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around any bookstore and you can easily be convinced that the general
public accepts the fact that there is a devil, and demons too. Sometimes,
it seems that whole sections of bookstores are given over to materials
on witchcraft, demonism, satanism, demon possession, astrology,
extraterrestrial phenomena, psychic phenomena, and every other assorted
study of the supernatural.
The
Bible is filled with many eyewitness accounts about Jesus’ direct
encounters with Satan himself as well as with many of his demons.
Jesus
Christ of Nazareth not only came to this earth in human fleshly
form in order to atone for the sins of His masterpiece of creation—humankind—but
also to qualify for future world rulership.
To
do so, He had to overcome the influence and the grip of the present
evil world ruler, Satan the Devil. Satan is admitted throughout
the pages of the New Testament, to be the "god of this world" (II
Cor. 4:4), "the prince of the power of the world" (Eph. 2:2), and
"a spirit of disobedience" that now works throughout human society.
Evil
supernatural spirits do exist.
They
are created beings, created out of spiritual essence and
given spirit life through a divine act of the Creator God. They
therefore will exist in perpetuity. The Bible reveals Satan is eternal,
and will not be "destroyed" in the sense of human or physical destruction
as we might conceive of it, but will apparently live on for all
eternity in the "blackness of darkness forever."
As
rebellious spirits who formerly were given the responsibility for
the harmonious maintenance of the government of God on this earth,
Satan and his followers seem to represent fully one-third of the
angelic hosts originally, created by the divine family of God. The
Bible reveals only three names for those of "archangel" status:
Lucifer, Michael and Gabriel.
When
Jesus was emaciated to the point of near starvation, and had been
praying many hours a day and fasting in His determined effort to
grow ever closer to God so that He would be able to withstand the
strongest imaginable temptations, He actually allowed Satan, who
is called the prince of the power of the air, to literally convey
His physical body from one place to another through the air. The
Bible claims Jesus was actually picked up and taken to a pinnacle
of one of the Temple buildings; that He was taken to the top of
Mount Hermon, and that the encounter with Satan took place over
an area of several hundreds of miles, ending finally "in the wilderness"
(probably the Negev) where it had begun.
Throughout
His ministry, Jesus continually encountered those who were afflicted,
tormented, tortured, "bothered," or even possessed by Satan's demons.
(Judas Iscariot allowed himself to be possessed of Satan himself;
and this brought about Jesus' betrayal, arrest and crucifixion.)
Never
once did Jesus "advertise" to the general public that He was coming
to that village or this town for the purpose of casting out demons
or performing great signs and wonders!
When
Jesus' ministry was completed there were no doubt many people still
possessed of demons in the land, as there were many who were sick,
afflicted, maimed or injured.
From
time to time, however, in the course of His ministry, individuals
would come to Him seeking special favor and compassion because of
a loved one who was grievously tormented by being possessed or influenced
by one of these evil spirit beings.
Matthew
tells of a time when a man came to Him and dropped to his knees
before Him, saying, "Lord, please have mercy on my boy—because he
is acting crazily, and is terribly bothered. Very often, he will
fall into a fire, and oftentimes into the water; it seems the spirit
that possesses him is trying to kill him. He will have these seizures,
falling to the ground, literally foaming at the mouth until he is
bruised and cut, and then will go into these long dark periods of
time where he just lies there like a vegetable, following the fit.
I desperately wanted him cured, so I brought him to your disciples,
and, they tried very hard to get the demon to leave, but they couldn't
cast him out!" (See Matt. 17:14-21; Mark 9: 17-29; Luke 9: 38-42.)
Jesus
sighed deeply, and said aloud to the disciples that were there,
"O faithless generation, how long am I going to be with you—how
long am I going to put up with you? Bring the boy to me!"
They
brought the boy to him, and the instant the spirit saw Jesus, he
recognized exactly who He was, and threw the boy into a particularly
violent fit. it caused a huge ruckus, and people began running from
all directions when they saw the young man suddenly flung on the
ground, writhing and moaning, chewing on his tongues and frothing
at the mouth.
An
uglier scene cannot be imagined than a human being wallowing on
the earth in terrible torment. Jesus asked the father, "How long
ago did this spirit come into him?" The father answered, "When he
was a child."
Jesus
looked at the man and said, "If you can believe, all things are
possible to a person who can believe!"
The
father, terribly distraught and seeing the son on the ground, broke
up and with tears in his eyes and trembling voice said, "Lord, I
believe, help me with my unbelief."
He
did believe that Jesus had the power to heal the boy, but he recognized
that the revolting physical spectacle represented pretty powerful
testimony in itself, and he knew that there were certain waverings
in the back of his mind; certain doubts nagging away at his consciousness,
and that he was not near so faithful and strong in his conviction
as he should have been.
His
statement, while I do not wish to wax maudlin over it, is nevertheless
a beautiful example for those who are willing to pray to God today,
and who are not ashamed to call out to God and ask, "Help me with
my unbelief!"
When
Jesus saw the crowds gathering rapidly, He said, "You dumb and deaf
spirit, I order you to come out of him, and never enter into him
again!"
Even
after this command, the spirit yelled loudly through the vehicle
of the boy's own voice and threw him into an even more violent fit,
and then left the boy lying on the ground as if in a total coma.
A
lot of the people began to murmur that he was probably dead, but
Jesus reached down and taking the boy by the hand, drew him to his
feet—whereupon the boy seemed to stir, looked around wonderingly,
and began to flex his muscles and straighten his clothes, brushing
the dust and twigs from his garments and from his hair, no doubt
wondering what in the world had taken place.
Later,
in private, the disciples rather sheepishly wondered why they had
not been able to cast the demon out. They were not about to confess
this in public, and were no doubt chagrined when the father had
said so openly that they had been unsuccessful in previous attempts
to exorcise the spirit.
Jesus
gently rebuked them by telling them there were some demons that
were far more tenacious than others, thus illustrating that demons
are individual creatures and spirit beings who have different kinds
of personality and different degrees of stubbornness, and strength.
He said, "this kind [of violent demon which is able not only to
convulse the body, but also to cause the ears to be stopped up and
the tongue to be blocked] will not be cast out except through prayer
and fasting."
Even
the use of the word "lunatic" in the old King James version shows
the popular concept of the person who was "struck by the moon" or
"moon struck" when he was mentally addled, thus believing the affliction
was more from an astrological source, attributing certain mystical
powers to the moon, than from a demon. (The Latin luna provides
the etymological basis for "lunatic" and means "moon.")
On
one occasion Jesus was up in the vicinity of Tyre and Sidon, along
the Syrophoenician seacoast, when a woman of Canaan, a Greek-speaking
native of the old Phoenician area, was pestering His disciples.
Perhaps
they were walking along through a marketplace shopping for some
food to eat to take along to the coast where they could sit down
for a few hours’ relaxation and casual conversation, listening to
the boom of the surf, and enjoying the bright blue day, when a woman
kept asking first one and then the other of the large group of men
who were walking among the bazaars and shops of the marketplace,
stopping to examine first this and then that article, "Which one
is Jesus Christ of Nazareth, the one who is able to do all the healing—I
am desperate, you have got to point Him out to me because I need
help!"
"What
do you want?" one of the disciples asked.
"My
daughter is terribly tormented and I believe it is a demon, and
I have got to get some help, she is suffering terribly."
Looking
back over their shoulders, perhaps Peter, John and Andrew saw the
growing mob of people around the loud protestations of the woman,
and, knowing Jesus had come into the area for a much needed rest,
probably tried to hustle Him along a little faster, saying, "Lord,
let's get out of here. I think a crowd is gathering."
Finally,
the woman managed to discern who Jesus was and began crying after
Him very loudly.
The
disciples said, "Lord, send her away, she's been nagging and crying
around after us for a long time now. She is embarrassing the daylights
out of us, making a public disturbance and causing everyone to think
we are crazy.
Perhaps
Peter told Him, "Lord don't listen to her, you know you came up
here to get a rest, and there is no reason to get involved with
these people or there is no telling what is going to happen. Let’s
wait until we get back down into Galilee before drawing any further
attention to ourselves."
The
woman said "I know you. You must be the one who is the Jesus of
Nazareth. You have got to help me! I am desperate. My daughter is
terribly troubled with a demon!"
Jesus
refused to answer the woman. He did not even look at her! (See Matt.
15:21-29, especially v. 23.)
The
woman kept insisting, and finally Jesus turned to her and said,
"I am sent only to the lost sheep of the House of Israel." This
surely reinforced the disciples' attitude that she was nothing but
a complete nuisance.
Yet
she persisted.
Clutching
at His garment she knelt before Him in worship, bowed her head,
and said, "Lord, help me!" Jesus looked down at the woman, seeing
her shaking shoulders, and said, "It isn't right to take the children's
food, and cast it to the dogs!"
This
eyewitness account should be shocking proof concerning the
true character and identity of the real Jesus.
Jesus’
refusal to even answer the woman goes squarely against the grain
of those who, like Judas, wanted to create "Jesus" in their own
image, a "Jesus" who would never refuse anybody anything. This "popular"
Jesus would have emptied every graveyard in sight, healed every
illness, cast out every demon, and would never have refused a single
request for aid from anyone. Yet the real Jesus did refuse to
even listen to the woman initially, and had it not been for her
own tenacity, and especially her faithful answer to a question she
was asked, the account in Matthew clearly indicated that Jesus would
have stolidly refused to have helped the woman’s daughter.
The
Bible account says that’s exactly what He did. First, He
refused to answer her at all. She had had to fight her way
forward through the disciples until she finally discovered which
one was Jesus. Then, she had to kneel before Him and beg Him to
help her.
Still,
He refused.
Rather
He gave her the statement that He was come only to the lost sheep
of the House of Israel and then gave her the unpleasant analogy
of taking the food from the table of the children of the household,
and then instead of giving it to them, throwing it to the dogs.
Finally,
the woman said, "That's true Lord; still, the dogs are able to eat
the crumbs that fall from their master's table."'
With
a sigh, and knowing that it meant the end of His few days’ enjoyable
vacation where He was able to bask with his disciples in the anonymity
of a strange area, unrecognized, untormented by the crowds, not
being maligned, ridiculed or accused by the religious leaders. and
be able to thoroughly enjoy their forays into the nearby countryside,
their times on the beach together, their pleasant walks through
the streets of Sidon and Tyre, Jesus nonetheless relented.
He
said, "Why, lady, your faith is really great. it will be unto you
exactly as you believe."
Matthew
says that the woman’s daughter was made whole, "from that very hour."
The mother, of course, didn't find out until later. When she arrived
home, she found that the demon had indeed departed and her daughter
was resting comfortably in bed.
No
doubt she wasn’t surprised at all. However, she did determine, from
conversations with others at her home Who were with her daughter,
that her daughter had become sane and was no longer tormented by
the demon within the exact same time frame when her encounter with
Jesus had taken place.
Sure
enough, that was the end of Jesus' few pleasant days on the Syrophoenician
seacoast.
"Jesus
departed from thence and came nigh unto the Sea of Galilee and went
up into a mountain and sat down there"(Matt. 15:29).
The
people living on the heights overlooking the Sea of Galilee had
been telling stories for years about a "crazy man" who lived in
a graveyard nearby.
When
Jesus came into their country, He was to be confronted by this man
who was known to be demon-possessed and who had been captured, tied,
and even bound in chains several times previously by the local people.
Demons
always recognized Christ immediately. As James says, "Thou believest
that there is one God [or, "God is one"]; thou doest well: the devils
[demons] also believe, and tremble" (James 2:19
Even
though they hated Him, these unseen spirit beings, able to speak
through the voices and minds of their human hosts, knew they were
totally subject to His divine authority, and that they had to obey
Him.
In
this case. the man was actually possessed by many different
demons. "And when he had come out of the boat, there met him out
of the tombs a man with an unclean spirit, who lived among the tombs;
and no one could bind him any more, even with a chain; for he had
often been bound with fetters and chains but the chains he wrenched
apart, and the fetters he broke in pieces; and no one had the strength
to subdue him.
"Night
and day among the tombs and on the mountains he was always crying
out, and bruising himself with stones. And when he saw Jesus from
afar, he ran and worshiped him; and crying out with a loud voice,
he said, What have you to do with me, Jesus, Son of the Most High
God? I adjure you by God, do not torment me" (Mk. 5:2-7, RSV).
This
was spoken in sarcasm—saucily and contemptuously—even though the
demons were forced to admit Christ's true identity. Their sarcastic
implication that Jesus would 'torment" them was coupled with fear
of being sent out of the country, or being commanded to go "out
into the deep" (Luke 8:31).
Luke's
account shows that Jesus had already commanded the demons to depart,
and they began to bargain for some alternate hosts. Maybe it's spooky
to think about, but Jesus plainly said, "When the unclean spirit
is gone out of a man, he walketh through dry places seeking rest
(Matt. 12:43).
Demons
desperately want to possess and inhabit, like a spiritual parasite,
either humans or animals.
Jesus
asked the man, "What is thy name?" "And he said, Legion, because
many devils [demons] were entered into him. And they besought him
that he would not command them to go out into the deep. And there
was an herd of many swine feeding on the mountain: and they besought
him that he would suffer them to enter into them. And he suffered
[allowed] them. Then went the devils [demons] out of the man, and
entered into the swine,: and the herd ran violently down a steep
place into the lake, and were choked" (Luke 8:30-33).
The
demons tried to cause the man to destroy himself; and somehow, enough
human mind was functioning to keep the man alive, even if in a wretched,
bloody, virtually mindless state.
Not
so with the pigs. Even though the demons begged Jesus not to send
them "into the deep," their violent entry into the pigs caused such
a stampede the demons couldn't control their new host—and immediately
upon the death of the pigs were once again disembodied. (Another
theory, suggests that some demons want to die; that they are so
perverted they are constantly in a suicidal state. Consequently,
they try to kill whomever they possess. But, they themselves, being
spirit, cannot die.)
The
swineherds (pigs were unclean and not fit to eat, according to God's
laws and, therefore, were avoided by the Israelites) were upset
by the loss, of their livelihood—and they began spreading the word
around the nearby villages.
Soon,
some of the local citizens arrived at the scene, to see the well-known
crazy man of the graveyard sitting calmly at Jesus' feet, fully
clothed and in his right mind.
To
these pagan people, Jesus had some mysterious powers of which they
were terribly afraid. instead of rejoicing that the poor demented
man was healed, they begged Christ to leave the country. The man
who had been demon-possessed asked to join Christ—but He refused
him, saying, "Return to your own house, and show how great things
God has done unto you" (vv. 34-39).
Jesus
Christ’s confrontation with the demonic world projected a meaning
far more important even than the helping of suffering human beings.
His ability to command the evil demonic spirits, as demonstrated
by His casting them out of human minds, witnesses to the fact that
He, Jesus, is Lord and Ruler of even the spiritual world.
This
once again reinforces the fact that in His Prehuman life, the personality
Who became Jesus of Nazareth, the God of the Old Testament, was
the very Creator Being who had originally created all the spirit
beings. And Jesus' confrontation with demons during His physical
life fore shadowed the time when He, as King of kings and Lord of
lords, will take control of the entire earth and subject all the
demons to His direct control, binding them with Satan for a thousand
years.
"That which is born of the Spirit is Spirit"
Jesus'
sensitive awareness of the spiritual dimension was constant, continual,
all pervasive and perennial.
That
the voices which Jesus and/or others heard on various occasions
throughout His life and His ministry had to be the voices of heavenly
messengers, or angels, was made very clear by Jesus himself when
He said, "And the Father himself which hath sent me hath borne witness
of me. Ye have neither heard his voice at any time, nor seen
his shape" (John 5:37). Earlier, John had said, "No man hath seen
God at any time" (John 1: 18).
This
awareness of the "other dimension" gave Jesus an insight into human
nature that was the most fabulous in all of history. He knew that
combination of instant appraisal of expression, body language, gestures,
mannerisms and speech of individuals to the point that He quite
literally could read their minds, and know exactly what they were
thinking in any given situation.
The
Bible says as much on several occasions. Especially interesting
is an account following the first "cleansing of the Temple" when
He threw the money changers out (there could have actually been
two such occasions, although most people would never discover this
in a quick reading of the gospels separately).
Jesus
told the money changers, "Get these things out of here—and don't
make my Father's house a house of merchandise."
Then
some of the religious leaders demanded to know what in the world
He was doing and wanted Him to show "some sign." They, like many
a religious fanatic today, were hung up on the idea of "supernatural
signs."
On
this occasion, He refused to give them an immediate sign. He said
instead, "Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it
up," referring to Christ's own forth-coming three day-and-three-night
period in the tomb. He was saying, very plainly, that some of these
leaders were themselves guilty and coconspirators with others who
were seeking any possible excuse to put Jesus to death. The obvious
inference was that He was referring to His own body, and yet the
Jews answered, "Forty-six years it took to build this temple and
you say you are going to raise it up again in three days?"
But
John said, "He spoke of the temple of His body," and went on to
say that when Jesus was risen from the dead His disciples remembered
that He had said this to them—and thereby believed all the more
the Scriptures and the words which Jesus had said.
Then
follows a verse which indicates how thoroughly Jesus understood
the attitude of other human beings around Him. When He was in Jerusalem
at the Passover, many believed in His name when they saw the miracles
which He did. (Just how much "believing on Jesus," or "believing
in His name" really means to people was exposed later when the same
people took up stones to kill him. Compare John 8:31 with 8:59.)
"But
Jesus did not commit Himself unto them. because he knew all men—and
needed not that any should testify of man: for He knew what was
in man" (John 2:24-25).
Jesus
did not "commit Himself unto them," meaning totally reveal who and
what He was; nor did He place Himself in a position of compromise
or jeopardy, because He knew very thoroughly how quickly those same
individuals who "believed in His name" because they saw miracles—could
become so enraged they would become a mob and cry out for His blood.
This actually happened on many occasions, until finally they succeeded.
Bearing
this in mind, we can read with more understanding Jesus' own words
to Nicodemus, who came to Him privately at night and entered into
a conversation about Jesus qualifications.
Though
most professing religions cannot seem to accept these plain words
without swallowing a tremendous amount of false doctrine, and completely
altering the popular concept of the meaning of the words "born again,"
the meaning is nevertheless plain.
John's
account said that Nicodemus was a Pharisee and one of the "rulers
of the Jews," who, because he feared his constituency, decided to
talk to Jesus at night when there was less likelihood of being recognized.
When
he was finally inside Jesus' quarters and began to talk he, admitted
that Jesus had come from God, because he said, "No man can do these
miracles that you do except that God would be with him."
Jesus
earnestly told Nicodemus, "I'm telling you truthfully, that except
a man be born again, he can't see the Kingdom of God!" (See
John 3:3.)
Jesus
may have spoken in the Greek language since He was in cosmopolitan
Jerusalem; in any event the gospel uses the Greek word gennao which
has no exact translation equivalent in the English language, since
the word gennao in the Greek implies the entire process from conception
to birth (parturition) and unlike the words in English "beget,"
"conceive," or "give birth," it can be used of both men and women.
Gennao
can include the entire process from conception to birth, and it
is clear from Nicodemus' startled response that he understood
Jesus to mean the process of being born like the birth of
a cow, an elephant, or a human being.
Nicodemus
said, incredulously, "How can a man be born when he is old?" He
made himself abundantly clear when he said, "'Can he enter the second
time into his mother's womb and be born?"
That
retort was perhaps a little laden with sarcasm, as well as incredulity.
Nicodemus had already compromised his position to the Pharisees
by coming to Jesus in the first place—and by coming there after
dark he in essence admitted to Jesus that he was afraid of his peers.
He then further compromised himself by acknowledging plainly to
Jesus that he knew that He, Jesus, had to be a man of God. Having
seen Jesus personally on some occasions, and having heard all the
rumors, Nicodemus seemingly wanted to be convinced further.
But
here was this young leader of these hill-country disciples telling
him an utterly impossible thing; and he chose to seemingly hurl
the words back in Jesus' face with even a little ridicule or sarcasm
thrown in, protesting that no adult human being could ever crawl
up into his mother's 'womb and "be born again"!
Nicodemus
plainly understood what Jesus meant as He went on to explain it.
He
told Nicodemus, "I’m telling you the truth—that except a man be
born of water and of the spirit, he cannot enter into the Kingdom
of God"!
(Water
is used to symbolize several things: (1) it is the symbol of the
ceremony of baptism, through which the old self is discarded and
a new man emerges in a type of death, burial and resurrection; (2)
it also represents the "washing of the water by the word" (Eph.
5:26), showing the cleansing of the human mind and spirit by the
imbibing of God's Word; (3) Jesus' own inference on many occasions
to the Holy Spirit being typified by "rivers of living water".)
Jesus
then said in John 3:6, one of the most important verses in the Bible,
"That which is born of the flesh is flesh; and that which is
born of the Spirit is spirit."
A
simple observation—yet crucially foundational to the very essence
of God's ultimate purpose for mankind.
You
and I, lizards, turtles, rabbits, elephants and oxen were all "born
of the flesh," and like all other creatures, you and I are composed
of flesh—physical matter, a metabolic, organism made up of cells,
with functioning physiological systems.
We
can easily understand that "that which is born of the flesh is flesh"—why
then is it so difficult for some to understand that "that which
is born of the spirit is spirit"?
For
that's precisely what Jesus meant!
Even
as He lived and moved in a "spirit world" consciousness, so He wanted
Nicodemus to understand that a complete transformation from one
state of being into a new and different state of being
would actually have to take place before a person could inherit
the Kingdom of God.
Jesus
went on to explain. "Don't be puzzled that I'm telling you that
you have to be born again. The wind blows randomly, and though you
can hear its sound, you can't tell where it comes from or where
it goes to, because you can't see it; that's the way it is with
everyone who is born of the spirit!"
Nicodemus
was almost equally confounded by Jesus' statement that an individual
who was "born of the spirit" would actually be a "spirit" (become
spirit essence, something extraphysical, extraterrestrial, having
its being in the spiritual dimension rather than the physical).
Nicodemus
said, "How can these things be?" Jesus then showed Nicodemus that
He was using "earthly" examples and analogies, and, asked, "If I
have told you earthly things, and you don't believe, how can you
believe if I tell you of heavenly things? And no man has ascended
up to heaven, but He who came down from heaven, even the Son of
man which is in heaven."
Surprisingly,
many millions have never read these words, and even many who have,
still do not understand them. Yet this conversation with Nicodemus
leads directly into the "golden text" in John 3:16, so beloved and
so oft quoted, "For God so loved the world, that he gave his only
begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish,
but have everlasting life!'
Few
seem to know that statement is a part of the quotation Jesus spoke
that night to Nicodemus and that Jesus was earnestly trying to communicate
to Nicodemus some essential points about the gospel of the Kingdom;
the hope and trust in Jesus as Messiah; the belief in the death,
burial and resurrection of Jesus as a sacrifice for the sins of
the world; the acceptance of Him as the risen Savior; the necessity
to await for one's own personal resurrection at His second coming;
and the fact that only when you are really born of the spirit and
literally became spirit have you been fully "born again."
It’s
no wonder that later, Nicodemus, together with Joseph of Arimathaea,
lovingly and carefully wrapped the body of Jesus in grave clothes
and ointments, and helped lay Him in the tomb following His crucifixion.
Jesus
had come from a spirit world, and confidently expected to overcome
the flesh and once again to be "born into" that spirit world and
return to the bosom of the Father. He was trying to explain to a
human being, from His own unique perceptions of that "other dimension,"
what it would be like to actually become a spirit!
Rather
than choosing electricity (for it had not been "invented" yet),
nuclear energy, or any other more "modern" space-age analogy, Jesus
chose the example of air as a physical substance which has weight,
occupies space, and is familiar, in order to illustrate to this
leader of the Jewish people that when a person is truly born
of the "spirit," he is to really become spirit!
This
fact is lost on many religious leaders, who cannot seem to accept
the plain statement that Jesus became, following His Resurrection,
the "first born among many brethren" (Rom. 8:29) and this "rebirth"
was the act of being changed from human to divine, from physical
to spiritual, from a fleshly body to a spiritual body.
I
have been criticized for allegedly claiming that "Jesus had to be
born again." These critics hope to convince anyone who will listen
that I make the hideous mistake of claiming Jesus "was a sinner!"
needed to repent, and therefore "had to be born again."
The
confusion is quite understandable since these critics are so thoroughly
confused about what being "born again" means. To them it is the
conversion experience, the time when one repents,
and accepts Christ as Savior. Of course, Jesus did not have, to
repent. He never sinned, and He surely never had to
be born again in the sense normally (mis)understood by most religionists!
But
Jesus was "born again" in the biblical meaning of the term:
He was born of the spirit at His Resurrection and became spirit,
Just as will happen to us at our resurrection.
Cheap
tracts, books, articles, letters, and protestations of modern-day
religious leaders to the contrary, this Armstrong and his father
believe with all of our hearts that Jesus Christ of Nazareth never
committed one iota of sin, not even in a subconscious or unconscious
thought; and yet we just as firmly believe with all of our being
those statements in the opening chapters of John, as well as every
other word of the Bible, that Jesus Himself was, in fact, "born
again" by a resurrection from the dead, that He quite literally
became spirit, precisely as He told Nicodemus all humanity
could ultimately become.
That's
why Jesus is called the "first born" of many brethren.
It’s
no wonder the Apostle Paul talked about the fact that at the last
trumpet, at the time of the resurrection of the dead, "We shall
all be changed," and that Job said he would wait in the grave
"until my change come"!
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