…continued
**
References Cited
Baltzer, Klaus. The Covenant Formulary, in Old Testament, Jewish, and Early Christian Writings. Trans. David E. Green. Philadelphia, PA: Fortress Press, 1971.
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McCarthy, Dennis J. Old Testament Covenant. Richmond, VA: Knox, 1972.
Mendenhall, G. E. "Covenant Forms in Israelite Tradition." The Biblical Archaeologist (Sept 1954) 17:50-75.
Pope, M. H. "Oaths." The Interpreter's Dictionary of the Bible. 4 vols. Ed. George A. Buttrick. Nashville, TN: Abingdon, 1962. 3:575-76.
Weinfeld, M. "Berith." Trans. John T. Willis. Theological Dictionary of the Old Testament. 4 vols. Ed. G. J. Botterweck and Helmer Ringgren. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1975. 2:253-79.
The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia has an article, “Covenant, the New” by Archibald McCaig, which also explains that “the ancient Semitic method of making a covenant” involved a reference to death for failure to keep the covenant:
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the sacrificial animals being divided, and the parties passing between the pieces, implying that they deserved death if they broke the engagement. The technical Hebrew phrase for making a covenant is "to cut a covenant."
Further insight comes from the journal Biblica has an interesting article related to this topic by Paul Sanders, “So May God Do To Me!,” Vol. 85, No. 1, 2004, pp. 91-98. (The link is for a PDF file. There is also an HTML version, but if you don’t have Greek and Hebrew fonts installed, some parts will not look right.) From the summary:
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In the Hebrew Bible we find the self-imprecation "So may God do to me and more also!" (2 Sam 3,35, 1 Kgs 2,23, etc.). In many cases, the phrase is immediately conditioned: "So may God do to me and more also, if you will not be the commander of the army" (2 Sam 19,14). God may punish the speaker, if the latter fails his promise. Ancient Mesopotamian sources suggest that the word "So" in the Hebrew expression originally referred to a gesture in use when taking an oath: the touching of the throat.
In light of this information about ancient oaths, the early and presumably optional inclusion of symbolic penalties with oaths made in the Temple is remarkably consistent with ancient Semitic covenants. Such penalties should not be viewed as recent innovations from Masonry, but as legitimate concepts from the ancient covenant-making patterns. (See also “Simile Curses in the Ancient Near East, Old Testament, and Book of Mormon” by Mark J. Morrise.)
**
FINALLY,
Your heaven is eternal sex between the new LDS god & the poor wife churning out “spirit” children. Doesn’t sound like ETERNAL REST to me, sounds like a NIGHTMARE. But wait! The NEW Testament says we “live like the Angels”. Hummmmm, so this “eternal marriage” thing is yet another contradiction of the Bible.
This of course is a caricature of Latter-day Saint views on Heaven.
en.fairmormon.org/Mormonism_and_the_nature_of_God/%22Celestial_sex%22
Latter-day Saints believe that Heaven is living in God’s presence for eternity with our families. We believe that through the atonement of Jesus Christ, we can become like God (or “gods” if you will), sharing in the life that He has, being joint-heirs with Christ. We also believe that our families can continue for the eternities, however the logistics of that is not known, and we never believe that it is something of a “churning out” or “eternal sex”.