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Bible prophecy is an emotionally loaded
subject. In it, a great supernatural Being claims to know EXACTLY
what will happen to man in the next few years. Some marvel—most
ridicule. Some believe—most criticize. Criticize? That's the “sport
of scholars.” In this article, we examine “modern theology's critical
analysis” of Ezekiel, Daniel and Isaiah—and discover why the critics
cannot ignore the prophets!
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Why
is that man cannot dismiss the Bible with a wave of the hand
as he might other writings of the ancient world? The Bible—more
than all the other books put together—has drawn unparalleled
attention from critics. Nothing in the history of literature
can begin to compare with it. It has been examined, dissected,
reviled, pulled apart, and even put back together again and
defended.
For
some reason, man could not simply say, “I don’t believe it”and
then carry on as always. There are many reasons why. But standing
head and shoulders above all the rest is prophecy!
Prophecy Troubles
Critics
The
human mind, even gifted with the greatest insight and sagacity,
can go only so far in predicting future events. Isaiah, Jeremiah,
Ezekiel, Daniel, and the twelve minor prophets have all gone
far beyond the tightly limited boundaries of mortal man. So
the critics have a choice: Either they must admit that a power
and intelligence greater than their own human mind had inspired
those prophecies, or they must find some other way to explain
them.
Guess
which alternative the critics have chosen!
They
have chosen to look for a human explanation. Their usual solution
is ridiculously simple—they “re-date” the prophecies! They
shove the date of composition forward a few centuries—so that
the prophecies appear to have been written after all of the
prophesied events had already occurred!
It
is significant that no critic has ever attempted to deny the
divine origin of these prophecies while leaving them in their
own time setting.
Actually,
this effort of the critics unequivocally proves the phenomenal
accuracy of the prophets. Why else would a materialistic “scholar”
feel it necessary to fabricate a new day? If the prophecies
were not accurate—if even only one were wrong—critics would
love to expose this obvious incompetence and glaring error
by retaining the true dates. But they can not do so. They
full well realize that Bible prophecy—if they don’t tamper
with the dates—is unerringly, precisely accurate in even its
most intricate details.
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So the critics have
only one choice—they must alter the date of the prophetic statement
and turn it into contemporary history. [They have to or they are
faced with the inevitable—a Being that is capable of making the
foretold events come to pass as He pleases…]
But
can we know the dates with any certainty?
We
certainly can!
In
this article, we will demonstrate the absolute prophetic authenticity
of three of the most important prophets—Ezekiel, Daniel, and Isaiah.
Date of Ezekiel
Ezekiel
is one of the easiest of the prophets to date. No one was any more
thorough—he gives us no less than twelve specific dates in his book.
Ezekiel
dates his prophecies from the year of “Jehoiachin’s captivity” by
Nebuchadnezzar’s reign which occurred at the time of the spring
equinox in 596 B.C. (II Chron. 36:10). Since all historians agree
upon the dates of Nebuchadnezzar’s reign, we can compose the following
dates for the book of Ezekiel:
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Chapter 1:1-2 |
5th day of the 4th
month in the 5th year (592 B.C.) |
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Chapter 8:1 |
5th day of the 6th month
in the 6th year (591 B.C.) |
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Chapter 20:1 |
10th day of the 5th month
in the 7th year (590 B.C.) |
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Chapter 24:1 |
10th day of the 10th month
in the 9th year (beginning of 587 B.C.) |
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Chapter 26:1 |
1st day of a month in the 11th
year (586 B.C.) |
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Chapter 29:1 |
12th day of the 10th month
in the 10th year (end of 587 B.C.) |
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Chapter 30:20 |
7th day of the 1st month
in the 11th year (586 B.C.) |
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Chapter 32:1 |
1st day of the 12th month
in the 12th year (beginning of 584 B.C.) |
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Chapter 32:17 |
15th day of the month in the 12th
year (584 B.C.) |
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Chapter 33:21 |
5th day of the 10th month
in the 12th year (end of 585 B.C.) |
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Chapter 40:1 |
10th day of the beginning
month of the civil yearTishri, the seventh monthin the 25th
year (572 B.C.) |
Now
that’s evidence! Yet, some critics just toss aside such careful,
meticulous dating!
Where Critics Go Wrong
Why,
then, do the same critics attempt to place the authorship of the
book of Ezekiel between 400 and 230 B.C.?
The
answer is twofold. First, they must assume—without proof—that Ezekiel’s
prophecies are not of divine origin. Then, proceeding from this
assumption, they reasoned that Ezekiel had to have had certain historical
information available before he could have written these remarkable
“histories”. His in-depth script for the fall of Tyre, for example,
was still being acted out in fantastic detail until about 320 B.C.
Consequently, the critics reason, Ezekiel couldn’t have written
it before that time! But Ezekiel’s prophecies about Tyre’s destruction
were indeed written in 596 B.C.—as is clearly proclaimed. How then
could the critics explain it’s incredible accuracy for the next
250 years without acknowledging their Creator God in heaven?
(In
reality, the prophecy concerning Tyre is still being fulfilled today—so
using the critics’ own reasoning, we would have to conclude that
the Book of Ezekiel has not been written yet!)
Let’s
put it bluntly: We are asked to believe that Ezekiel’s dates are
an out-and-out fraud. Furthermore, we are asked to believe that
this fraud in dating went undetected until the present day!
A “Pseudo Ezekiel”?
Now
let’s consider the problems that this imaginary, “pseudo-Ezekiel”
would have had to face in getting his spurious book accepted as
the work of an original Ezekiel and then have it accepted as Scripture.
During
the time of the Babylonian captivity, there was a recognized religious
authority among the Jews. Ezekiel refers to them as the “elders
of Judah” (Ezek. 8:1).
Later,
when Cyrus decided to give permission for the Temple to be rebuilt,
“Then rose up the chief of the fathers of Judah and Benjamin, and
the priests, and the Levites … to go up to build the house of the
Lord which is in Jerusalem” (Ezra 1:5). The leaders of this expedition
were Zerubbabel the governor and Joshua the high priest.
A
little later, about 457 B.C., Ezra comes to Palestine. Ezra is called
a “ready scribe in the law of Moses, which the Lord God of Israel
had given” (Ezra 7:6). “Ezra had prepared his heart to seek the
law of the Lord, and to do it, and to teach Israel statutes and
judgments” (verse 10). Notice that Ezra was not a lawgiver, but
a scribe—a copier—of an already existing code of law.
Throughout
Ezra and Nehemiah, it is quite obvious that there is a ruling body
of Jews concerned with ecclesiastical affairs and that there is
a “holy scripture”an authoritative body of religious writings (see
Neh. 8:1).
There
can be no question that the “law of Moses” was the Torah—the first
five books of your Old Testament. Remember this was before 400 B.C.
Now
back to the mischievous plot of “pseudo-Ezekiel.” He would have
had the rather formidable task of palming off on a group of Jewish
priests, Levites, and governors, a totally new book which none of
them had ever heard before—and convince them that it was written
during the Babylonian captivity. Quite an assignment!
The
Jews have always been an intelligent, practical people with a great
deal of common sense. Would they have accepted a book purporting
to have foretold, in advance, the history of the last few years,
yet which did not appear until after the event?
Would
you have accepted such a book?
Suppose
some individual would try to convince you that he has written a
book listing in detail all the major events of 1990-1995and that
the book was published in 1960, but he gave you a copy of the book
in the year 2000, would you immediately accept this would be-prophet?
Wouldn’t
it seem a little bit contrived?
When
one comprehends the exalted position of the Torah among Jews past
and present, the obstacles that a “pseudo-Ezekiel” would face becomes
insurmountable.
Why was Ezekiel Accepted?
Why
then were Ezra and the men of the Great Synagogue (the assemblage
of priests and Levites constituting the religious authority) willing
to accept the real Ezekiel at all? The answer becomes obvious when
we understand that the Canon of the Old Testament—that is, the books
making up the Old Testament—was complete by the end of the 5th Century
B.C. Ezra and the Jews with him in Babylon were aware of the prophetic
work of Ezekiel when they returned.
Ezekiel
had been part of the succession of prophets: He had held an office
which was honored and respected. His prophecies had already began
to come to pass. And as they continued to be fulfilled before the
Jews’ very eyes—while the book was their very possession. Nobody
could question the authenticity of the book.
Interestingly
enough, even the critics have not been willing to call Ezekiel an
out-and-out fraud. Their reason is obvious: Frauds have ulterior
motives. And any ulterior motive would have been transparent throughout.
But no such motive can be found in Ezekiel. And no fraud writes
like Ezekiel writes.
Ezekiel
rings true. Literature with such a powerful moral force simply does
not arise from a hypocritical mind.
Finally,
since both Jewish tradition and the Jewish historian Josephus state
that the Old Testament was completed about the end of the 5th Century
B.C., there can be no question of a later date for Ezekiel.
Absolutely,
the only claim that can be advanced to question Ezekiel’s own date
is the fact that NO MAN could have made the prophecies that Ezekiel
made. This, however, is not evidence for a later date, rather, it
is PROOF OF A DIVINE ORIGIN!
Date of Daniel
Daniel
was a contemporary of King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon. He was carried
into captivity by Nebuchadnezzar about 604 B.C.and continued to
live and write for more than the next 70 years.
Certain
critics, however, date Daniel between 165 and 175 B.C.! That shouldn’t
come as a great surprise. But, just for curiosity, let’s examine
whatever reasons they have fabricated. Again, topping the list,
is the assumption that the Book of Daniel is of purely human origin.
The
fundamental axiom of criticism is the dictum that a prophet always
spoke out of a definite historical situation to the present needs
of the people among whom he lived and that a definite HISTORICAL
situation shall be pointed out for each prophecy (George L. Robinson,
The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia).
Consider
what this means. It is a “fundamental axiom” that every prophet
always spoke to and about the present needs of the people among
whom he lived. In other words, Daniel is not seen by the critics
as a prophet contemporary with Nebuchadnezzar, but rather as a “pious
fraud” writing about 175 B.C. This “pseudo-Daniel,” it is reasoned,
was directing his “prophecies” to the current needs of the people
in the second century B.C., since some of his “prophecies” cover
that period.
Daniel Is Challenged
When
one understands that what was going on about 175 B.C. the critics’
motives become embarrassingly obvious.
This
was the time of the Maccabean revolt against Antiochus Epiphanes.
The book of Daniel covers historical details of the breakup of Alexander
the Great’s empire into four divisions and the subsequent war between
the king of the south, climaxing in Antiochus Epiphanes’ invasion
of Jerusalem. Daniel’s spectacular in-advance description of the
minute details of all of this (in Daniel 11the longest “detailed”
prophecy in the Bible) are too absolutely accurate to have been
written hundreds of years before they took place, say the critics.
Too
accurate to have been conceived by man, that is, [who have lived
400+ years before the event actually occurred!]
Therefore,
the “fundamental axiom of criticism” is applied—and Daniel is quickly
put into a “time machine” and “re-materialized” some four hundred
years later—as an attempt is made to set his prophecies into the
“proper” historical situation of the Maccabean revolt.
There
are two things wrong with this hypothesis:
| 1.Daniel himself did not understand all that he
wrote. When he asked for further understanding, he was told:
“Go thy way, Daniel: for the words are closed up and sealed
till the time of the end” (Daniel 12:9). |
| 2.Daniel’s words were not directed to the
people of his own time nor even primarily to those in the second
century B.C., but to those living at the time of the end. |
Of
course, some will argue that this was an attempt to make the people
of his time believe that the end was near. Fair enough, but why
then did they accept the book into the Canon when the end didn’t
come? [Besides, as pointed out earlier, the Old Testament Canon
had already been compiled and completed several hundred years earlier.]
A Critical “Fairy Tale”
Once
upon a time (about 175 B.C.) a pious man (really a religious nut
or a clever fraud) resolved to avail himself of the traditions surrounding
the name of Daniel. He then set about to write the circumstances
of his own time. And so, in the name of “Daniel the prophet,” this
fast-talking “pseudo-Daniel” proclaimed words of admonition and
prophecy to the “faithful” (deceived idiots) around him in the second
century B.C.
Now
ponder what this imaginary situation would have to have been. This
wily fellow—living long after the time of Daniel—decided to attempt
to foist off a series of spurious prophecies on his gullible contemporaries
(perhaps motivated by a dare from his friends). He then proceeded
to embellish his phony predictions with a detailed description of
life in Nebuchadnezzar’s court, including punishment given for certain
crimes, details of the religious leaders, customs of the time, etc.
The
critics have generally felt that many of these details were fanciful
tales, since a Jew living so much later [some 400 years difference]
would have had no direct knowledge of these ancient times. He would
have had to have been something of a novelist.
The
third chapter of Daniel is thought by critics to bear this out.
The “story” of Shadrach, Meshach and Abed-Nego has been labeled
“preposterous.” The very idea of throwing men into a furnace seems
absurd. It simply doesn’t fit the normal pattern of executions.
A
letter (dated even before the time of Nebuchadnezzar), however,
has been found (and is in the Nies Babylonian collection at the
Yale University) which contains a royal decree ordering the death
of a slave by burning in a furnace! (John B. Alexander, “New Light
on the Fiery Furnace,” Journal of Biblical Literature, Vol. 69,
1950, pp. 375-6.)
Daniel’s
details of Nebuchadnezzar’s court have been proven to be remarkably
accurate. Sir Henry Rawlinson found that the magicians in Babylon
at that time correspond exactly to the three classes of Chaldean
doctors which Daniel enumerates.
Fairy
tales don’t come true.
Daniel’s Prophecies for Today!
Daniel’s
prophecies didn’t finish in 175 B.C.! And that’s crucial—for this
article, and for your life.
Having
had Daniel’s prophecies in hand since the sixth century B.C., it
must have been quite an experience for the Jews of the time to see
these things being fulfilled before their eyes. The prophecies of
chapters 2, 7 and 8 were proving to be absolutely accurate. The
Babylonian Empire was succeeded by the Medo-Persian Empire, which
was in turn conquered by Alexander.
When
Alexander came to Jerusalem, we are told:
He
went up to the temple, where He sacrificed to God under the direction
of the high priest, and showed due honor to the priests and to the
high priest himself. And, when the book of Daniel was shown to him,
in which he had declared that one of the Greeks would destroy the
empire of the Persians, he believed himself to be the one indicated
(Josephus, Antiquities, XI, viii, 5).
With
Alexander’s rise to power at such a young age and his unbelievable
march across the civilized world, it must have seemed impossible
to those who were holding the book of Daniel that his kingdom could
be broken at its peak of strength as Daniel had prophesied (chapter
8:8). Yet it happened! Not only was his empire broken, but it was
later—as Daniel had said—divided into four primary divisions.
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Daniel’s Prophecy for Rome
A
person living at the time of the degeneration of these four
kingdoms and the rise of Rome in the west could—if we allow
our imaginations to be stretched—have forecasted what was
about to take place. This, of course, is what the critics
believe a pseudo-Daniel did about 175 B.C. A man could—at
that point in time—have possibly predicted that Rome would
become the fourth great world empire. What a man could not
have predicted at that time, was that Rome would be the last!
But
Daniel did.
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And
he did not stop there. He went on to describe the nature of the
Roman Empire: what it would be like, how it would develop, predicting
that the Roman Empire would endure incredibly—being “resurrected”
many times rather than being replaced, as the pattern of world history
up to that point had been!
And
finally, as incredible as it may sound, what it would do before
the returning, conquering Creator God would destroy it!
The
story is worth reading.
It
would have been logical in 175 B.C. to look at the lesson of history
and thereby assume that Rome was going to be just like all the rest—another
fighting, conquering, pillaging, destroying world empire. Daniel,
however, emphasizes that this fourth kingdom would be different
from all the kingdoms before it (Dan. 7:7, 19, 23).
The
unique strength of Rome, its terrifying nature, its twofold division,
and its later history are all foretold by Daniel with stunning accuracy.
So are the successive revivals—and a final union of ten European
kings prophesied to destroy the English-speaking peoples in this
generation.
How
could a “pious fraud” have foretold the future beyond the latest
dates given by the critics?
Or
beyond today’s date? Daniel’s prophecy is alive in today’s headlines—and
tomorrow’s! Using the critics historical approach to Daniel for
a moment, we would have to again humorously conclude that his book
is not yet written!
One Isaiah, Two Isaiah, Three Isaiah, Four …
Isaiah
is dated by Isaiah himself between 760 and 695 B.C. Notwithstanding,
and as we might expect, critics have attempted to alter these dates
by as much as 300 years. One even went so far as to place Isaiah
in the first century B.C.—but was rather embarrassed when archaeologists
discovered a complete scroll of Isaiah, copied and preserved, dated
in the second century125 B.C.
When
we examine the reasons for the difficulties that critics have with
Isaiah, we find the same answer that we found for Ezekiel and Daniel—Isaiah
is just a little too accurate for their materialistic tastes.
But
with Isaiah, the problem could not be solved by merely pushing the
date forward. The critics had to dissect the book—and have it attributed
to the fraudulent writings of between two and five authors!
Jewish
tradition informs us that King Manasseh of Judah had Isaiah sawn
in two—the New Testament book of Hebrews alludes to this (Hebrews
11:37). But today’s “higher critics” have butchered him into five
pieces!
Why
were two to five fictitious authors needed by the critics? To understand,
we must return to the “fundamental axiom of criticism.”
Having
decided that a prophet cannot foretell the future, it is essential
for the critics that the “pseudo-author” be writing for his own
generation. When we have begun with this assumption, it is only
natural to look to history for a historical context into which each
prophet can be fit. What is strange about Isaiah, however, is that
there is no historical situation into which Isaiah AS A WHOLE
can be squeezed!
So
there’s only one “solution.” Isaiah must be “sawn asunder [a
second time…]”
Critics With Saw in Hand …
According
to some, “the conversion of the heathen” lay quite beyond the horizon
of any eighth century prophet; consequently, Isaiah 2:2-4 and all
similar passages which foretell the conversion of those outside
the chosen people are to be relegated to an age subsequent to Isaiah
(George L. Robinson, “Isaiah,” The International Standard Bible
Encyclopedia, p. 1505).
Other
ideas which are supposed to be “beyond the horizon” of Isaiah are
those of “universal peace,” “universal judgment,” “the Apocalyptic
character of chapters 24-27,” “the return from captivity,” and even
the poetic character of some passages. All this, according to critics,
means that Isaiah couldn’t have written the entire book.
The
question we have faced in Ezekiel, Daniel and now in Isaiah is whether
their prophecies were dreamed up by “religious geniuses,” or whether
they were inspired by God. The only evidence advanced by the critics
to prove a later date for these prophets is the prejudicial “evidence”actually
circular reasoning—that no man could have written the prophecies
when these men said they did.
That
isn’t proof!
That’s
begging the question! We all agree that that concept of the “conversion
of the heathen” might have lain completely “beyond the horizons
of any eighth-century prophet.” But it doesn’t lie beyond the horizons
of God, nor does it lie beyond the ability of God to convey His
concept to a prophet who otherwise could never have understood it!
(See II Peter 1:21 and I Cor. 2:9-10.)
Now,
what shred of evidence have the critics mustered up to indicate
that Isaiah may have been written by more than one prophet?
All
their hopes are placed in the one basket of literary criticism.
A “first Isaiah” is supposedly distinguished from a “second Isaiah”
(and a “second” from a “third”) solely on the basis of change in
writing style.
But
the real crux of the matter is not writing style. Nothing definite
can be determined by counting particles, articles, conjunctions,
or any other “characteristic traits” of a man’s writing. The fact
of the matter is that an accomplished author’s writing style should
and will change through the years—so any evidence based upon writing
style is tenuous at best. (Modern computer-based literary analysis
has claimed that Paul wrote [only] five of his 14 epistles, that
Ian Fleming didn’t write James Bond, and that the works of Graham
Greene and G. K. Chesterton had “more than one author.”)
Obviously,
literary analysis of writing style completely fails to take into
account the possibility of a purposeful change in form of the literature
in question—i.e., a switch from a prose to poetry, or a switch from
one form of poetry to another (in which the writer uses or omits
words for the sake of euphony, rhythm, etc.).
The
critics must face their own motivations.
The
real criteria for breaking Isaiah down into sections are the prophecies
themselves. No man could have written them as “prophecies.” And
any man who wrote them as “histories” would have had to be present
in several eras of Israel’s history.
Which
might be possible for a tree—but not for a man.
Ageless Test of Prophecy
Another
reason for the critics’ confusion in the prophetic books of the
Bible is their failure to understand the simple principle of duality
in prophecy.
In
the 40th and 41st chapters of Isaiah, God is challenging Israel
to prove their idols and false gods. The test He proposes is one
of prophecy—foretelling the future. In the process of challenging
the idols to prove that they are indeed real gods, an important
principle of prophecy is expressed:
Produce
your cause, saith the Lord; bring forth your strong reasons, saith
the King of Jacob. Let them bring forth, and shew us what shall
happen [in the future]: let them shew the former
things [fulfilled prophecy], what they be, that we may consider
them, and know the latter end of them; or declare us things
for to come (Isaiah 41:21, 22).
This
is something which God does repeatedly in prophecy. In preparing
to give us the understanding of the latter end of a thing, He gives
us a prophecy which will have two fulfillments. The former
is not the primary purpose of the prophecy, but is
merely a “type”a model which we can examine to understand the latter
fulfillment. It is this latter fulfillmentthe “antitype”which, being
far more comprehensive in its scope, is the main goal of the original
prophecy.>
Isaiah’s
prophecies are this wayand Isaiah himself knew it. He not only understood
that prophecy was dual, but he understood why it was dual.
It was not merely to help us understand the latter end of these
propheciesit was also to confound and confuse the skeptics. [In
so doing, God is able to prove that He is indeed God by making come
to pass what He declared not only once, but TWICE to send a message
that HE is doing it and not just mere “coincidence…” Some prophecies
are corrective in nature, meaning God is punishing the nation or
an individual for disobedience. A prior fulfillment serves as a
warning that a second one is forthcoming, greater and more severe,
if the nation or individual continues to disobey God!]
In
Isaiah 28:9, Isaiah asks: “Whom shall he teach knowledge? And whom
shall he make to understand doctrine? Them that are weaned from
the milk, and drawn from the breasts.” The spiritually immature
will not understand. Isaiah goes on to say:
For
precept must be upon precept, precept upon precept; line upon line,
line upon line; here a little, and there a little… that they might
go, and fall backward, and be broken, and snared, and taken (Isaiah
28:9-13).
God
did not intend for scornful men to fully comprehend His Truth. Therefore,
the prophecies of God are purposely NOT laid out in a simple,
straightforward mannerbut are found “here a little and there a little.”
And they are dualand it takes a mind imbued with spiritual
discernment to understand (I Cor. 2:12-14). (Christ used the
same technique when teaching in parablesparables were designed to
hide the meaning; see Matthew 13:10-17.)
The
critics only confound themselves, because it is utterly impossible
to confine Isaiah’s prophecy to any one historical context. The
prophecies are deliberately dualand are obviously intended for people
of other ages.
When
the facts are considered, the criticism leveled at all the
prophets becomes transparent. The critics have neither correctly
evaluated the evidence nor logically combined it. They have started
with an assumptionthat the authors of the prophets were completely
of no divine inspiration. From this point on, all criticism degenerates
into a simple effort to explain away the fact that God’s prophets
foretell the future with stunning accuracy.
But
why should anyone want to be rid of the prophet?
Paul
characterized a group of men who seemed to want to get rid of God.
Perhaps there’s a comparison [or similarity]:
For
the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness
and unrighteousness of men, who suppress {marginal reading}the truth
in unrighteousness … because that when they knew God, they glorified
him not as God, neither were thankful; but became vain in their
imaginations, and their foolish heart was darkened. Professing themselves
to be wise, they became fools…and even as they did not like to
retain God in their knowledge, God gave them over to a reprobate
mind… (Romans 1:18-28).
(Reprinted
from “The Good News of Tomorrow’s World", January, 1971) AG
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