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flyonthewall
Guest
I follow your analogy and (think I) understand what you are saying.I’m going to draw what is probably a very poor analogy here, but bear with me.
Say I decide to buy my daughter a new car on her birthday (fat chance). I start giving her little hints about what her present will be. It has wheels. It has a seat. She knows something, but it could be a bicycle at this point. I tell her it weighs a lot. Now it could be a motorcycle. On her birthday she awakes to see a large covered object sitting in the driveway. It is obviously a car. Now the mystery is almost solved. We walk out to the driveway and begin, slowly, uncovering the vehicle. She sees the tires, the bumper, the color of the paint, the back window, the roof and finally the entire car. What was waiting to be revealed has been fully revealed. There is nothing more to be revealed. Now she gets to know the car. She learns how it handles on the road. She learns where the windshield wipers are; how to turn on the brights; how the sound system works. All of these little “revelations” surround THE revelation of the car. That is what I mean when I say that “He has stated all He has to say in His one Word”. The focus is Christ; He is the Word. The rest is just getting to know Him better.
I think there is more to revelation than you give credit to. God reveals His will to us as an individual, as a church/religion, and as a people.
God’s revelation to Noah to build an ark would have been no use to Abraham.
God’s revelation to Abraham to sacrifice his son Isaac(as a test of faith) would have been no use to Moses.
God’s revelation to Moses to deliver the House of Israel out of Egypt, would have been no use to either Noah or Abraham.
God’s will is revealed to specific people in specific times and specific places. The needs and circumstances of man change through times and places.
While I consider all these things revelations, you may not.
Jesus taught in parables, and it is by revelation that the layers of understanding are pealed away for deeper meaning to be brought forth.
It is these types of revelation that continues today.
If it is no less the word of God, how can it not carry the same authority?Well, no prophet carried the same authority as Christ because no prophet carried the same authority as God. What they wrote under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit is no less the word of God, however, because it came from God. The difference between Christ and the prophets is that while the prophets received the word of God, Christ is the Word of God.
I think I can agree with you on this. Wow, did I actually say that?![]()
Moses’ allowance of divorce came from God. It was a practice suited for the people of the time. An eye for an eye was also given by God. It too was a practice that was tailored to the people.That is not at all what I am saying, although Moses may not be the best example. Moses’ allowance of divorce was contrary to truth, as Jesus pointed out. The notion of “an eye for an eye” was contrary to truth, as Jesus also pointed out. These were not God’s laws. Truth is truth and cannot change. God is Truth and He does not change.
The Mosaic law as given to the people by God through Moses. It was not contrary to the truth, but was a school teacher of it. The practice of the Mosaic law pointed to the truth of Christ.
Exactly!!! The practice of animal sacrifice stopped, not because it was not truth, but because the Lord changed the practice of it.Not really. Sacrifice did not stop. It was the type of sacrifice that stopped. The sacrifice of Christ is eternal and never stops. All former sacrifices were a “type” of the sacrifice of Christ. In Him, finally, the perfect sacrifice was offered and continues to be offered. Yes, animal sacrifice stopped, but only because it found its perfection in Christ.
I agree. God did not change, but the practices He laid down for man have. Times, places, and man’s understanding have changedThe Old Testament, in my mind, can be boiled down to a faithful, loving, very patient God who pursued His children even though they kept running from Him and turning away from Him. I see no difference in the New Testament. He gave His very life for the very people that nailed Him to the cross; us. Through all of the different authors, the different genres of writing, the different circumstances, the different events we find in the Old Testament, we find the common thread of a faithful, loving and saving God. God is constant. He did not change from the Old Testament to the New.
Just as a father teaches his children from infancy to adulthood, and the methods of teaching evolve as the child grows in age and understanding, so, too, does God’s revelation of His will to us.