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Today's Message From:
THe People oF eVeRYDaY TR'u'TH
THe People oF eVeRYDaY TR'u'TH
Let’s Start Off
‘BY’ Praying,
DEAR GOD!
I just ask that You will be watching over us_all
as We go through this discussion with You
ALL WITHiN our Minds, our
Hearts, our Bodies, & our Spirits,
that You will touch us_all through these
WORDS TODAY & May
We Not Stop
When Sin Arrives.
AMEN
GOD SAYS THESE THINGS ARE…
FOR ALL MY SONS &
DAUGHTERS
^
“Messiah”
means “Anointed One”
Biblical
prophecy specialists Peter and Paul LaLonde have noted that:
The Old
Testament includes about sixty different prophecies, with more than 300
references, of the coming of the Messiah. It was through the fulfillment of
these prophecies that Israel was told she would be able to recognize the true
Messiah when He came.
The four gospels record several times when Jesus
said that He was fulfilling a prophecy of the
Old Testament. Luke 24:27 records, for example,
“And
beginning at Moses and all the prophets, he expounded unto them in all the
scriptures the things concerning himself.” And verse 44 notes, “And he said
unto them, These are the words which I spake unto you, while I was yet with
you, that all things must be fulfilled, which were written in the law of Moses,
and the prophets and the psalms, concerning me.”
[Peter
and Paul LaLonde, 301 Startling Proofs & Prophecies
(Niagra
Falls, Ontario, Canada: Prophecy Partners, Inc., 1996).]
Jesus
Christ himself said, “For if you believed Moses, you would believe Me; for he
wrote about Me”
(John 5:46, NKJV).
Likewise,
Christ’s disciples taught that He fulfilled Old Testament prophecy
(e.g., Acts 3:18; 17:2-3; 1 Corinthians 15:3-4).
Partial list of prophecies
about the Messiah
A prophet
like unto Moses. This was prophecied by Moses, himself:
“The LORD
your God will raise up for you a Prophet like me from your midst, from your
brethren.
Him you
shall hear, according to all you desired of the LORD your God in Horeb in the
day of the assembly, saying, ‘Let me not hear again the voice of the LORD my
God, nor let me see this great fire anymore, lest I die.’ And the LORD said to me:
‘What they have spoken is good. I will raise up for them a Prophet like you
from among their brethren, and will put My words in His mouth, and He shall
speak to them all that I command Him.
And it
shall be that whoever will not hear My words, which He speaks in My name, I
will require it of him’.”
(Deuteronomy
18:15-19, NKJV).
Like
Moses, the Messiah would be a leader, a prophet, a lawgiver, a deliverer, a
teacher, a priest, an anointed one, a mediator, a human and one of God’s chosen
people (a Jew) performing the role of intermediary between God and man—speaking
the words of God—and like Moses, the Messiah would offer himself to die for the
sins of the people.
Both
Moses and Jesus performed many miracles validating their message. As infants,
both their lives were threatened by evil kings, and both were supernaturally
protected from harm. Both spent their early years in Egypt. Both taught new
truths from God.
Both
cured lepers (Num 12:10-15; Matthew 8:2-3) and confronted demonic powers. Both
were initially doubted in their roles by their siblings. Moses lifted up the
brazen serpent to heal all his people who had faith; Jesus was lifted up on the
cross to heal all who would have faith in Him.
Moses
appointed 70 elders to rule Israel (Numbers 11:16-17); Jesus appointed 70
disciples to teach the nations (Luke 10:1, 17). And there are many other
parallels between the lives of Moses and Jesus.
The
Messiah would be a descendant of Noah’s son, Shem. Noah said, “Blessed be the
LORD God of Shem; and Canaan shall be his servant. God shall enlarge Japheth,
and he shall dwell in the tents of Shem; and Canaan shall be his servant
(Genesis 9:26-27).
Chapter
10 goes on list descendants of Shem, noting that he was ancestor of Eber
(Heber: Luke 3:35), the founder of the Hebrew race.
Noah
associated Shem especially with the worship of Jehovah, recognizing the
dominantly spiritual motivations of Shem and thus implying that God’s promised
Deliverer would ultimately come from Shem. The Semitic nations have included
the Hebrews, Arabs, Assyrians, Persians, Syrians and other strongly
religious-minded peoples.
…Shem was
peculiarly His [God’s] steward with respect to the propagation of God’s will
and plan for mankind, especially the transmission of His saving Word.
(Henry M. Morris, The Defender’s Bible)
More
specifically, he would be a descendant of Shem named Abraham
( Genesis
22:18; 12; 17; 22).
Fulfilled: See Christ’s genealogy in Matthew 1.
More
specifically, he would be a descendant of Abraham’s son, Isaac,
not
Ishmael
(Genesis
17; 21).
Fulfilled: See Christ’s genealogy in Matthew 1.
More
specifically, he would be a descendant of Isaac’s son, Jacob,
not Esau
(Genesis
28; 35:10-12; Numbers 24:17).
Fulfilled: See Christ’s genealogy in Matthew 1.
More
specifically, he would be a descendant of Judah, not of the other eleven
brothers of Jacob.
Fulfilled: See Christ’s genealogy in Matthew 1.
More
specifically, he would be a descendant of the family of Jesse in the tribe of
Judah
(Isaiah
11:1-5).
Fulfilled: See Christ’s genealogy in Matthew 1
and Luke 3:23-38.
More specificially, he would be of the house
of David
(2 Samuel
7:12-16; Jeremiah 23:5; Psalm 89:3-4).
Fulfilled: See Christ’s genealogy in Matthew 1;
Luke 1:27, 32, 69.
Note: Since the the Jewish genealogical records were destroyed in 70
A.D., along with the destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple, it would not be
possible for a Messiah imposter who was born later to prove his lineage back to
David and thus fulfill this prophecy.
He will
be born in a small city called Bethlehem, specifically the one formerly known
as Ephratah
(Micah
5:2).
Fulfilled: Luke 2:4-20.
Note: Christ’s birth in Bethlehem was apparently not by the choice of
Mary and Joseph; it was forced upon them by Caesar Augustus’ taxation decree
which required Joseph to leave his home in the city of Nazareth and return to
his place of origin to pay the tax.
He will
be born of a virgin
(Isaiah
7:14).
Fulfilled: Matthew 1; Luke 1.
The
Messiah would be the “seed of of a woman”
come to
destroy the work of the Devil.
Not long
after Creation, God prophecied to the serpent Satan, “And I will put enmity
between you and the woman, And between your seed and her Seed;
He shall
bruise your head, And you shall bruise His heel”
(Genesis
3:15).
The
implication was that Eve’s descendant would undo the damage that Satan had
caused.
The “seed
of the woman” can only be an allusion to a future descendant of Eve who would
have no human father. Biologically, a woman produces no seed, and except in
this case Biblical usage always speaks only of the seed of men. This promised
Seed would, therefore, have to be miraculously implanted in the womb.
In this
way, He would not inherit the sin nature which would disqualify every son of
Adam from becoming a Savior from sin. This prophecy thus clearly anticipates
the future virgin birth of Christ.
Satan
will inflict a painful wound on the woman’s Seed, but Christ in turn will
inflict a mortal wound on the Serpent, crushing his head.
This
prophecy was fulfilled in the first instance at the cross, but will culminate
when the triumphant Christ casts Satan into the lake of fire (Revelation 20:10).
This
primeval prophecy made such a profound impression on Adam’s descendants that it
was incorporated, with varying degrees of distortion and embellishment, in all
the legends, mythologies and astrologies of the ancients since they are filled
with tales of mighty heroes engaged in life-and-death struggles with dragons
and other monsters. Mankind, from the earliest ages, has recorded its hope that
someday a Savior would come who would destroy the devil and reconcile man to
God.
(Henry M. Morris, The Defender’s Bible)
In the
New Testament, Christ’s apostle John confirms that this was His Master’s
purpose, “He who does what is sinful is of the devil, because the devil has
been sinning from the beginning. The reason the Son of God appeared was to
destroy the devil’s work”
(1 John
3:8).
(Also see: Hebrews 2:14; Revelation 20:10.)
He will
be a priest after the order of Melchisedek (Melchisedec)
(Psalm
110:4).
Fulfilled: Hebrews 5:6
The
scepter shall not pass from the tribe of Judah until the Messiah comes.
In other
words, He will come before Israel loses its right to judge her own people. The
patriarch Jacob prophecied this:
The
sceptre shall not depart from Judah, nor a lawgiver from between his feet,
until Shiloh come; and unto him shall the gathering of the people be.
(Genesis
49:10)
As Dr.
Henry M. Morris’ The Defender’s Bible explains:
This important prophecy has been strikingly
fulfilled.
Although
Judah was neither Jacob’s firstborn son nor the son who would produce the
priestly tribe, he was the son through whom God would fulfill His promises to
Israel and to the world. The leadership, according to Jacob, was to go to
Judah, but this did not happen for over 600 Years.
Moses
came from Levi, Joshua from Ephraim,
Gideon from Manasseh, Samson from Dan, Samuel from Ephraim and Saul from
Benjamin. But when David finally became king, Judah held the scepter and did
not relinquish it until after Shiloh came.
“Shiloh”
is a name for the Messiah, probably related to the Hebrew word for “peace”
(shalom) and meaning in effect, “the one who brings peace.”
According
to the Jewish historian Josephus, the Sanhedrin of Israel lost the right to
truly judge its own people when it lost the right to pass death penalties in 11
A.D. (Josephus, Antiquities, Book 17, Chapter 13). Jesus Christ was certainly
born before 11 A.D.
[>Continue More ToMoRRoW<]
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I SAY<‘AMeN’
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We aLL
Thank You For Reading!
From:
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ALL LIFE & LOVE IS MINE SAYS THE LORD!
THE POET OF EVERYDAY TRUTH
FOR
‘the people of everyday truth’
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THE CROSS IS A CENTER POINT FOR USALL TO SEE
SALVATION IS THERE FOR ONLY YOU TO BELIEVE
“I AM ALLWAYS THERE & HERE FOR YOU”
GOD SAYS!
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