Statement of Beliefs
of the
Christian Faith
This booklet
is not to be sold.
It is a free
educational service in the public interest.
ISBN 0 646 20506 4
Copyright ©
1994,1995,1996,1997, 2001, 2007
PO Box
369, WODEN ACT 2606, AUSTRALIA
First Edition August
1994
Second Edition February
1995
Third Edition June
1996
Fourth Edition March
1997
Printed in Australia by Union Offset Co. Pty Ltd, Canberra
Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1. The Godhead
1.1 God
The Father
1.2 Jesus
the Son of God
1.3 The
Holy Spirit
1.4 The
Relationship of the Holy Spirit to Christ and Humanity
1.5 The
Relationship of Christ, Satan and the Host to God
1.5.1 Christ
as the Son of God
1.5.2 The
Doctrine of Antichrist
1.5.3 The
Name and Sovereignty of God
Chapter 2. The Plan of Salvation
2.1 The
Fall of Mankind
2.2 The
Salvation of Humanity
2.3 The
Bible as Inspired Truth
2.4 Repentance
and Conversion
2.5 Baptism
Chapter 3. Doctrines Concerning Human Responsibility
3.1 Prayer
and Worship
3.1.1 God
as the Object of Prayer and Worship
3.1.1.1 The
Object of Worship
3.1.1.2 The
Object of Prayer
3.1.1.3 Individual
and Collective Prayer on Behalf of Others
3.2 The
Relationship Between Salvation and the Law
3.2.1 God
is Our Rock
3.2.2 Salvation
by Grace
3.2.3 Obligation
under the Law
3.2.3.1 Why
Christians Keep the Law
3.2.3.2 Christians
as the Temple of God
3.2.4 The
Ten Commandments
3.2.5 Other
Laws Governing Human Conduct
3.2.5.1 The
Food Laws
3.2.5.2 The
Sabbath
3.2.5.3 The
New Moons
3.2.5.4 The
Annual Holy Days
3.2.5.5 Marriage
3.2.6 Financial
Stewardship
3.2.6.1 Towards
God
3.2.6.2 Towards
Others
3.2.7 Warfare
and Voting
3.2.7.1 Warfare
3.2.7.2 Voting
Chapter 4. Doctrine Concerning the Messiah
4.1 The
Pre-existence of Christ
4.2 The
Crucifixion and Resurrection
4.3 The
Second Coming of Christ
4.4 The
Millennial Reign of Christ
Chapter 5. The Problem of Evil
5.1 The
Existence of Evil Through the Rebellion of the Host
5.2 The
Doctrines Concerning Predestination
5.3 The
State of the Dead
5.4 The
Resurrection of the Dead
5.5 The
Punishment of the Wicked
Chapter 6. The Church
6.1 Who
or What is the Church?
6.2 Church
Organisation
6.3 Aims
and Objectives of the Church
6.4 Sanctification
Chapter 7. The Kingdom of God
7.1 The
Establishment of the Kingdom of God
7.1.1 The
Spiritual Kingdom
7.1.2 The
Millennial Reign of Christ
7.1.2.1 The
Return of the Messiah
7.1.2.2 The
Gathering of Israel
7.1.2.3 The
Day of the Lord
7.1.3 The
Eternal Kingdom of God
7.1.3.1 The
Coming of God
7.1.3.2 The
New Earth and the New Jerusalem
7.1.3.3 The
Destiny of Mankind
Appendix
Introduction
For seventeen hundred years Christianity has been tied
to a theological system, which has been based on Greek Philosophy and a system
related to neo-Platonism. The Unitarian simplicity of the biblical message and
the cohesiveness of God’s revelation to man over both Testaments has been altered
and obscured for the sake of power and domination of the then known world.
The end result was what was understood to be the
structure as laid down in the councils of Nicaea (325AD), Laodicea (c. 366AD),
Constantinople (381AD) and Chalcedon (451AD). The structure altered the
understanding of God along metaphysical lines ultimately producing the Trinity.
The Council of Laodicea (canon 29) also outlawed the Sabbath, under penalty,
introducing accepted pagan festivals from Sunday worship to the December Sun
festivals and the Easter system in place of the Passover. What was also altered
was the way the understanding of the biblical system and law was to be
interpreted. The law given to Moses was held to be no longer relevant and the
New Testament passages were re-interpreted to justify existing pagan practices.
For example, the food laws were held to be eliminated
by misapplying Acts 10 and other texts. The effect on human health was
immediate. However, the end result for the environment could only really be
seen after some two thousand years. The breakdown in the food chain is
contributed to, in a large degree, by the consumption of foods prohibited under
biblical law.
The degradation of the land systems can only be seen
fully after the lands have been exhausted by failure to observe the jubilee
systems and the land Sabbaths because they are inextricably interlinked with
the calendar based on the nineteen year moon cycles. The introduction of the
solar calendar was itself a major step in destroying the understanding of the
patterns and cycles God had established for natural harmony.
Modern Christianity by and large has very little if
anything in common with original Christianity. The rise of Islam and the later
wars with Islam were arguably the direct result of the false Christian system
set up in Europe and West Asia by the Greek theological systems using the
Cappadocian theology based on the Triune God and attempted mystical union with
God and as God.
The Triune system simply does not work. The end result
of seventeen hundred years of this erroneous doctrine has been the near
destruction of the planet and the persecution of people genuinely trying to
obey biblical laws.
The purpose of this work is to isolate in the clearest
and simplest possible way the original message of the Bible and the New
Testament Church under Jesus Christ and the apostles. No doubt some cherished
fables will be challenged and demolished by what is stated herein. The work has
been written so that it is as near as possible a series of biblical statements
or paraphrases, which have the supporting text quoted. In that way it is
considered that the work is ultimately less ambiguous and the intent is clear.
Where possible the complete range of texts on a subject are listed so as to
avoid the all too prevalent practice of quoting in isolation or quoting
misconstructed texts. Some biblical texts are plain forgeries (e.g. 1Jn. 5:7
KJV; 1Tim. 3:16 KJV from Codex A), or mistranslations (1Cor. 15:28 RSV etc;
Rev. 3:14 NIV among numerous others), designed to negate contrary texts or
misconstrue texts so as to appear to support the Triune or Cappadocian system
when viewed in isolation.
When Messiah comes again he is going to introduce in
total the system of law that he gave to Moses at Sinai. Every Christian has an
obligation to identify and to implement the system of living and worship that
is laid down in the Bible. The Christian is obligated to emulate the way of
life of Jesus Christ and to live by the systems that Christ introduced and
lived by as a man and pre-incarnate. This work is dedicated to producing the
whole system in a coherent and identifiable manner so that the false systems of
seventeen hundred years can be swept aside and the original and true way can be
identified and implemented in the lives of all people no matter what they have
done in the past. Our task is to call people to repentance and newness of life.
Chapter 1
The Godhead
1.1 God the Father
The Supreme Deity of the universe is God. He is the
Almighty, the Creator and Sustainer of the heavens, the earth and all things
therein (Gen. 1.1; Neh. 9:6; Ps. 124:8; Isa. 40:26,28; 44:24; Acts 14:15;
17:24-25; Rev. 14:7). He alone is immortal (1Tim. 6:16). He is our God and
Father and the God and Father of Jesus Christ (Jn. 20:17). He is the Most High
God (Gen. 14:18; Num. 24:16; Deut. 32:8; Mk. 5:7) and the One True God (Jn.
17:3; 1Jn. 5:20).
1.2 Jesus the Son of God
Jesus is the first begotten (prototokos) of the creation (Col. 1:15) hence the beginning (arche) of the creation of God (Rev.
3:14). He is the onlyborn (monogene)
Son of God (Mat. 3:17; Jn. 1:18; 1Jn. 4:9), conceived of the Holy Spirit and
born to the virgin, Mariam (Lk.
1:26-35). He is the Christ or Messiah (Mat. 16:16; Jn. 1:41), sent from God to
be our Saviour and Redeemer (Mat. 14:33; Jn. 8:42; Eph. 1:7; Tit. 2:14). He is called the Son of the Most High God
(Mk. 5:7). He was designated Son of God in power according to the Spirit of
holiness by his resurrection from the dead (Rom. 1:4). He is given the throne of
David to rule over the House of Jacob forever and of his Kingdom there shall be
no end (Lk. 1:32).
1.3 The Holy Spirit
The Holy Spirit (Acts 2:4) is that essence or power of
God which Christ promised to send to the elect (Jn. 16:7). It is not a person
but the extension of the living power of God. It is the means whereby we become
partakers of the Divine Nature (2Pet. 1:4), being filled with the Holy Spirit
(Acts 9:17; Eph. 5:18) and hence all
Sons of God (Job 38:7; Rom. 8:14; 1Jn. 3:1-2) and co-heirs with Christ (Rom.
8:17; Gal. 3:29; Tit. 3:7; Heb. 1:14, 6:17, 11:9; Jas. 2:5; 1Pet. 3:7). It is
given by God to those who ask (Lk. 11:9-13) and obey him, dwelling in those who
keep God's commandments (1Jn. 3:24; Acts 5:32). The Holy Spirit is the comforter
that leads God's servants into all truth (Jn. 14:16,17,26). The Holy Spirit
confers the power to witness (Acts 1:8). It administers gifts as recorded in
1Corinthians 12:7-11 and has fruits as described in Galatians 5:22-23 not being
given by measure (Jn. 3:34 RSV; Rom. 12:6). It is the means by which God can
finally become all, in all (1Cor. 15:28; Eph. 4:6).
1.4 The Relationship of the Holy Spirit to
Christ and Humanity
The Holy Spirit operates from before baptism. The
Spirit draws the individual to God through Christ (Heb. 7:25).
The firstfruits of the Spirit are given to the
individual at baptism, from Romans 8:23, which clearly states that the adoption does not occur until the redemption of the body.
Thus we are born
again but continue to grow in the Spirit daily in Christ Jesus until we
come into the glory of God. The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of Truth (1Jn. 4:6,
5:6) and by speaking the Truth in all things we grow into Christ our head in
all respects (Eph. 4:15). The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of God (Rom. 8:14) and
the Spirit of faith (2Cor. 4:13)
which searches all things and knows all things (1Cor. 2:10-11, 12:3 ff).
Thus the Holy Spirit is not an independent aspect of a
triune God but is the means by which we become elohim (Zech. 12:8). The Spirit conveys to God an understanding of
our thoughts and very being. Being routed through Jesus Christ as our mediator
and intermediary elohim or theos (Ps. 45:6-7; Zech. 12:8; Heb. 1:8-9) it
enables Christ to help, teach and comfort us and to enable us to exercise the
power of God. The Spirit gives to each person the attributes God desires in
order to benefit the body as outlined in 1Corinthians 12:7-11.
The Spirit can be quenched (1Thes. 5:19) by being
neglected or grieved (Eph. 4:30) and thus admits of gains and losses in the
individual.
The fruit of the Holy Spirit is love from Galatians
5:22. Therefore, if we do not love each other the Holy Spirit is not evident.
The Spirit is the means by which we worship God as
stated in Philippians 3:3. Thus, it cannot be God as an object of worship and,
hence, equal to God the Father. It is a force which empowers Christ. Christ is
thus an Everlasting Father (Isa. 9:6)
of which there are many fatherhoods
in heaven and on earth (Eph. 3:15). Christ becomes Everlasting Father by delegation.
All of these fatherhoods or families are named for God the Father which is the
reason we bow before God the Father, worshipping Him (Eph. 3:14-15).
Christ was the firstborn or firstbegotten of the
creation. For him all things were created in heaven and on earth, visible and
invisible, whether thrones or dominions or principalities or authorities, all
things were created through him and for him. He is before all things and in him
all things hold together (Col. 1:16-17). But it was God who generated him and
who willed that the creation exist and subsist in Christ. Therefore, Christ is
not God in any sense that God the Father is God and who alone is immortal
(1Tim. 6:16) existing in abiding perpetuity.
Christians are called out of this world to a life of
service and dedication. Many are called
but few are chosen (Mat. 20:16, 22:14). Christians are the chosen, as Christ
was the chosen of God (Lk. 23:35). The elect were chosen by Christ (Jn. 6:70,
15:16,19), under direction of God (1Pet. 2:4).
To assist the Church, the elect who are the Church, or
ecclesia, are given understanding of the mysteries of God. The Holy Spirit was
the mechanism by which they were given to understand the mysteries of God and
the Kingdom of God (Mk. 4:11). For the wisdom of God is spoken in a mystery
(1Cor. 2:7), which is explained by the servants of God (1Cor. 2:7, 15:51). For
God's will is explained as a mystery (Eph. 1:9) which God gave to His servants
by revelation. Further the mystery is in the stewardship of Christ through the
elect. Paul wrote
...assuming that you have
heard of the stewardship of God's grace that was given to me for you, how the
mystery was made known to me by revelation, as I have written briefly. When you
read this you can perceive my insight into the mystery of Christ, which was not
made known to the sons of men in other generations as it has now been revealed
to his holy apostles and prophets by the Spirit; that is, how the Gentiles are
fellow heirs, members of the same body, and partakers of the promise in Christ
Jesus through the gospel (Eph. 3:2-6).
1.5 The Relationship of Christ, Satan and the
Host to God
There are multiple entities referred to in the Bible
as Elohim or Theoi, meaning gods. Christ was one of those subordinate entities
referred to in the Old Testament as Elohim (see Zech. 12:8). Christ is referred
to in the New Testament as being the new Morning Star at his return to earth.
He will share this rank with his elect (Rev. 2:28, 22:16).
God is held by the Bible to be the God and Father of
Christ (from Rom. 15:6; 2Cor. 1:3, 11:31; Eph. 1:3,17; Col. 1:3; Heb. 1:1 ff;
1Pet. 1:3; 2Jn. 3; Rev. 1:1,6, 15:3). Christ derives his life, power and
authority by command of God the Father (Jn. 10:17-18).
Christ subordinates his will to that of God, who is
the Father (Mat. 21:31, 26:39; Mk. 14:36; Jn. 3:16, 4:34). God gave the elect
to Christ and God is greater than Christ (Jn. 14:28) and greater than all (Jn.
10:29). Thus God sent his only born
(monogene) Son into the world that we
might live through him (1Jn. 4:9). It is God who honours or glorifies Christ
(Jn. 8:54), God being greater than Christ (Jn. 14:28).
God is the Rock (sur)
as a Quarry or Mountain from which all others are quarried, the flint of Joshua
5:2 which circumcises Israel, the principal and effective cause (Deut. 32:4).
God is the Rock of Israel, the Rock of their salvation (Deut. 32:15), the Rock
that bore them (Deut. 32:18,28-31). 1Samuel 2:2 shows that Our God is our Rock,
an everlasting Rock (Isa. 26:4). It is from this Rock that all others are hewn,
as are all the descendants of Abraham in the faith (Isa. 51:1-2). The Messiah
is hewn from this Rock (Dan. 2:34,45) to subjugate the world empires. God is the Rock or base upon which the
foundation is laid and upon which Christ will build his Church (Mat. 16:18) and
upon which he himself rests. Messiah is the Chief
Cornerstone of the Temple of God, of which the elect are the Naos or the Holy of Holies, the
repository of the Holy Spirit. The Temple stones are all cut from the Rock that
is God, as was Christ, and given to Christ, the spiritual rock (1Cor. 10:4),
the rock of offence and stone of stumbling (Rom. 9:33) to form the Temple.
Christ is constructing the Temple so that God may be
all, in all (Eph. 4:6). God has given Christ to be all and in all (panta kai en pasin Col. 3:11) putting
all things under his feet (1Cor. 15:27) giving him to be the head over all
things to the Church which is his Body, the fullness of him that fills all in
all (Eph. 1:22-23). When God put all things under Christ, it is manifest that
God is excepted, being the One who put things under the feet of Christ (1Cor.
15:27).
When Christ subdues all things then shall Christ
himself be subject to God who put all things under Christ that God may be all
in all (panta en pasin 1Cor. 15:28
not as per RSV). Thus the Platonist doctrines that seek to merge God and Christ
in the Trinity contradict Scripture. Christ will sit on the right hand of God,
by direction of God (Heb 1:3,13, 8:1, 10:12, 12:2; 1Pet. 3:22) and share God's
throne as the elect will share the throne given to Christ (Rev. 3:21) which is a throne of God (Ps. 45:6-7; Heb. 1:8)
or God is thy Throne translated Your throne O God (see footnote to
annotated RSV).
God, who sends, is greater than he who is sent (Jn.
13:16), the servant not being greater than his Lord (Jn. 15:20).
Christ was challenged in the desert by Satan, and in
effect the trial of Satan commenced. Satan, who was the Morning Star, The Lucifer
or Light Bringer of this planet (Isa.
14:12) as its guardian and teacher, was in effect one of the Elohim who was
subordinate to God the Father.
Christ was to be the Star that should come out of
Jacob (in Num. 24:17). Thus it was signified in the Books of Moses that one of
the Morning Stars which are mentioned as being present at the completion of
this planet (in Job 38:7), one of the elohim, was to become a human being of
Jacob and from David (Rev. 22:16).
This elohim we know as Jesus Christ was not yet the
Morning Star of this planet. That rank was held by Satan (from Isa. 14:12 and
Ezek. 28:2-10).
Christ had been anointed as the elohim of Israel from
Psalm 45:7 and anointed above his companions or partners. However, Christ was not in fact in the
position of Morning Star and will not assume those duties until his second
coming. The rank and duties are to be shared with Christ by the elect, who
share his nature as Morning Star in their hearts (translated Day Star in 2Pet. 1:19). The elect are
promised to share in this power from Revelation 2:28.
Satan, as Morning Star, had challenged God Most High
or God the Father as we are told in Isaiah 14:12. He tried to ascend or exalt
his throne, a throne of God, above the Stars of God or the Council of Elohim.
This Council is the Congregation of the Elohim or Gods referred to in Psalm
82:1. It is of interest to note that Irenæus, the disciple of Polycarp,
disciple of John, held that Psalm 82:1 referred to the Theoi or gods which
included also the elect, namely those of
the adoption (Against Heresies,
Bk. 3, Ch. 6, ANF, Vol. 1, p. 419).
There are multiple Sons of God (from Job 1:6, 2:1,
38:7; Ps. 86:8-10, 95:3, 96:4, 135:5) who are identified as the Bene Elyon or Sons of the Most High. The human elect are also included with the
heavenly Host as Sons of God (from
Rom. 8:14). Thus, Christ and the elect as Sons of God are one with God through
the Holy Spirit, predestined from the foundation
of the world. Christ laid down his power to become a man. He and all the
elect receive the Sonship in power according to the Spirit of holiness by the
resurrection from the dead (Rom. 1:4).
From Acts 7:35-39 it was an angel which spoke to Moses
on Sinai and this angel was Christ. In Galatians 4:14 Paul likens himself to an
angel of God even Christ Jesus.
Also we will become like angels (Mat. 22:30) as an
order or isaggelos (from Lk. 20:36),
being co-heirs with Christ (Rom. 8:17; Gal. 3:29; Tit. 3:7; Heb. 1:14, 6:17,
11:9; Jas. 2:5; 1Pet. 3:7). The Old Testament identifies the Angel of YHWH as
both Jehovah and Elohim (Ex. 3:2,4-6 where the God or elohim here was an angel;
cf. Zech. 12:8).
Psalm 89:6-8 shows that there is a Council of Holy
Ones (qedosim or qadoshim, also used of humans) comprised of both an inner and outer
council. This is understood to be a celestial Council of the Elohim of Justice.
1.5.1 Christ as the Son of God
Satan attempted to tempt Christ in a number of ways.
Firstly Satan referred to Christ as the Son of God (in Mat. 4:3, 4:6; Lk. 4:3).
The demons also referred to Christ as the Son of God (in Mat. 8:29; Lk. 4:41;
Mk. 3:11). Satan tried to have Christ prove his position as Son of God by a
display of power, in that God had promised that He would give His angels charge
of him (in Ps. 91:11-12). Satan omitted to
keep thee in all thy ways and added at
any time. Thus, by garbling Scripture, Satan attempted to take Christ's
life.
Christ did not at any time correct Satan or the demons
by asserting that he was God instead of the Son of God. Indeed, no demon
attempted to assert the deception that Christ was Supreme God until after his
death in order to establish a doctrine that said that Christ was God in the
same way that God the Father was God and thus achieve, after his death, a
deception that Christ would have refuted in life. In each of the temptations
the aim was to undermine the obedience of Christ to God and to, in effect,
break Scripture. Satan attempted to have Christ worship him. He promised Christ
the rulership of the planet then if
Christ would worship him.
Christ did not challenge his right to transfer his
rulership of the planet or indeed that he was ruler. Christ instead replied
...it is written: You shall worship the Lord your God and Him only
shall you serve.
Christ did not tell Satan that Satan should worship
Christ but rather referred him to the law. Christ never at any stage of his
ministry claimed to be God. He said he was the Son of God. It was for this
reason that he was placed on trial.
As stated in Matthew 27:43
He trusts in God. Let God rescue him now if He wants him, for he said,
'I am the Son of God'.
It was here that Christ cried out to fulfil the
Scripture at Psalm 22:1
My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?
Christ clearly did not consider himself God. To
suggest that he was part of the entity to which he appealed, in an equal form,
part of which was impassible, is absurd.
1.5.2 The Doctrine of Antichrist
The doctrine of Antichrist is stated in 1John 4:1-2.
The correct ancient text for 1John 4:1-2 is reconstructed from Irenæus, Chapter 16:8 (ANF,
Vol. 1, fn. p. 443).
Hereby know ye the spirit of God: Every spirit that confesseth Jesus
Christ came in the flesh is of God; and every spirit which separates Jesus
Christ is not of God but is of Antichrist.
Socrates the historian says (VII, 32, p. 381) that the
passage had been corrupted by those who wished to separate the humanity of
Jesus Christ from his divinity.
Christ as
Son is not the One True God (Jn.
17:3).
Also in Luke 22:70 they all said Are you then the Son of God?
He replied You are right in saying I am.
He was recognised as the Son of God in
*
Matthew 27:54 where they
said, Truly this was the Son of God.
*
Mark 1:1 holds the
Gospel to be that of Jesus Christ, The
Son of God.
*
Luke 1:35 states that
the Holy one to be born was to be called the Son of God.
To understand that Christ is the Son of God is a
revelation from God.
Simon Peter answered and said, "You are the Christ, the Son of the
living God." Jesus answered and said to him, "Blessed are you Simon
Bar-Jonah, for flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but MY FATHER who
is in Heaven. (Mat. 16:16-17)
Also Matthew 11:27 states
All things have been delivered to me by MY FATHER and no one knows the
Son except the Father. Nor does anyone know the Father except the Son and the
one to whom the Son wills to reveal him.
Thus the Father reveals things to individuals and
gives them to Christ who then reveals the Father to them.
1.5.3 The Name and Sovereignty of God
There is no doubt that God is singular and sovereign.
Proverbs 30:4-5 shows the name of God and that He has a son.
Who hath gone up to heaven, and come down?
Who hath gathered up the wind in the hollow of His hands?
Who hath wrapped up the waters in His cloak?
Who hath established all the ends of the earth?
What is His name and the name of His son? Tell me if you know.
Every word of God [ELOAH] is flawless: He is a shield to those who take
refuge in Him.
Do not add to His words, or He will rebuke you and prove you a liar.
The Bible interprets itself and the name of God is
directly supplied following the question and it is clear that this entity is
not a composite of Father and Son but, rather, He has a son.
Further, the New Testament states clearly that it is
the Father who is the object of worship. Christ warned the Samaritan woman in
John 4:21 that there was a time coming when they could not worship the Father
either on her mountain (Samaria) or in Jerusalem. But he distinctly says in
John 4:23
Yet a time is coming and has now come when the true worshippers will
worship the Father in spirit and truth, for they are the kind of worshippers
the Father seeks.
Christ here identifies the object of worship as the
Father and not himself. It is thus quite blasphemous to assert that one should
worship the uplifted Christ from a perversion of John 3:14 where the Son of man
was to be lifted up as Moses had lifted up the serpent in the wilderness. The
purpose of the crucifixion was so that man would have eternal life, not that
Christ could become an object of worship as is falsely asserted. From this
false premise, it is also falsely asserted that Christians worship Christ's
body and blood in the Eucharist.
Eloah is the God of the Old Testament and the Temple
and the God of Jesus Christ of the New Testament. The Temple at Jerusalem was
the House of Eloah (Ezra 4:24; 5:2,13,15,16,17; 6:3,5,7,8,16,17; 7:23). He was
the Eloah of Israel (Ezra 5:1; 7:15), the Great Eloah of Heaven (Ezra 5:8,12).
He was the object of sacrifice at the Temple (Ezra 6:10) where He had caused
His name to dwell (Ezra 6:12). He ordered the Temple’s construction (Ezra 6:14)
and the priesthood stand in His service (Ezra 6:18; 7:24) and do His will (Ezra
7:18). The law is the law of the Eloah of Heaven (Ezra 7:12,14). Those that
know the laws of Eloah are to teach those that know them not (Ezra 7:25) and
judgment is to be by the laws of Eloah (Ezra 7:26). This being is the Father
who is the singular Eloah and God Most High, the Father of Messiah and all the
sons of God.
Chapter 2
The Plan of Salvation
2.1 The Fall of Mankind
Mankind was created in the image and likeness of God
(Gen. 1:26-27). Adam and Eve were cursed because of disobedience (Gen.
3:16-19). As a result of this rebellion, sin and consequently death came upon
all humanity (1Cor. 15:22; Rom. 5:12).
2.2 The Salvation of Humanity
God does not want any flesh to perish (2Pet. 3:9). In
order that humanity might escape the penalty for sin, which is death, God
instituted a plan of salvation involving a sacrifice in the death and
resurrection of His son Jesus Christ (Jn. 3:16). The plan is of a sequential
harvest of which Christ is the firstfruits of those who have died (1Cor.
15:20). The plan of salvation is mirrored in the annual Holy Days of the Bible
(Lev. 23).
2.3 The Bible as Inspired Truth
Christ said: It
is written Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds
from the mouth of God. (Mat. 4:4; Lk. 4:4). The Bible is known as Scripture
(Dan. 10:21), and is directed towards the salvation of mankind and the
manifestation of the power of God (Ex. 9:16; Rom. 9:17). The means of salvation
is Jesus Christ (Rom. 10:11) who was foretold by Scripture from Moses and the
prophets (Lk. 24:27), prophecy being Scripture (Mat. 26:56; Rom. 1:2). All
Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for
correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be
complete, equipped for every good work (2Tim. 3:16).
The Scriptures, at the time of Christ and the apostles
were the Old Testament (Mat. 21:42; Mk. 12:10; Acts 17:2). The Old Testament is
the Scripture referred to as God breathed
or inspired in 2Timothy 3:16. The New
Testament is additional to the Old Testament. It does not replace the Old
Testament.
The Old Testament was written in earlier days for our
instruction, so that by steadfastness and the encouragement of the Scriptures
we might have hope (Rom. 15:4). Error proceeds from a poor knowledge of those
Scriptures (Mat. 22:29; Mk. 12:24). The Beroeans (or Bereans KJV) examined the
Scriptures daily, proving whether what was said was in fact correct. This was
measured as being noble (Acts 17:11). The whole picture of the Bible is taken
from all parts of the Scripture, precept upon precept, line upon line (Isa.
28:10). The Scriptures show that Jesus was the Messiah or Christ (Acts 18:28).
It is Christ, by means of the Holy Spirit, who opens the mind of all the elect
beginning with the apostles, so that the Scriptures can be understood (Lk.
24:45).
The Scriptures of the Old Testament must be fulfilled
(Mat. 26:54,56; Mk. 12:10, 14:49) and cannot
be broken (Jn. 10:35). Much Scripture was directed towards and was
fulfilled in Christ, or will be fulfilled in Christ at his second coming (Rev.
1:7, 12:10, 17:14, 19:11-21), which will be in power and glory (Mat. 24:30).
2.4 Repentance and Conversion
For humanity to live, or have eternal life, God
requires that it repents. Unless it repents it will perish (Lk. 13:3,5).
Christ was sent to call mankind to repentance (Lk.
11:32). Christ began his ministry after the imprisonment of John the Baptist
(Mat. 4:12-17). John's imprisonment took place some time after the Passover of
28 AD (Jn. 3:22-24; Mat. 4:12) being the Passover after the commencement of
John's ministry in the fifteenth year of Tiberius (Lk. 3:1). From that time,
Jesus began to preach saying Repent, for
the kingdom of heaven is at hand (Mat. 4:17). Christ charged his disciples
to preach the gospel of repentance, giving them authority over the demons or
unclean spirits (Mk. 6:7,12; Lk. 10:1,17-20).
Repentance was taught as the prelude to the blotting
out of sin (or wickedness) (Acts 8:22) so that the time of refreshing may come
from the presence of the Lord, so that He might send the Christ who was
appointed for us (Acts 3:19-20).
The times of ignorance, as it is called, God
overlooked but, after Christ, He commands all people to repent, having fixed a
day of judgment for them (Acts 17:30). Thus repentance is extended to the
Gentiles (see also Acts 15:3).
From repentance and turning to God, the repentant
sinner must then perform deeds worthy of repentance (Acts 26:20).
The Church in Ephesus was called on to repent and
remember what it was from which they had fallen, and to do again the works they
did at first (Rev. 2:5). Likewise the Church in Pergamum was called upon to
repent (Rev. 2:16). So also was the Church in Thyatira (Rev. 2:21-22) which had
apostates thrown onto a bed with the false religious teachers. The Church in
Sardis was also called on to repent or Christ would come on them like a thief
in the night and they would not know what hour he was coming (Rev. 3:3). Those
who Christ loves he reproves and chastens. He demands that they (in this case
the Laodiceans), are zealous and that they repent (Rev. 3:19). Repentance is
thus ongoing for all the Churches of God, being the responsibility of all (Jas.
5:19-20).
2.5 Baptism