We don’t quite know how, but Eden was connected to the natural world before the Fall. The people were commanded to reproduce so that the imaging mission could be spread across the world. They were not elohim but something lesser. Second Temple literature offers a lot of embellished detail about these things and we must take it with a grain of salt. Still, the general idea is that the Devil (God’s Chief Bodyguard) objected to the whole idea that he and the rest of God’s staff would be required to honor these people who were so obviously beneath their rank as eternal beings.

God censured His Bodyguard for rejecting His plans. The punishment was to confine this eternal creature in a time-space continuum, which happened to include access to the natural world God intended his humans to modify and manage, extending His garden. The whole thing is characterized in terms of the courts of an eastern potentate. God permitted a certain amount of debate and some kind of testing and proof. As part of this arrangement, the Devil was commissioned to take as his domain the unimproved portion of the natural world, but not the Garden itself. Not so much to control the natural world, but to inhabit it and use some aspects of it. He was granted the role of jailer, but confined to his own jail.

The Devil was permitted to tempt and imprison the humans. It would serve as a test case in the central debate with God. We can’t really comprehend the crux of the matter, but there are characterizations of it in the Second Temple literature. This is sort of the mental image Jesus and His disciples had in their minds in the Gospels and the rest of the New Testament.

The natural world is not only unimproved, but subjected to the serious mishandling of humans deceived about what matters. The world in which we live is increasingly abused and poisoned. But it’s not inert; it cries out to God for the redemption of His people so that the original purpose of imaging God can be restored to Creation.

The point here is that some of us humans will be redeemed out of this prison existence. When Jesus returns, He will wipe away the mess humans have made under Satan’s dominion and return it to a primal condition. The Devil will lose his domain; he and his allies will be destroyed in the Lake of Fire.

We get the feeling God will retire to His garden estates. He will dissolve His courts and commission His human family to take over the residual roles that are still needed in His retirement. In the process, the rebellious staff will be destroyed. Their duties will be passed to God’s family.

Humans will not enter God’s courts at any point in this narrative. We weren’t made for that. Surely, those who die before Christ’s return will see paradise, but that is conceptually a part of the afterlife separate from God’s courts. Strictly speaking, “Heaven” should be a term for God’s courts, but in English it has taken on the meaning of “paradise” as Jesus used the word. This has something to do with Paul’s use of the terms for a multi-layered “heaven”. Our place in that realm for now is a holding area “in Abraham’s bosom” waiting for the Second Coming.

When Christ returns, we shall be restored to our native form, not in mortal flesh. We’ll meet Him in the sky as He restores the world to what it was before the Fall. Then, we shall return to our original purpose of imaging God’s private character in the natural world.

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Not the Center

I’ve pressed people on this. When I first began to explain my understanding of the thesis of the Unseen Realm, people objected. While they might be able to offer reasoned objections based on mainstream theology, only a few could pin down exactly why they resisted internally. Near as I can tell, it boils down to the loss of human centrality in the Big Story.

I said it like this: In the Unseen Realm, we are not the subject, but the object of the narrative. It’s not really about us as humans. The ultimate nature of the rebellion in Heaven is about the non-human characters and what God demanded of them. Our situation here in this world after the Fall is a drama, a demonstration of God’s justice in making those demands, and His justice in punishing the elohim for their failure to meet His requirements. We are the object lesson, God’s proof in that dispute.

It’s not that we don’t matter, but that we aren’t the center of attention. The divine logic of what we should be doing is not based on us, but on Him and His glory. And while lots of people can declare that His glory is what matters most, they still object to any reformation in theology and practice that actually takes us off center stage.

This is at least part of why the teaching of the Unseen Realm was buried over the centuries. The traditional church theology elevates humanity to a central role in everything. It assumes that we are the whole point of everything Scripture mentions. When you bring back the very real Hebrew outlook on things, it takes away that false image of the importance of humanity.

This is why the Boastful Pride of Life — a reference to fleshly arrogance — is listed as a primary temptation of our fallen nature. Our flesh does not want to accept the truth of our impotence and lack of importance.

God does have great plans for us, but there are some very important matters regarding the other creatures He made that take first priority. We aren’t kings yet; we are still servants. This is sort of what Luke 17:7-10 is all about. We must look beyond ourselves and our dreams for human existence. Our place in the grand scheme of things is to ride out the simulation until the God has handled the crucial matter in front of Him. That crucial matter is not us.

Thus, Solomon declared that human ambition is striving after the wind. At some point, he realized that (a) he was one of the greatest men to ever live and (b) it really didn’t matter. Against the scale of cosmic events, humanity as a whole was not that significant. The only way we can matter at all is to commit to serving God from the heart. It’s the only way we can possibly have any effect that will outlive us.

Thus, when the Holy Spirit is present, there are two primary symptoms: humility and a passion for making Christ look good.

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