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You're not taking the entire context of the writing into consideration, nor are you taking the time it was written and the events that lead up to it, instead you're taking writing from other periods and comparing them together, which can create false narratives because everything in the writings are metaphor for real events. But if you take their metaphore out of context, you're going to create metaphore for non real events.
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Ezikiel was one of the jews exiled from jews after it was sacked by babylon.
Years after, he and the other exlies wondered why has God blessed Babylon? And he developed this writing and his ideas while he lived in exile with other exiled jews from isreal. He accuses isreal of breaking their covenant with god, so he spends years trying to convince the other exiles to right themselves with the jewish traditions (God). he goes on and on about all the evil music they listen to, the sexy dancing they were doing, (all the usual bad stuff, that leads to an empires destruction *cough cough AMERICA cough cough) 15-23, these are all pariables (which is why isaid not to quote them out of context) and arguments by ezikiel about why the pariables are what the jews were doing. the rest is judgment, and resolution, and the resolution is hope for everyone, and gods final victory over bad behavior, and we get to the BEST PART gog magog. which is really about defeating those that dont worship God and their empires. Or, more specifically: non-Israelites. The un-chosen. And then after that its about how the victors after those battles play out, the jews will be taken up into a whole new glorious world from isreal in the temple. Hence, how, and why the jews are the chosen ones. They will reign all, from isreal. |
Also, I think that was(is) Mike Pompeo's ultimate plan.
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If God speaks in contemporary context, then why is this part of the word:
You have taken up the tabernacle of Molek and the star of your god Rephan, the idols you made to worship. Therefore I will send you into exile' beyond Babylon. In Acts 7:43, in the New Testament, well over 1,000 years after captivity in Babylon? |
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hey, you can think its about time.
I can think its about "wtf did we lose that war, i thought we were blessed" and "well one day we're going to be so friggen blessed that we win ALL the wars!" potato, potato, it all ends the same way! |
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Tomato, tomato; it is about "Time", because the illusion of "Time"; complacency founded through the passage of "Time"; worship of "Time"/Cronus/Saturn/Saturday, and deception wrought by fear of running out "Time" is what drives humanity to fall away from God |
I think you're thinking of entropy.
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