The Gospel of Luke, Chapter 17 -
Christogenea on Talkshoe 10-12-2012
In Luke chapter 16, Christ is recorded as having
given a lengthy discourse concerning wealth and the love of mammon,
or riches. Beginning with a parable which warns concerning the
behavior of the “sons of light” as opposed to the “sons of this
age”, He continued with a warning about those forcing their way
into the Kingdom of God, and then presented another parable in an
example of a wealthy man who had failed to extend assistance to the
poor man, Lazarus. All of this actually presents diverse parts of a
consistent moral lesson concerning the behavior of the “sons of
light”. That they should not act as the “sons of this age” in
pursuit of unrighteous riches, wealth obtained through unjust means,
that they should be wary of those outsiders forcing their way into
the Kingdom of God, and that if they were to become wealthy, they
risk losing their own reward in the Kingdom in the event they forsake
their brethren as the rich man had not considered the needs of
Lazarus.
Studying the history of Christian Europe one should
recognize that many from the noble classes thought that it was
beneficial to have the anti-Christ jewish usurers around for the sake
of commerce. Kings used these jews in the hopes of they themselves
profiting from jewish vice and usury. In the meantime the jews
acquired great wealth, having the business of usury and capital
exclusively to themselves since Christians were barred from such
practices. If Christians had only heeded the words of Christ in Luke
chapter 16, they may have recognized the connection between the
pursuit of wealth and the infiltration and corruption of the Kingdom
of God, which has led to the very situation which we suffer today.
1 Then He said to His students: “It is
impossible for scandals not to come, but woe to him through whom they
come! 2 It would be better for him if a mill stone is placed around
his neck and he were cast into the sea than he should be offended by
the least one of these!
The word σκάνδαλον (4625), scandals,
may have been rendered in this context as offenses. The word
appears only here in Luke but it is often used by Paul, and it is
defined as “a trap or snare laid for an
enemy...metaphorically a stumbling-block, offence,
scandal” (Liddell & Scott). It is obviously the source
for our English word scandal. Aside from the words for sin,
the usual words for offense or transgression in the
Greek, as the King James Version translates them, are παράβασις
(3847) and παράπτωμα (3900). It appears to this
commentator, that scandals, or σκάνδαλα, seem to be the sins
which men are trapped into making, either through deceit or through
weakness, where the others seem to be purposeful on the part of they
who commit them.
These words of Christ were in response to the
parables which He gave in Luke chapter 16. They come immediately
after the parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus. The warning seems to
be leveled at the wealthy, who in their riches neglect the future of
the Kingdom of God, which lies in its children. Rather, the wealthy
of this world have historically taken advantage of children, and do
so today, corrupting them for their own gain.
In a different conversation in Matthew Chapter 18 we
see a similar discourse: “6 But he whom would offend [from a verb
derived from σκάνδαλον] one of these little ones who
believes in Me, it is better for him that a millstone would be hung
around his neck and he be drowned in the depth of the sea! 7 Woe to
Society because of offenses! Indeed it is a necessity for offenses to
come, but woe to that man through whom the offense comes! [The
occurrences of the word offense(s) are from the same word
σκάνδαλον seen here in Luke 17.] 8 Now if your hand or your
foot entrap you, chop it off and cast it from you: it is good for you
to enter into life crippled or lame than having two hands or two feet
to be cast into the eternal fire! 9 And if your eye entraps you, take
it out and cast it from you: it is good for you with one eye to enter
into life than having two eyes to be cast into Gehenna for the fire!”
[The word entrap(s) is from that same verb derived from
σκάνδαλον.]
3 Watch yourselves! “If your brother should do
wrong admonish him, and if he should repent, forgive him. 4 And if on
each of seven days he should do wrong to you and seven times should
turn to you saying ‘I repent’, you forgive him.”
The King James reading, where it has “and seven
times in a day”, is based upon the Codices Alexandrinus (A),
Washingtonensis (W) and the Majority Text. Here the text of the
Christogenea New Testament follows the codices Sinaiticus
(א),Vaticanus
(B), and Bezae (D).
Here we see the measure by which Yahweh our God shall
forgive us, and by that measure we should forgive our repentant
brethren:
Jeremiah 33:8: “And I will cleanse them from all
their iniquity, whereby they have sinned against me; and I will
pardon all their iniquities, whereby they have sinned, and whereby
they have transgressed against me.”
Ezekiel 37:23: “Neither shall they defile
themselves any more with their idols, nor with their detestable
things, nor with any of their transgressions: but I will save them
out of all their dwellingplaces, wherein they have sinned, and will
cleanse them: so shall they be my people, and I will be their God.”
If we expect Yahweh to cleanse us of our sins, then
we must forgive our brethren theirs. From Matthew chapter 7: ““1
Do not condemn, in order that you would not be condemned. 2 For with
the judgment by which you condemn, you shall be judged, and with the
measure by which you measure, it shall be measured with you. 3 Now
how do you see the stick which is in the eye of your brother, but the
beam which is in your own eye you do not perceive? 4 Or how do you
say to your brother ‘Let me extract the stick from your eye’, and
behold, the beam is in your eye! 5 Hypocrite! Extract first the beam
from your eye, and then you will see clearly to extract the stick
from the eye of your brother!” [Those who want to throw any of the
children of Yahweh into the Lake of Fire should heed these things.]
5 And the ambassadors said to the Prince, “Add
to our faith.” [Literally “Add faith to us.”] 6 Then the
Prince said: “If you have faith as a grain of mustard, you may say
to this mulberry tree ‘You must be rooted up and be planted
in the sea’, and it would submit to you.
With faith we must overcome our trials. With faith,
our trials either fall to the wayside, or are made easy for us to
bear. With faith we can move mountains, figuratively speaking. In our
faith we regard our trials as nothing.
Romans 8: “18 Therefore I consider that the
happenstances of the present time are not of value, looking to the
future honor to be revealed to us. 19 Indeed in earnest anticipation
the creation awaits the revelation of the sons of Yahweh. 20 To
transientness the creation was subjected not willingly, but on
account of He who subjected it in expectation 21 that also the
creation itself shall be liberated from the bondage of decay into the
freedom of the honor of the children of Yahweh. 22 For we know that
the whole creation laments together and travails together until
then.” The phrase “whole creation” refers to the creation of
the Adamic man, as Paul illustrates further on in his discourse, at
Romans 8:31-38 where he is compared to “any other creation”.
1 Peter 1: “3 Blessed is Yahweh, even the Father of
our Prince Yahshua Christ, who according to His great mercy has
engendered us from above into a living hope through the resurrection
of Yahshua Christ from among the dead, 4 for an inheritance
incorruptible and undefiled and unfading, being kept in the heavens
for us 5 who are being preserved by the power of Yahweh through faith
for a salvation prepared to be revealed in the last time. 6 In which
you must rejoice, if for a short time now it is necessary being
pained by various trials, 7 in order that the test of your faith,
much more valuable than gold which is destroyed even being tested by
fire, would be found in praise and honor and dignity at the
revelation of Yahshua Christ, 8 whom not having seen you love, in
whom now not seeing but believing you rejoice with an indescribable
and illustrious joy, 9 acquiring the result of your faith:
preservation of your souls. ”
7 “Who from among you having a servant plowing
or tending sheep who coming in from the field, says to him
‘Immediately, coming forth you recline!’ 8 Rather would you not
say to him ‘Prepare something that I may have dinner, and girding
yourself serve me while I eat and I drink, and after these things you
shall eat and drink’? 9 Does he not have thanks for the servant
that he do the things appointed?
The words found at the end of verse 9, “I trow
not”, literally “I think not”, are found in the Codices
Alexandrinus (A), Bezae (D), Washingtonensis (W), and the Majority
Text. The text of the Christogenea New Testament follows the third
century papyrus P75, and the Codices Sinaiticus (א)
and Vaticanus (B).
Men have servants from whom they expect to always and
continually be served. God has servants and when they serve Him, He
serves them in turn. From John chapter 13: “12 Therefore when He
washed their feet and took His garments and reclined again, He said
to them: 'Do you know what I have done to you? 13 You call Me
‘Teacher’ and ‘Prince’, and you speak well, for I am. 14
Therefore if I, the Prince and the Teacher, have washed your feet,
you are also obliged to wash the feet of one another. 15 For I have
given to you an example in order that just as I have done for you,
you also should do. 16 Truly, truly I say to you, a servant is not
greater than his master nor an ambassador greater than he who sent
him. 17 If you know these things, you are blessed if you would do
them.'”
10 Thusly also you, when you have done all the
things appointed to you, say that ‘We are useless servants,
who were obliged to do what we have done’?”
The question is rhetorical. Useless servants fulfill
their obligations and stop there. Useful servants fulfill their
obligations happily and seek to do more. The good master finds value
in his servants and rewards them after they have fulfilled their
obligations. Yahweh God is indeed such a master.
However not anybody can claim for themselves to be a
servant of Yahweh the God of Israel. Men choose their servants, and
it is not the other way around. Yahweh has stated many times, that He
has chosen Israel, and not only Israel but their seed after them: the
descendants of genetic Israel alone are the servant race of God.
Psalm 136: “21 And gave their land [the land of the
Canaanites] for an heritage: for his mercy endureth for ever: 22 Even
an heritage unto Israel his servant: for his mercy endureth for
ever.”
Isaiah 41: “1 Yet now hear, O Jacob my servant; and
Israel, whom I have chosen: 2 Thus saith the LORD that made thee, and
formed thee from the womb, which will help thee; Fear not, O Jacob,
my servant; and thou, Jesurun, whom I have chosen. 3 For I will pour
water upon him that is thirsty, and floods upon the dry ground: I
will pour my spirit upon thy seed, and my blessing upon thine
offspring.”
Isaiah 41: “8 But thou, Israel, art my servant,
Jacob whom I have chosen, the seed of Abraham my friend. 9 Thou whom
I have taken from the ends of the earth, and called thee from the
chief men thereof, and said unto thee, Thou art my servant; I have
chosen thee, and not cast thee away.”
Isaiah 44: “21 Remember these, O Jacob and Israel;
for thou art my servant: I have formed thee; thou art my servant: O
Israel, thou shalt not be forgotten of me. 22 I have blotted out, as
a thick cloud, thy transgressions, and, as a cloud, thy sins: return
unto me; for I have redeemed thee.”
Isaiah 49: “3 And said unto me, Thou art my
servant, O Israel, in whom I will be glorified.”
Jeremiah 30: “10 Therefore fear thou not, O my
servant Jacob, saith the LORD; neither be dismayed, O Israel: for,
lo, I will save thee from afar, and thy seed from the land of their
captivity; and Jacob shall return, and shall be in rest, and be
quiet, and none shall make him afraid.”
Jeremiah 46: “27 But fear not thou, O my servant
Jacob, and be not dismayed, O Israel: for, behold, I will save thee
from afar off, and thy seed from the land of their captivity; and
Jacob shall return, and be in rest and at ease, and none shall make
him afraid. 28 Fear thou not, O Jacob my servant, saith the LORD: for
I am with thee; for I will make a full end of all the nations whither
I have driven thee: but I will not make a full end of thee, but
correct thee in measure; yet will I not leave thee wholly
unpunished.”
Ezekiel 28: “25 Thus saith the Lord GOD; When I
shall have gathered the house of Israel from the people among whom
they are scattered, and shall be sanctified in them in the sight of
the heathen, then shall they dwell in their land that I have given to
my servant Jacob.”
Luke 1: “54 He has come to the aid of His servant
Israel, to call mercy into remembrance, 55 just as He spoke to our
fathers, to Abraham and to his offspring for the age” The New
Testament Israel of Luke is the same Old Testament Israel of the
prophets. Only they are the servants of God, here to fulfill His
purposes.
11 And it came to pass, while traveling to
Jerusalem, that He had passed through the center of Samaria and
Galilaia, 12 and upon His coming into a certain town they encountered
ten leprous men who had stood afar off.
The Codex Sinaiticus (א)
has “ten leprous men went to meet Him” and wants the words “who
had stood afar off”.
13 And they raised their voices saying “Yahshua,
Master, have mercy on us!” 14 And seeing them He said to them
“Going, show yourselves to the priests!” And it happened
that with their going off they were cleansed. 15 Then one
of them, seeing that he was healed, returned with a great voice
extolling Yahweh, 16 and fell upon his face by His feet
thanking Him, and he was a Samaritan. 17 And replying Yahshua said
“Were not ten cleansed? Then where are the nine? 18 Are there none
found returning to give honor to Yahweh, except he who is of another
race?” 19 And He said to him, “Arising go, your faith has
preserved you.”
The word ἀλλογενής (241), means “of
another race, a stranger”, according to Liddell &
Scott, and it appears only here in the New Testament. While the word
certainly may be used to signify a non-Adamic or non-White person,
that interpretation is not compulsory, for it may only signify that
the man is merely a non-Judaean, or a non-Israelite. The Greek
definition of “race”, as the words γενεά and γένος were
employed, often being narrower than our modern definition, could
signify a tribe or other subdivision within a nation, or even only a
particular family. According to Liddel & Scott, Herodotus and
others used the word to describe a tribal subdivision within a
nation. However the word was also used to describe the people of a
nation, as Liddel & Scott also attest with examples from Greek
literature. The man, being a Samaritan, was most certainly an Adamic
man since it was Adamic people from all over Mesopotamia which the
Assyrians had brought into Samaria, along with the remnant of Israel
which remained there.
The word faith in the phrase “your faith has
preserved you” may just as well have been translated as belief.
Modern Christians often attach a special esoteric or spiritual
meaning to the word faith. However the Greek word πίστις
is merely trust or faith or belief in something,
or confidence or an assurance in a thing, and it is the
common word used to express all of those ideas. The man simply
believed that he was cleansed by God through Yahshua, and He was, and
Yahshua credited the man for having that belief. The man's faith was
only a belief that Yahshua had healed him. In contrast, and as Paul
defines it in Romans chapter 4, the faith of Abraham was the belief
that God was true when He said that many nations would come from out
of his loins, from his physical descendants, as Yahweh had promised
him. Therefore whenever the word faith is used in the Bible, it does
not necessarily refer to the specific Christian faith, which is
properly summed up in a profession of the belief that Christ came and
died in order to redeem the children of Israel. Notice, of course,
how ungrateful the nine children of Israel were here, even though
they were cleansed of their leprosy. How many times have we all taken
gifts from God and from each other for granted?
20 Then being asked by the Pharisees when the
Kingdom of Yahweh would come, He replied to them and said: “The
Kingdom of Yahweh does not come along with observation. 21 Nor shall
they say ‘Behold, it is here!’ or ‘it is there!’ For behold!
The Kingdom of Yahweh is among you!”
The popular Dispensationalist interpretation is that
Christ said that “the Kingdom of God is within you”, as the King
James Version and other popular translations reads the Greek text
here. The word rendered among, or in those other versions within, is
ἐντός (1787), and with the Genitive plural pronoun ὑμῶν,
“you”, is rendered “among” in order to avoid any
misunderstanding of the intended meaning.
Thayer properly explains this, where in his Greek-English Lexicon at
ἐντός he states:
“... ἐντός
ὑμῶν,
within you,
i.e. in the midst of you,
Lk. xvii. 21...” and he cites a similar usage in Xenophon’s
Anabasis 1.10.3 for an example. Thayer goes on to explain:
“...others [others’ interpretations here], within you
(i.e. in your souls), a meaning which the use of the word
permits (ἐντός μου, Ps.
xxxviii. (xxxix.) 4; cviii. (cix.) 22, etc....), but not the
context...” [brackets and emphasis mine].
Paul’s use of the synonym ἔσω (2080) at I
Corinthians 5:12 is much like the use of ἐντός here. There he
talks of unrepentant sinners to be put out of the assembly, and he
asks: “12 What is it to me to judge those outside? Not at all
should you judge those within you.” Translating that passage, I
purposely used the term within, the King James Version also
has it there, in order to help to illustrate what the term should
mean here in Luke 17:21. In Paul's statement the pronoun for you
is also plural, and in context the phrase clearly means “among
you”, as it refers to individuals among a larger group. That is how
this similar phrase should be understood here in Luke, for Christ is
saying “the Kingdom of Yahweh is among you”, meaning that it is
in the midst of the group of people whom He is addressing.
The general context in which the phrases “Kingdom
of God” or “Kingdom of Heaven” are used throughout the
Scripture also helps to establish the veracity of this as the correct
interpretation. Among the many examples are these:
Matthew 19:24: “And again I say to you, it is
easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a
wealthy man to enter into the Kingdom of Yahweh!” It does not say
that the Kingdom of God could not enter into the wealthy man, but
that the wealthy man could not enter into the Kingdom.
Matthew 21:31, in part: “Truly I say to you that
the tax-collectors and the whores shall go into the kingdom of Yahweh
before you!” Likewise, publicans and whores enter into the Kingdom,
not the Kingdom into them.
Mark 10: “13 And they had brought to Him children
in order that He may engage with them, but the students admonished
them. 14 And seeing it Yahshua was annoyed and said to them: 'Let the
children come to Me. Do not prevent them, for of such as these is the
Kingdom of Yahweh!'” Here we see that the Kingdom of Yahweh is
composed of people, such as these children. It is not in people, but
people are in it.
Luke 13: “28 And there shall be weeping and
gnashing of teeth, when you should see Abraham and Isaak and Jakob
and all of the prophets in the kingdom of Yahweh, but you are being
cast outside. 29 And they shall arrive from east and west, and from
north and south, and they shall recline in the kingdom of Yahweh.”
The Kingdom is not taken out of the undeserving, but rather the
undeserving are excluded from the Kingdom.
Mark 9:1: “1 And He said to them: 'Truly I say to
you that there are some of those standing here whom shall by no means
taste of death until they should see the Kingdom of Yahweh having
come with power!'” Or as He says in John, that “unless a man
should be born from above, he is not able to see the Kingdom of
Yahweh.” If the Kingdom of Yahweh was within these faithful people
whom Christ speaks of, then they would not have to see it, nor would
they have to wait for it. Neither does the Kingdom actually come with
observation, as Christ says here in Luke, that “20 … The Kingdom
of Yahweh does not come along with observation. 21 Nor shall they say
‘Behold, it is here!’ or ‘it is there!’ For behold! The
Kingdom of Yahweh is among you!”
We see the kingdom, but we do not see it coming,
because we – or at least, those of us who are children of Israel –
we are the Kingdom. Christ told the larger group that “the Kingdom
of God is among you” because it was, for the Kingdom of God is
Christ as King of His people who were right there among the greater
population of Judaea. When Christ rules over the earth populated by
His people, then the Kingdom of Yahweh shall be established. From
Luke chapter 1: “32 He shall be great and He shall be called ‘Son
of the Highest’ and Yahweh God shall give to Him the throne of
David His father, 33 and He shall rule over the house of Jakob for
the ages, and of His Kingdom there shall be no end!”
22 Then He said to His students: “The days are
coming when you shall desire to see one of the days of the Son of
Man, and you shall not see. 23 And they shall say to you ‘Behold,
He is there!’ or ‘Behold, He is here!’ You should not depart
nor give pursuit.
The days are indeed upon us, and have been for some
time now, where we do desire to see the return of Christ, to deliver
us from this present evil world. And it is at this very time, more
than any other in the past, that men have stood up claiming for
themselves to be some sort of Messiah, or even Christ Himself having
returned.
A lengthy prophecy concerning the future destruction
of Jerusalem and punishment upon the enemies of Christ, mingled with
a prophecy concerning the coming of the Kingdom of Heaven and the
return of Christ, is given by Yahshua and is recorded in Luke Chapter
21, which is a parallel record of the same discourse of which parts
are also found in Matthew chapter 24 and Mark chapter 13. That
discourse is of such a nature because it consists of one answer to
three questions concerning the time of the destruction of Jerusalem,
the time of the fulfillment of the age, and the time of the return of
Christ. However these words of Christ found here in Luke chapter 17
are clearly part of a somewhat earlier and separate discourse. Any
resemblance which they have with Matthew chapter 24 is rather easy to
account for once that is realized, and once it is realized that many
of the things which Christ taught were things that He must have
repeated often, with one gospel writer including one such occasion in
his gospel, while another gospel writer included a record of a
different such occasion. This has already been made apparent here in
several places as we have proceeded through the gospel of Luke, and
contrasted it to parts of the other gospels.
Matthew 24:4 records a statement similar to this one
in Luke 17:23: “And replying Yahshua
said to them: “Watch lest anyone should deceive you! 5 For many
shall come by My Name saying ‘I am the Christ’, and they shall
deceive many.”
In the first few centuries of Christianity many men
were preaching false Christs, meaning that they were attributing
teachings to Yahshua Christ which He did not actually intend for us.
But it is not evident in the records which we have that they were
claiming to actually be Christ. There
were also several minor would-be Messiah figures in Jerusalem around
the time of Christ, such as Judas the Gaulonite, who was described by
Josephus, and who was really just a tax-protester. None of these fits
the circumstances which Yahshua Christ relates here. Here Yahshua
tells us specifically that many would come claiming to be Him, and
that has not happened until this present era. Over
the last two centuries, there have been
many figures explicitly claiming to be the Christ, meaning an advent
or reincarnation of Yahshua Christ. Among these are the Korean named
Sun Myung Moon, another Korean named Ahn Sahng-Hong, Marshall
Applewhite, Jim Jones, Bahá'u'lláh, and a host of several dozens of
other assorted freaks and circus clowns. Therefore if this prophecy
can only be seen to have been realized in more recent times, because
there is no such attestation of its having happened in the early
centuries of Christianity or at any other time, then the other
related prophecies given here must also apply to more recent times.
24 For even as lightning flashing
illuminates from beneath this part of heaven to beneath that part of
heaven, thusly shall the Son of Man be in His day.
This is similar to a statement found in Matthew
chapter 24: “27 For just as lightning comes out from the east and
appears so far as the west, thusly shall be the coming of the Son of
Man.”
Many commentators want to see a special application
to the record of Christ's use of the words east and west
as they are recorded in Matthew 24:27. However this version in Luke
refutes that we must interpret those words in any special manner.
Rather, either analogy, whether east-to-west or
one-part-of-heaven-to-another, only draws a picture for the listener
which depicts how sudden the coming return of the Christ would be
when it happens.
25 But first it is necessary for Him to suffer
many things and to be rejected by this race.
The words “this race” can only refer to the
corrupt mixed race of Judaea, and it was clearly they who were
responsible for the Crucifixion. It cannot properly be rendered
generation, as the term is used today, because a great number
of the people of that time were avid listeners of Christ, and were
not His opponents. It is rather the Canaanite-Edomite infiltrated
leadership of Judaea which rejected Him and sought to destroy Him.
This facet of the Gospel, that Christ was not going
to take the throne of David immediately, is one in which Paul had the
hardest time convincing the people to whom he preached. The people
who expected Christ, also expected Him to restore the kingdom to the
children of Israel and to rule over them as King at that time. This
is evident at John 6:15, where it is recorded that the people wanted
to seize Christ and make Him their king right then. Later it is even
in the words of the apostles recorded at Acts 1:6-7: “6 So then
they who were gathered asked Him, saying 'Prince, then at this time
shall You restore the Kingdom to Israel?' 7 And He said to them: 'It
is not yours to know the times or the seasons which the Father has
placed in His own authority.'” The people, and even the apostles,
did not at all understand the prophecies, but only that the Messiah
had arrived and should be their king. Much later, talking about his
struggle against the jews, Paul says in Acts chapter 26: “22
However obtaining assistance from Yahweh, unto this day I have stood
bearing testimony to both the small and the great, saying nothing
outside of the things which both the prophets and Moses said are
going to happen, 23 whether the Christ was to suffer, whether first
from a resurrection from the dead is a light going to be declared to
both the people and to the Nations.”
26 And just as it was in the days of Noah, thusly
it shall be in the days of the Son of Man. 27 They were eating, they
were drinking, they were marrying, they were giving in marriage,
until the day in which Noah entered into the vessel and the deluge
had come and destroyed all.
There is a similar statement in Matthew 24:37-39.
These are the comments made concerning those verses when that chapter
was presented here last year: In Revelation chapter 20, we see that
Satan – the Adversary, which is World Jewry - deceives
the hordes of Gog and Magog to come against the people of God. These
are the world's other races, who are all the tools of Satan. In
Ezekiel chapters 38 and 39, the enemies of God come under cover
(which is the pretense of immigration) like a cloud covering the land
to surround the people of God. In Jeremiah 31:27-30, the House of
Israel and the house of Judah are sown with the offspring of beasts.
In Isaiah 56:9-10, speaking of the ultimate regathering of Israel, we
see the invitation to "9 All ye beasts of the field, come to
devour, yea, all ye beasts in the forest. 10 His watchmen are blind:
they are all ignorant, they are all dumb dogs, they cannot bark;
sleeping, lying down, loving to slumber." At Joel 2:25 Yahweh
promises the Children of Israel: “And I will restore to you the
years that the locust hath eaten, the cankerworm, and the
caterpiller, and the palmerworm, [and He calls them] my great army
which I sent among you.” So we see in all this that we are already
surrounded by our enemies, that our would-be conquerors are already
here, and that all of this is indeed permitted to come upon us as a
test from Yahweh our God. All of these end-time prophecies converge
in this understanding. That is how a great war could be waged against
us, while at the same time Christ says that “just as the days of
Noah, thusly shall be the coming of the Son of Man. 38 For as they
were in those days before the deluge eating and drinking, marrying
and giving in marriage”. We are in the midst of that war right now,
and our people do not even know it is being fought! Such is the
Jewish World Order of political correctness, multiculturalism and
diversity, which is all tantamount to World Communism. [That is the
end of the quote from my Matthew presentation.]
Today we are being devoured socially, by mingling our
seed with the seed of beasts, “marrying and giving in marriage”.
In the days of Noah, a reference to the events of Genesis chapter 6,
the fallen angels came down and mingled themselves with the daughters
of men: a race-mixing society had developed, just like the one which
we see has developed here today. The jews, being descended in part
from Cain and from the Rephaim, it is evident that the same parties
responsible for the corruption then are also the primary perpetrators
of the same corruption today. These other races which share in the
general communion of our White nations, these are the violent ones
who are taking the Kingdom of Yahweh by force; the “every man”
who “presseth into” the Kingdom, as the King James Version has
Luke 16:16. The apostle Jude in verses 12-13 of his epistle calls
these infiltrators “spots
in your feasts of charity, feasting together without fear, tending
to themselves, clouds without water being carried away by the winds
late-autumn trees without fruit, twice dead being uprooted stormy
waves of the sea foaming up their own shame, wandering stars for whom
the gloom of darkness is kept forever!” Likewise the apostle Peter
calls them “stains and disgraces reveling in their deceits feasting
together with you”, among other things similar to what Jude said
about them.
Obadiah
15 promises the destruction of all those eating and drinking upon
Yahweh's holy mountain who are not of His people: “For the day of
the LORD is near upon all the heathen: as thou hast done, it shall be
done unto thee: thy reward shall return upon thine own head. 16 For
as ye have drunk upon my holy mountain, so shall all the heathen
drink continually, yea, they shall drink, and they shall swallow
down, and they shall be as though they had not been.” They shall
all swallow from the cup of Yahweh's wrath.
28 Likewise just as it came to pass in the days of
Lot, they were eating, they were drinking, they were buying, they
were selling, they were planting, they were building, 29 but in the
day Lot departed from Sodom, it rained fire and sulfur from heaven
and destroyed all.
Jude also compares the sins of Sodom and Gomorrah to
the events of Genesis chapter 6, where after mentioning the “angels
which left their first estate” in verse 6, which is a reference to
the events of that chapter of Genesis, Jude then says in verse 7 of
his epistle: “as
Sodom and Gomorra and the cities around them in like manner with them
committing fornication and having gone after different flesh are set
forth an example, undergoing the punishment of eternal fire.”
Fornication, which is defined there by Jude as the pursuit of
different flesh, is also the word used by Paul in 1 Corinthians
chapter 10 to describe another race-mixing event, first recorded in
Numbers chapter 25, that of the sons of Israel who committed
fornication with the daughters of Moab. By this we know, that the
“marrying and giving in marriage” in the words of Christ here at
Luke 17:27 are surely a reference to race-mixing. The “eating and
drinking”, as we see here with the eating, drinking, buying,
selling, planting and building of the people of Sodom and Gomorrah,
is merely a reference to the fact that although consumed in sin, life
went on in these cities as though there was nothing wrong, until the
day when the judgement of Yahweh and sudden destruction came upon
them.
30 In accordance with these things it shall be in
the day that the Son of Man is revealed!
All of these circumstances shall be extant at the
return of Christ. All of these circumstances are extant today, at
this very time, and therefore we pray that Christ delivers us
shortly.
31 In that day, he who shall be upon the housetop,
and his vessels in the house, must not go down to take them. And he
in the field likewise must not return for the things behind. 32 You
remember the wife of Lot. 33 Whoever would seek to preserve his life
shall lose it, but whoever would lose it shall be kept alive.
Entering the Kingdom of Heaven, we must account
worldly possessions as nothing. Seeking to preserve our lives, we may
lose them. Forsaking this life and its possessions, we shall find
that a greater one awaits us. Lot's wife was being saved out of
Sodom, however she was concerned for the city, and she suffered for
it as it was being destroyed.
34 I say to you, in that night there shall be two
men upon one couch, one shall be taken and the other shall be left
alone. 35 There shall be two women grinding grain together, the one
shall be taken and the other left alone.”
The words “men” and “women” do not appear in
the Greek in verses 34 and 35, but are inferred from the gender of
the Articles and pronouns. The Codex Sinaiticus (א)
wants all of verse 35.
The text found in the King James Version at verse 36
of Luke chapter 17 is attested to only by the Codex Bezae (D) and by
some late Latin and Syriac manuscripts, and in two late Greek
minuscules which are designated by the numbers 700 (11th century) and
579 (13th century). The passage does not exist in the Majority Text,
yet the King James Version included it. The Codex Bezae (D) reads:
“Two men shall be in a field. One shall be taken and the other
shall be left alone.”
Those being taken are not being raptured. The parable
of the wheat and the tares, the parable of the net, the parable of
the goats and the sheep, all indicate that the wicked are removed
from society first, and that they are at that time going to be
destroyed. The prayer which Christians are taught to pray by Christ
indicates that the good people are left behind, so that things be “on
earth as they are in heaven”. It is, in Revelation chapter 21, the
city of God which descends to men, and not men which ascend to God.
It is, in the promises of the prophets which are also quoted by Paul,
the tabernacle of God which comes to dwell with men, and not men who
ascend to dwell with God. Real Christians want to be left behind!
37 And replying they said to Him “Where,
Prince?” So He said to them: “Wherever the body is, there also
shall the eagles be gathered together.”
This is similar to a statement found in Matthew
chapter 24: “28 Wherever the corpse may be, there the eagles shall
be gathered!” The body, or the corpse or carcass as
it is in Matthew 24:28, from the word which Christ used there, the
corpse at which the eagles are gathered must be the body of the woman
who joined herself to the beast, Mystery Babylon, and there is where
the vultures and parasites, or “every unclean and hated bird”,
are found, which is described in Revelation chapter 18. Find those
nations which are being devoured by the anti-Christ jews and overrun
with “every unclean and hated bird”, and you have found the
people of God, true Israel. Of course, the description can apply only
to the White race.