Tag: jerusalem

  • 12 Men Texting as their Messiah approaches – Part 1

    12 Men Texting as their Messiah approaches – Part 1

    If you could TEXT 12 men or women about Jesus Christ, would you? Do you SHARE the Good News of JESUS with a ‘christian’ friend or 12 men you know or dozens of men and women who have questions about the Gospel?

    Worship of the Son of God!

    You likely know the narratives of 21st century holidays such as Palm Sunday, Easter or even Passover [Pesach – פסח (in Hebrew)] all too well – perhaps too well to worship the Lord God in the context of a first century Jerusalem.

    A dear Jewish friend of ours, one of many since my wife is a Messianic Jew, commented just last week on the troubling events of these last days. He said something to the effect that it looks like it could be getting close to the time of the return of the Messiah.

    Perhaps our Jewish friend is right. Indeed, if you examine the context of the first coming of the Messiah Jesus you will see promise after His bodily resurrection of a return once more.

    Yet I ask you to consider in my agreement with our Jewish friend (a social jew just like many “christians” have become social christians) a deeper look into Scripture – Jewish Scripture. What you read here I offer based on what Christians call, the “Old Testament” or the ‘former Covenant.’

    The Former Covenant – בְּרִית

    How many Christians OR Jews truly value the solemn witness of Covenant with the LORD our God?

    Sadly, too few — and the LORD in these last days seems all-but forgotten in the hearts and lives of those ‘religious’ who claim covenant with the Lord our God. I trust that by your own study of my exposition of prophecy of the Messiah and especially all other Scripture (yes, christian, including the Old Covenant) you seek cleansing and redemption for your sins.

    Although ancient writings of the Talmud & Mishna, (in various translations), the Apocrypha (with 14 books Jewish in origin) and other extra-Biblical teaching may be enlightening, these do not stand up to Scripture alone, the inspired word of the Lord God.

    We might easily veer off course, sidetracked from the Lord’s application of Scripture in our own lives by even unintentional misdirection and misinterpretation by teachers of the past.

    In this brief look of connection between the Old Covenant and New we will look back to two brief passages from three chapters of Daniel.

    The New Covenant

    Our purpose here is focused only on the Sacrifice of the Son of Man – the Messiah of Israel – and not specifically the broken covenant compared to a new and better covenant. If the Spirit of the Lord draws you to further study the following translations of the book of Hebrews may help.

    Hebrews 9:

    Please note that you may LISTEN to three of these translations as well as READ it in Hebrew.

    Daniel 9:

    … I, Daniel, observed in the books the number of the years which was revealed as the word of the LORD to Jeremiah the prophet for the completion of the desolations of Jerusalem, namely, seventy years.

    24 …

    • to finish the transgression,
    • to make an end of sin,
    • to make atonement for iniquity,
    • to bring in everlasting righteousness,
    • to seal up vision and prophecy
    • and to anoint the most holy place.

    What mere mortal, what man even a priest of the Lord can do this with permanence?

    Only the Son of Man, the Holy One of Israel – the One Messiah Jesus!


    25 Know therefore and understand, that from the going forth of the commandment to restore and to build Jerusalem unto the Messiah the Prince…

    You with ears to hear, understand: Jerusalem does not surpass the Messiah the Prince of God our Father in importance. For by His Sacrifice worship of the LORD is sanctified and perfected in Jesus the Son of Man and Only Son of God.

    … It will be rebuilt with a plaza and a moat,
    but in difficult times.
    26 After those sixty-two weeks
    the Anointed One will be cut off
    and will have nothing.
    The people of the coming ruler
    will destroy the city and the sanctuary…

    Daniel 10: Vision of a Glorious One

    Better-learned men than me have studied Daniel’s vision of the Messiah and understood more, but even the Prophet Daniel confessed that he did not understand its full meaning.

    I will add one additional look at Daniel after deferring to Sir Isaac Newton.

    On the Bible:


    “I have a fundamental belief in the Bible as the Word of God, written by men who were inspired. I study the Bible daily.”

    On atheism:
    “Atheism is so senseless.

    When I look at the solar system. I see the earth at the right distance from the sun to receive the proper amounts of heat and light. This did not happen by chance.”

    TEXT COMMENTARIES :: SIR ISAAC NEWTON – BluedLetterBible.org

    If you count in Judaic years commencing in autumn, and date the reckoning from the first autumn after Ezra’s coming to Jerusalem, when he put the King’s decree in execution; the death of Christ will fall on the year of the Julian Period 4747, Anno Domini 34; and the weeks will be Judaic weeks, ending with sabbatical years; and this I take to be the truth…

    Daniel 12:

    Many of those who sleep in the dust of the ground will awake, these to everlasting life, but the others to disgrace and everlasting contempt.

    Daniel 12:2 NASB

    7 Then I heard the man dressed in linen, who was above the water of the river. He raised both his hands toward heaven and swore by him who lives eternally that it would be for a time, times, and half a time.

    When the power of the holy people is shattered, all these things will be completed.

    8 I heard but did not understand…


    Whether texting 12 men and women OR simply sharing the Gospel in person you can bet that THEY do not understand either. Why not start your Christian Social Witness here?

    Comment on Scripture – Share the Gospel

    To be continued...
  • The Gatekeeper & the Shepherds

    The Gatekeeper & the Shepherds

    Then the watchman saw another man running; and the watchman called to the gatekeeper and said, “Behold, another man running by himself.”

    And the king said, “This one also is bringing good news.”

    2 Samuel 18:16
    watchtower at Jerusalem gate
    Watchtowers at gates of old city

    Of Gatekeepers and Watchmen

    Soldier of Roman Legion

    It would have been a Roman Centurion, Roman guards at the gates of first century Jerusalem.

    Armed soldiers, some who had marched on Roman roads connecting nearby towns and slaughtering rebellious zealots in the mountain passes guarded the gates.

    As each festival approached with its crowds of pilgrims flooding the streets of Jerusalem, each watchtower with its Roman overseers would look to turn back any threat to their subject-king and their Caesar.

    A Roman guard in each watchtower of Jerusalem would have sent out an alarm if any opponent approached their captive city.

    They were unlike the faithful who worshiped here and the not so casual crowds of curious visitors of this day.

    Damascus Gate of Jerusalem
    • Who approaches our city?
    • Will they enter through the gate by permission of their king (or city leader)?
    • Are they any threat to the Emperor’s representative, our leaders and our Legions?

    Who may enter?

    It was common practice of the people, including shepherds leading sheep for the slaughter of the sacrifice, to travel here from far away hills and trade within Jerusalem’s walls. Then they worshiped within the courts of their Temple, surrounded by walls of watchmen.

    The gatekeeper is much more than a ticket taker, so to speak, a man of authority.

    Please keep in mind the context of John’s gospel in the earthly journey of Jesus and the Apostles to Jerusalem. Although we pause once more in John’s witness of a man born blind, the context of Jesus’ actions set the stage for what will happen next.

    Rome will destroy Jerusalem later, as Babylon and others had destroyed her before. This nervous alliance between a subject king of the region and ruler of Rome governed the day-to-day lives of Judea’s subjects.

    Some mattered more than others. A ruling council guarded their revamped religion and culture: Pharisees, Sadducees, rich landowners paying taxes for the Roman army to remain there in peace.

    They kept pretense of self-rule under Herod as a self-subjugated nation which could be crushed by Rome at any hint of rebellion.

    A Roman legacy of a Judean King

    Back in 19 B.C., Rome had allowed their great builder king to start rebuilding the Temple. Ten thousand skilled laborers and a thousand Levites built it with contributions of Jews mostly from the diaspora to the east just beyond Rome’s grip. It would not be completed until A.D. 63, just seven years prior to their destruction of all Jerusalem. – Source

    Those now in authority choose who may enter Jerusalem. Several acted as gatekeeper for a gate entering the court of the Temple, a designated religious police poised at its gates. And as always, those judged for crimes were sentenced by a court sitting at the gate.

    But now their jewish judgments must be confirmed by Rome’s prefect who cruelly crushed opposition by the constant reminders of their Roman crosses of crucifixion along roads to the city.

    Like always, men of no threat to anyone often sat within the gates begging from faithful pilgrims coming and going into the city.

    poor pilgrims to Jerusalem
    “For you always have the poor with you; but you do not always have Me. – the words of Jesus, Matthew 26:11 NASB

    David’s Watchmen

    When David was king, Jerusalem had fought for the LORD rather than bowing down to a Caesar. Yet even David sat as gatekeeper of Israel after opposition by his own son.

    David’s great kingdom long forgotten, Jerusalem’s leaders mustered the crowds toward a new faith of confidence by the name of David, although few remembered David’s defeats and difficulties.

    One such ne’er-told scripture would have been of David’s time after Absalom’s revolt. It was a day not so grandiose as their many reminders to first century crowds of Solomon’s first Temple.

    2 Samuel 18:

    Then David numbered the people who were with him and set over them commanders of thousands and commanders of hundreds…

    So the king stood beside the gate, and all the people went out by hundreds and thousands…

    6 Then the people went out into the field against Israel, and the battle took place in the forest of Ephraim. (Note Ephraim’s earlier loss of the blessing of Jacob.)

    7 The people of Israel were defeated there before the servants of David [Judah], and the slaughter there that day was great, 20,000 men…

    17 They took Absalom and cast him into a deep pit in the forest and erected over him a very great heap of stones. And all Israel fled, each to his tent.

    24 Now David was sitting between the two gates; and the watchman went up to the roof of the gate by the wall, and raised his eyes and looked, and behold, a man running by himself. The watchman called and told the king.

    And the king said, “If he is by himself there is good news in his mouth.”

    And he came nearer and nearer. Then the watchman saw another man running; and the watchman called to the gatekeeper and said, “Behold, another man running by himself.”

    And the king said, “This one also is bringing good news.”

    Why send two?

    Two messengers. King David awaits good news as he sits in the gate as gatekeeper of the City of David.

    Men from the watchtowers above see a distant scene long before David has news of what has happened. Two separate messengers approaching the stronghold of Jerusalem where the people had kept their king behind as gatekeeper.

    Why two? What details of the battle for the LORD will they reveal?

    “O my son Absalom

    The report of hope turns into great sorrow for the king.

    “Let my lord the king receive good news, for the Lord has freed you this day from the hand of all those who rose up against you.”

    “Let the enemies of my lord the king, and all who rise up against you for evil, be as that young man!”

    33 The king was deeply moved and went up to the chamber over the gate and wept.

    Though his victory as King is secured, David would have done anything to have kept his own son from death.

    And thus he said as he walked, “O my son Absalom, my son, my son Absalom! Would I had died instead of you, O Absalom, my son, my son!”

    2 Samuel 19:

    8 So the king arose and sat in the gate. When they told all the people, saying, “Behold, the king is sitting in the gate,” then all the people came before the king…

    After several violent battles between the rebellious tribes of Israel David prevails as king.

    Solomon then becomes Israel’s richest and greatest king, building the Temple of the Lord. But in his old age Solomon falls away from his faith and at his death Israel and Judah once again divide.

    After some centuries both kingdoms fall, the Temple of Solomon destroyed.

    A Babylonian-built Jewish temple

    Perhaps you have never considered that the temple in Jerusalem could never have been rebuilt over the ruble where the Law was found without Persia’s and Babylon’s help. Of course, the LORD made it possible as the LORD had influenced Pharaoh before.

    “Thus says Cyrus king of Persia, ‘The LORD, the God of heaven, has given me all the kingdoms of the earth and He has appointed me to build Him a house in Jerusalem, which is in Judah.

    Ezra 1:2 NASB

    Therefore, ‘in order to fulfill the word of the LORD by the mouth of Jeremiah, the LORD stirred up the spirit of Cyrus king of Persia.’ [Ezra 1:1]

    For every house is built by someone, but the builder of all things is God.

    Hebrews 3:3 NASB

    Therefore, just as the Holy Spirit says,
    “TODAY IF YOU HEAR HIS VOICE,

    DO NOT HARDEN YOUR HEARTS AS WHEN THEY PROVOKED ME,
    AS IN THE DAY OF TRIAL IN THE WILDERNESS…

    Hebrews 3:7-8 NASB

    Nehemiah & Ezra

    Prophets like Isaiah, Jeremiah and Ezekiel warned both Israel and Judah to return to the LORD, but they also provided hope for later faithful generations of God’s faithfulness.

    Although building of the second temple was begun around 516 BC (many centuries after David), it was not completed until about 349 BC under the leadership of Ezra and Nehemiah.

    Then I said to them, “You see the bad situation we are in, that Jerusalem is desolate and its gates burned by fire. Come, let us rebuild the wall of Jerusalem so that we will no longer be a reproach.”

    Nehemiah 2:17 NASB

    Again, note the passage of time and the patience of the LORD in completing His plan of redemption.

    Nehemiah 4:

    He [Sanballat] spoke in the presence of his brothers and the wealthy men of Samaria and said,

    “What are these feeble Jews doing?

    Are they going to restore it for themselves? Can they offer sacrifices? Can they finish in a day? Can they revive the stones from the dusty rubble even the burned ones?”

    The importance of gatekeepers guarding the gates of the faith, as well as the city continued as it had since the time of David and traditions of Moses.

    1 Chronicles 9

    A century before the beginning of the rebuilding of the temple

    … And Judah was carried away into exile to Babylon for their unfaithfulness.

    17 Now the gatekeepers were Shallum and Akkub and Talmon and Ahiman and their relatives (Shallum the chief being stationed until now at the king’s gate to the east)…

    20 Phinehas the son of Eleazar was ruler over them previously, and the Lord was with him. Zechariah the son of Meshelemiah was gatekeeper of the entrance of the tent of meeting. All these who were chosen to be gatekeepers at the thresholds were 212.

    The Pharisees and priests (Levites) of the rebuilt temple of the first century had legitimacy of guarding the purity of the faith of the LORD.

    Now the leaders of the people lived in Jerusalem, but the rest of the people cast lots to bring one out of ten to live in Jerusalem, the holy city, while nine-tenths remained in the other cities.

    Nehemiah 11:1 NASB

    Isaiah 60:

    ק֥וּמִי א֖וֹרִי כִּ֣י בָ֣א אוֹרֵ֑ךְ וּכְב֥וֹד יְהוָ֖ה עָלַ֥יִךְ זָרָֽח׃

    2 כִּֽי־הִנֵּ֤ה הַחֹ֙שֶׁךְ֙ יְכַסֶּה־אֶ֔רֶץ וַעֲרָפֶ֖ל לְאֻמִּ֑ים וְעָלַ֙יִךְ֙ יִזְרַ֣ח יְהוָ֔ה וּכְבוֹד֖וֹ עָלַ֥יִךְ יֵרָאֶֽה׃

    We will next return to first century Jerusalem, but first hear the words of the Prophet Isaiah. (Without knowing their context you may have heard them before.)

    Arise, shine;
    For your light has come!
    And the glory of the Lord is risen upon you.

    The Gentiles shall come to your light,
    And kings to the brightness of your rising.
    “Lift up your eyes all around, and see:
    They all gather together, they come to you;
    Your sons shall come from afar,
    And your daughters shall be nursed at your side.
    Then you shall see and become radiant,
    And your heart shall swell with joy…

    Yet previously Isaiah the Prophet had warned:

    His watchmen are blind,
    All of them know nothing.
    All of them are mute dogs unable to bark,
    Dreamers lying down, who love to slumber;
    And the dogs are greedy, they are not satisfied.

    And they are shepherds who have no understanding;
    They have all turned to their own way,
    Each one to his unjust gain, to the last one.

    Into this same Jerusalem the Messiah Jesus enters the gates, encounters the watchmen and shepherds of Herod. Among other signs the Lord gives a man blind from birth his sight!

    Could the LORD have sent a new gatekeeper of heaven to Jerusalem?

    To be continued...
  • You Scoffers Who Rule Jerusalem – a Bed too Short

    You Scoffers Who Rule Jerusalem – a Bed too Short

    Perhaps by now you know from introduction in my previous post that the complainant in this case is the LORD. His indictment of leaders is not my complaint for today, but that of the prophet of Judah in the eighth century BC. Therefore Isaiah approaches these leaders, scoffers who rule Jerusalem with warnings from the LORD.

    Scoffers who rule …

    Our application, of course, may call the question to our own nations:

    Are our leaders also scoffers who rule with a bed too short?

    Let’s return to excerpts from the LORD’s rebuke from where we began previously. (You may follow various translations, including Hebrew, on the link below.)

    Scoffers who rule Israel

    Isaiah 28:

    14 Therefore hear the word of the Lord, you scoffers
    who rule this people in Jerusalem.
    15 For you said, “We have made a covenant with Death,
    and we have an agreement with Sheol;
    when the overwhelming catastrophe passes through,
    it will not touch us,
    because we have made falsehood our refuge
    and have hidden behind treachery.”

    Did the catastrophe pass over the Jewish leaders of Isaiah’s day?

    Again, as I pointed previously in our chronology of Israel, it did not. The Jews were overrun by Assyria in that day, as Empires rise and fall even unto this day. So what does the Lord promise through Isaiah to a people about to be taken from their homes to a foreign land?

    A Cornerstone in Zion

    If you do not already know it, you will find it helpful here to understand some significance of Zion to Hebrew history.

    צִיּוֹן

    Zion (153x), Sion (1x). Zion = “parched place,” a “sunny mountain,” a fortress, the southern and higher hill (of the LORD) upon which Jerusalem is built. On it set Mount Moriah, where the Temple was built and the LORD worshiped. It is used for the holy “city of David” specifically and for all of Jerusalem in general, especially by the prophets: Isaiah 47x, Jeremiah 32x and six other prophets 30x.

    16a [NASB] Therefore thus says the Lord God,

    “Behold, I am laying in Zion a stone, a tested stone,
    A costly cornerstone for the foundation, firmly placed.

    This from the LORD, of course, is prophecy. The question we must understand is not only when, but the identity of this symbolic cornerstone of the Temple.

    Who IS this costly cornerstone of Israel’s future? And what makes this Savior of Israel so costly to the LORD?

    The one who believes will remain anchored to the Cornerstone of the heavenly Temple, established with justice as it’s measuring line and righteousness as its level.

    Yet if you do not hold to this cornerstone, a stumbling block to scoffers who rule without guidance from God — if you support godless scoffers who rule — then you will stumble as well on the cornerstone of righteousness. For like those you manipulate, you cannot hide on the day of your accounting before the LORD.

    What does Isaiah predict?

    Isn’t this the same prophet we hear quoted every year in this season leading up to remembering a birth of righteousness, the Cornerstone in Zion that rebuilds the Temple of the LORD for all time?

    Yes, Isaiah prophesies not only the fall of Jerusalem in their near future, but the coming of the Messiah of Israel born some seven centuries later.

    Consequence for Scoffers Who Rule

    Have you leaders been hiding behind lies of convenience?

    “Then hail will sweep away the refuge of lies…

    Can you really hide the truth of your sins forever?

    “And the waters will overflow the secret place.

    The LORD and others, even your enemies, will find you out.

    “and your agreement with Sheol will not stand;
    when the overwhelming scourge passes through
    you will be beaten down by it.

    19 [CSB] Every time it passes through,
    it will carry you away;
    it will pass through every morning—
    every day and every night.
    Only terror will cause you
    to understand the message.

    NO PLACE TO HIDE FROM THE LORD GOD!

    Hear the word of the LORD, you scoffers who rule any of God’s people anywhere.

    Isaiah’s imagery shows the futility of trying to keep your sin from God, for it will be shown to others.

    Perhaps you will take this warning as your one and only opportunity to repent of your sin. Maybe just one of our scoffers who rule will humbly return to fear of the Lord, our heavenly Father.

    The Bed too short

    Do you recall when you were a child how you thought that you could hide from your father under the bed or from fearful noises under the covers.

    Indeed, the bed is too short to stretch out on,
    and its cover too small to wrap up in.

    Isaiah 28:20 CSB

    Isaiah illustrates that leaders seeking rest from any but God as laughable at best, but futile in any instance. Judah was burdened with threats from and alliances with other leaders. They sought rest from war and peace with the world flowing through their porous defences.

    Then Jesus said, “Come to me, all of you who are weary and carry heavy burdens, and I will give you rest.

    Matthew 11:28 NLT

    Once Isaiah mentions their frustration of trying to sleep on a bed too short (their alliances with other evil leaders) and of remaining of cover of their trust in others, he again proceeds to prophesy what must happen.

    Parazim & Gibeon

    21 [NASB] For the LORD will rise up as at Mount Perazim,
    He will be stirred up as in the valley of Gibeon,
    To do His task, His unusual task,
    And to work His work, His extraordinary work.

    You scoffers who rule in other places must understand the significance of these places to which Isaiah refers.

    So David came to Baal-perazim and defeated them there; 
    and he said,
    “The LORD has broken through my enemies before me
    like the breakthrough of waters.”
    Therefore he named that place Baal-perazim.
    They abandoned their idols there,
    so David and his men carried them away.
    - 2 Samuel 5:20-21

    David, King of a once-united Israel, did not win the land and the people without the help of the LORD!

    And there in his victory, David gave thanks to the Lord before the people of the land. Yet before David and following leadership of another revered man of God and giver of the Law [Torah], Joshua also credits the LORD who has taken this land from their enemies.

    Joshua 10:10 And the LORD confounded them before Israel, and He slew them with a great slaughter at Gibeon, and pursued them by the way of the ascent of Beth-horon, and struck them as far as Azekah and Makkedah.

    Warning & Advice to Scoffers Who Rule

    Isaiah speaks to scoffers of God. Yet are your ears this day so filled with twisted speech that you do not even understand the significance of his warning?

    לוּץ

    Scoffers translated from Hebrew luwts holds a pointed meaning. From Strong’s Concordance:

    לוּץ lûwts, loots; a primitive root; properly, to make mouths at, i.e. to scoff; hence (from the effort to pronounce a foreign language) to interpret, or (generally) intercede:—ambassador, have in derision, interpreter, make a mock, mocker, scorn(-er, -ful), teacher.

    “(from the effort to pronounce a foreign language) to interpret..” Sounds like #media, doesn’t it?

    Do you think even in seven-hundred some years before Christ scoffers who rule were any different than those who rule this day in the year of our Lord 2019?

    Of course not! These men and women of power: scorn, make mouths at, talk arrogantly; They boast, mock and deride.

    Isaiah warns:

    22 Now therefore, do not be mockers,
    Lest your bonds be made strong…

    Shall I mock Isaiah, scripture and the word of the Lord?

    (What do you think? Do you, your leaders or even opponents fear your shackles of slavery to lies tightening?)

    For I have heard from the Lord God of hosts
    Of decisive destruction on all the earth.

    Isaiah 28:22b NASB

    Decisive destruction on all the earth. It is not the causes for which these ambassadors of hypocrisy which will destroy the earth, the Lord God at a time and place of His Own choosing.

    Where’s a leader to hide?

    Again, Isaiah’ illustration of the futility of it all.

    • 24 Does the farmer plow continually to plant seed?
    • Or does he continuously break up and cultivate the soil?

    There’s a process here, a plan of the Lord; and you will be a part of it.

    • 25 Does he not level its surface
    • And sow dill
    • scatter cummin
    • And plant wheat in rows,
    • Barley in its place
    • and rye within its area?

    God’s ordered ways

    26 [CSB] His God teaches him order;
    he instructs him.

    27 Certainly black cumin is not threshed
    with a threshing board,
    and a cart wheel is not rolled over the cumin.
    But black cumin is beaten out with a stick,
    and cumin with a rod.
    28 Bread grain is crushed,
    but is not threshed endlessly.
    Though the wheel of the farmer’s cart rumbles,
    his horses do not crush it.

    Even a king, prime minister or president in a palace will see the ridicule of the farmer using the wrong tool to accomplish his purpose. Perhaps even a scoffer in Congress, Parliament or leadership claiming the rule of Law will see their own error and return to the Lord.

    Woe to the scoffers who rule the worldly cities.

    We cannot nearly complete the prophesies of Isaiah today. For if I continue, like Isaiah’s critics you would surely complain:

    “Law after law, law after law,
    line after line, line after line,
    a little here, a little there.”

    Therefore in closing I’ll caution US.

    Hear the Lord your God, for woe is akin to death. Isaiah uses it more than any other Prophet of the Lord.

    Woe to the wicked! It will go badly with him,
    For what he deserves will be done to him. – Isaiah 3:11 NASB

    Woe to those who enact evil statutes
    And to those who constantly record unjust decisions,

    So as to deprive the needy of justice
    And rob the poor of My people of their rights…

    Now what will you do in the day of punishment,
    And in the devastation which will come from afar?
    To whom will you flee for help?
    And where will you leave your wealth?

    excerpt: Isaiah 10:1-3 NASB

    After these warnings to leaders of the nations and specifically Judah, Isaiah warns:

    “Woe to the one who quarrels with his Maker—
    An earthenware vessel among the vessels of earth!
    Will the clay say to the potter, ‘What are you doing?’
    Or the thing you are making say, ‘He has no hands’?

    Isaiah 45:9 NASB

    In a time yet to come — neither next Wednesday nor next year — Isaiah shows hope in a day to come and judgment against those who refuse the Way of the Lord, even those who yet deny the Truth Who IS and will judge from the Throne of Heaven, even those scoffers who rule in this life lacking regard for the Life that is to come — the life or the punishment after death.

    The LORD Rises Up

    Isaiah 33:

    Woe, you destroyer never destroyed,
    you traitor never betrayed!
    When you have finished destroying,
    you will be destroyed.
    When you have finished betraying,
    they will betray you.

    2 O Lord, be gracious to us; we have waited for You.

    Blessing or Woe?

    Blessed are the meek: for they shall inherit the earth. – Matthew 5:5

    Blessed are the merciful: for they shall obtain mercy. – Matthew 5:7

    Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness’ sake: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. – Matthew 5:10

    But woe to you, blind guides… scoffers who rule…

    “Woe to you also, lawyers! For you load men with burdens hard to bear, and you yourselves do not touch the burdens with one of your fingers. –Luke 11:46

    Woe to the city of blood, totally deceitful, full of plunder, never without prey. – Nahum 3:1

    Your eyes will see the King in His beauty;

    They will see the land that is very far off.

    Isaiah 33:17 NKJV

    The Scroll of Isaiah

    Luke 4:

    17 The scroll of the prophet Isaiah was given to him, and unrolling the scroll, he found the place where it was written:

    The Spirit of the Lord is on me,
    because he has anointed me
    to preach good news to the poor.
    He has sent me
    to proclaim release to the captives
    and recovery of sight to the blind,
    to set free the oppressed,
    19 to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.

    He began by saying to them, “Today as you listen, this Scripture has been fulfilled.”

    The words of the Messiah Jesus from the Gospel of Luke 4:21

    And He has on His robe and on His thigh a name written:

    KING OF KINGS AND LORD OF LORDS.

    The Revelation of Jesus Christ to John 19:16 NKJV