2Pe, overview

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Author: Peter. This epistle claims that the Apostle Peter wrote it (2Pe 1:1). It also claims to follow a former letter by Peter (2Pe 3:1) that certainly appears to be a reference to 1Pe. The author’s reference to the fact that Jesus had predicted a certain kind of death for him (2Pe 1:14) ties in with Jesus’ statement to Peter recorded in Joh 21:18.

The writings of the church fathers contain fewer references to Peter’s authorship of 2Pe than to the authorship of any other NT book. It is easy to see why critics who look for reasons to reject the authority of Scripture have targeted this book for attack. Ironically in this letter Peter warned his readers of heretics who departed from the teaching of the apostles and the OT prophets, which is the very thing these modern critics do.

Regardless of the external evidence, there is strong internal testimony to the fact that Peter wrote the book. The writer claimed to have witnessed Jesus’ transfiguration (2Pe 1:16-18) and to have received information about his own death from Jesus (2Pe 1:13-14; cf John 21:18).

Assuming Peter’s reference to his former letter (2Pe 3:1) is to 1Pe, he seems to have sent this epistle to the same general audience. That audience was primarily Gentile but also Jewish Christians living in northern Asia Minor (cf 1Pe 1:1).

Time: Peter’s reference to his imminent departure from this life (2Pe 1:13-15) suggests that the time of composition may have been just before Peter suffered martyrdom. The writings of church fathers place Peter’s death at 67-68 AD in Rome (the persecutions of Nero began about 64 AD). Consequently a date of composition about that time seems most likely. Early church tradition also says Peter spent the last decade of his life in Rome.

“Second Peter is the swan song of Peter, just as 2Ti is the swan song of Paul. There are striking similarities between the two books. Both epistles put up a warning sign along the pilgrim pathway the church is traveling to identify the awful apostasy that was on the way at the time and which in our time has now arrived. What was then like a cloud the size of a man’s hand today envelops the sky and produces a storm of hurricane proportions. Peter warns of heresy among teachers; Paul warns of heresy among the laity” (McGee).

Summary: Peter encourages the Christians to be sure of salvation by putting true doctrine into practice and dealing with false teachers. The letter is written to encourage Christian growth, while resisting false doctrine.

Key verse: “The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness. He is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance” (2Pe 3:9).

Outline

1. How to make one’s salvation sure: 2Pe 1:1-11
2. Peter’s reason for writing: 2Pe 1:12-21
3. False teachers: their behavior and end: 2Pe 2:1-22
4. The day of the Lord: 2Pe 3:1-18

3 1/2 years

ChristadelphianBooksOnline The Agora Bible Articles and Lessons: 1-9

  1. Daniel and Revelation not only share the characteristic of having specific time periods mentioned: they have identical time periods. Rev 12:14 seems to equates “a time, and times and half a time” with “one thousand two hundred and sixty days” (Rev 12:6). Assuming that “a time” = one year, and “times” = two years, the equation is 3 1/2 years = 1,260 days. This just happens to equal 42 30-day months. Since the period of 42 months appears to be equated with 1,260 days in Rev 11:2,3, the assumption is validated.

  2. When the same or similar activity occurs in both books, it is reasonable to believe that the same event is being described. Thus the little horn’s war on the saints for 3 1/2 years (Dan 7:25) = the beast’s war on the saint for 42 months (Rev 13:5). Indirectly, this equates 42 months with 3 1/2 years, and further confirms the argument in point #1 above: 42 months = 3 1/2 years = 1,260 days.

  3. Most interestingly, the three years and six months when there was an Elijah-implored drought upon Israel (Jam 5:17; Luk 4:25) corresponds exactly with the time period of the Elijah-like witnesses in Rev 11:3-6. This strongly suggests that the literality of 3 1/2 years can be used when estimating the actual duration being prophesied.

  4. Significantly, Daniel’s “seventy weeks prophecy” has a final “week” divided into two (Dan 9:27), the first half of which surely corresponds to the 3 1/2-year ministry of Jesus at his first coming. (The Hebrew for “weeks” here is not necessarily restricted to “weeks” of 7 literal days; rather, it simply means “sevens”!) The second half-“week” readily aligns with the other 3 1/2-year periods in Daniel and Revelation, which demonstrably end with the return of Christ (cp Dan 7:21-27; Rev 11:2,3,15-18). Since a literal 3 1/2 years was used in the first half of the “week”, it would be consistent to deduce a literal 3 1/2 years in the second half.

  5. Although not explicitly mentioned in Daniel, the 1,260 days is inherent in the 1,290 days and 1,335 days of Dan 12:11,12 and is effectively referred to by the 3 1/2 times of Dan 12:7. The 1,290 = 1,260 plus 30, where the extra 30 days probably reflects the “intercalary” month the Jews inserted in their calendar (a sort of “leap-month” added 7 out of every 19 years, or approximately once every three years) in order to keep the planting of crops in line with the actual seasons.

  6. Rev 11:2 says, “…and they [the nations] shall trample over the holy city for forty-two months.” Dan 8:13 asks, “For how long is the vision concerning… the giving over of the sanctuary and host to be trampled under foot?” So when Jesus is predicting the overthrow of Jerusalem, it is not surprising to see him using the same terminology: “They [the Jews] will fall by the edge of the sword, and be led captive among all nations; and Jerusalem will be trodden down by the Gentiles, until the times of the Gentiles are fulfilled” (Luk 21:24).

  7. In the Olivet prophecy, Jesus was predicting a first-century fulfillment. In Rev, Jesus reinforced that prediction, for he spoke about “what must soon take place”, and he said that “the time is near” (Rev 1:1,3; 22:6). But Jesus also said: “Behold, I am coming soon” (Rev 22:7,12,20). Since his personal return to earth is still future, these words of Rev are describing a Last Days scenario. So one fulfillment of these prophecies is past, and we can read about it in the history books. The next fulfillment is upon us, and we can read about it in our Bibles.

36 stress reducers

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  1. Pray
  2. Go to bed on time.
  3. Get up on time so you can start the day unrushed.

  4. Say No to projects that won’t fit into your time schedule or that will compromise your mental health.

  5. Delegate tasks to capable others.

  6. Simplify and unclutter your life.
  7. Less is more. (Although one is often not enough, two are often too many.)

  8. Allow extra time to do things and to get to places.

  9. Pace yourself. Spread out big changes and difficult projects over time; don’t lump the hard things all together.

  10. Take one day at a time.

  11. Separate worries from concerns. If a situation is a concern, find out what God would have you to do and let goof the anxiety. If you can’t do anything about a situation, forget it.

  12. Live within your budget; don’t use credit cards for ordinary purchases.

  13. Have backups; an extra car key in your wallet, an extra house key buried in the garden, extra stamps, etc.

  14. K.M.S. (Keep Mouth Shut.) This single piece of advice can prevent an enormous amount of trouble.

  15. Do something for the Kid in You everyday.
  16. Carry a Bible with you to read while waiting in line.

  17. Get enough exercise.
  18. Eat right.

  19. Get organized so everything has its place.
  20. Listen to a tape while driving that can help improve your quality of life.

  21. Write thoughts and inspirations down.

  22. Everyday, find time to be alone.
  23. Having problems? Talk to God on the spot. Try to nip small problems in the bud. Don’t wait until its time to go to bed to try and pray.

  24. Make friends with godly people.

  25. Keep a folder of favorite scriptures on hand.
  26. Remember that the shortest bridge between despair and hope is often a good “Thank you, Dear Lord!”

  27. Laugh.
  28. Laugh some more!
  29. Take your work seriously, but yourself, not at all.

  30. Develop a forgiving attitude (most people are doing the best they can).

  31. Be kind to unkind people (they probably need it the most).

  32. Sit on your ego.
  33. Talk less; listen more.
  34. Slow down.

  35. Remind yourself that you are not the general manager of the universe. The one in control, He is IN control!

  36. Every night before bed, think of one thing you’re grateful for that you’ve never been grateful for before.

360-day year

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The proposition is that there was, at one time, a literal, 360-day year. It was not an artifact of an ancient calendar nor was it an approximate number. This ancient year differed from our present year by 5 1/4 days. It is known that our present year has not changed its present length by more than a few seconds since at least 600 BC.

The importance is that there is no known, physical way that the year can change from 360 days to 365 1/4 days. If it is true it proves that there was a supernatural intervention to bring it about. The consequences of this are self-evident.

Ancient civilizations speak and write of a 360-day year: (1) in India, texts of the Veda period. Brahmanic literature has the moon crescent for 15 days and waning for 15 days, and the sun moving north for 180 days and then south for 180 days (measured against a fixed point, like a mountain peak). [In a later period, c 700 BC, the Hindu calendar was reformed to a 365 1/4-day year.] (2) In Assyria, the ancient year also consisted of 360 days. A decade of years consisted of exactly 3,600 days. Assyrian months were 30 days each, counting from crescent to crescent. (3) Ancient Persia also had 360 days to a year, with 12 months of 30 days. The sacred Persian books record 180 days from winter solstice to summer solstice. (4) In ancient Babylon, a 360-day year — with 12 months of exactly 30 days each. The Babylonian numerical system was 6 and 60-based, the number we still use to divide the sky: 360 degrees in a circle. (5) Ancient Egypt, and (6) ancient Rome, likewise.

Likewise, too, the ancient (7) Mayans, (8) Mexicans, (9) Peruvians, and (10) Chinese.

Scholars who investigated the calendars of the Incas of Peru and the Mayas of Yucatan wondered at the calendar of 360 days; so did the scholars who investigated other ancient calendars. Most of them, while investigating the problem in their own fields of study, did not suspect that the same problem occurred in other ancient cultures. Two matters appeared perplexing: a mistake of 5 1/4 days in a year could certainly be traced, over a relatively short term of years. The second perplexity concerns the length of the month.

“One may assume that the ancestors of Israel and the early Israelites themselves followed some sort of calendar (or calendars), but the extant sources do not permit one to determine what its (their) nature may have been. No part of the Bible or even the Bible as a whole presents a full calendar; information about these matters must be gleaned from occasional, often incidental references to dates, days, months, seasons, and years. The largest amount of biblical calendrical data appears in documents that were written during the exilic or postexilic periods, while an explicit, complete calendar is not found in a Jewish text until approximately the 3d century BC” (ABD).

Biblical evidence for 360-day year: (1) Gen 7:11,24; 8:3,4: in the days of Noah, 150 days = EXACTLY 150 days! (2) the 3 1/2 times/years, 42 months, and 1,260 days of Dan 12:7; Rev 11:2,3,15; 12:6,14; 13:5.

Was there an extraordinary event in about the time of Hezekiah, in which the earth changed its orbit relative to the earth, and the duration of a complete cycle changed from 360-day year to a 365 1/4-day year?

(Adapted from an unpublished paper by Dale Wong)

3Jo, overview

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Author: John

Time: AD 85 – 95

Summary: John had sent brothers with letters to one of the churches but a leader, Diotrephes, refused to accept the brothers or the letter they carried. The letter commends Gaius for welcoming these brothers and also warns Diotrephes.

Outline

1. Greetings to Gaius: 3Jo 1:1-8
2. Criticism of Diotrephes: 3Jo 1:9-11
3. Praise of Demetrius: 3Jo 1:12
4. Conclusion: 3Jo 1:13,14

666

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Who or what is intended by the 666?

Some modern translators read “666”. However, the KJV, as does the Greek text, reads “six hundred (600) threescore (60) and six (6)”. In other words, three distinct divisions (600 + 60 + 6 = 666). The definite article is omitted before “man” in the Greek text, suggesting that this number is not exclusively of one particular man, but of fallible men in general.

Some commentators apply numbers to every letter of the Greek alphabet, then add up the numerical value of particular names, and try to discover what man’s name “adds up” to 666. (The technical name for this procedure is gematria.) The possibilities are endless, esp considering language variations, and various combinations of names (last name only, first and last, all three, titles, etc.). By this method many candidates have been put forth: Nero Caesar, Constantine, Napoleon, Martin Luther, the Pope of Rome, and — more recently — Mussolini, Stalin, Hitler, Kissinger, John F. Kennedy, and Ronald Reagan.

But is this the proper Biblical approach?

Bible prophecy students should recognize the value of relying on the OT when interpreting the NT. For example, reference to Daniel is key to interpreting the opening verses of Rev 13:

Bible passage Revelation 13 Daniel 7
The sea Rev 13:1 Dan 7:3,17
The beast Rev 13:1 Dan 7:3,17,23
The ten horns Rev 13:1 Dan 7:24
The seven heads Rev 13:1 Dan 7:4-7
The leopard, lion, and bear Rev 13:2 Dan 7:4-6

Given the reasonableness of this approach, why abandon it when attempting to decipher the 600, 60, and 6?

Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon, the first Gentile conqueror of Jerusalem (Dan 1:1), dreamed of a great image (Dan 2; Rev 13:14,15), which Daniel interpreted to be the Gentile oppressors of the nation of Israel. Nebuchadnezzar and the Babylonian Empire were the image’s head of gold (Dan 2:38). Nebuchadnezzar seems to have been so impressed with this magnificent image of the dream, headed by himself, that he had a replica of it erected; he then proceeded to command the subjects of his empire to worship it (Dan 3). Because of his fierce pride, and his refusal to acknowledge the One God, Nebuchadnezzar was later deprived of his reason and treated, by God, as a beast (Dan 4:16,32,33).

This great golden image, representing the Gentile “beast” and his successors, was “threescore cubits” tall and “six cubits” broad (Dan 3:1). Here are two of the three numbers allotted to the last Gentile oppressor of Israel, the beast/man of Revelation 13. Is this merely a coincidence?

Possibly, the gold with which Nebuchadnezzar constructed the great idol was the same gold that he had confiscated from the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem. Shortly before this time, his army had conquered the city, destroyed the Temple, and carried much gold back to Babylon, breaking it down for other uses (Dan 1:1,2; 2Ki 24:13; 2Ch 36:10).

Curiously, both the numbers 600 and 666 are also connected with this same Temple and its gold:

  • King David purchased the future site of the Temple, the threshingfloor of Araunah the Jebusite, for 600 shekels of gold (1Ch 21:25).

  • King Solomon, to whom God granted great wisdom (2Ch 1:10-12; cp Rev 13:18: “here is wisdom”!), received enormous tribute from his Gentile subjects, in one year “666 talents” of gold (1Ki 10:14), gold which would have found its way into the recently-constructed Temple.

The Temple connection

If the beasts of Rev 13 are those who trample down Jerusalem and Israel in the Last Days, then the “man” of Rev 13:18 will be the one who, like Nebuchadnezzar, defiles the Temple at Jerusalem! The numbers 600 and 60 and 6 — uncommon in the Bible as a whole, but common in Daniel and the history of the Temple and Nebuchadnezzar — suggest a great king, a great empire (“Babylon”, also prominent in Revelation), the wealth of Israel and its Temple misappropriated and diverted to abominable uses (possibly with some acquiescence by Jewish leaders?), and a great golden image of idolatry foisted upon Israel. History records a Greek king (Antiochus Epiphanes, in 168 BC) who set up the image and altar of Jupiter in the Jewish temple, and commanded its worship. Is it possible that history may repeat itself in the near future?

This latter-day Arab “Beast” will invade Jerusalem, exalt his “image” (representing Gentile supremacy over the Jews), and will establish his headquarters upon the same site where Solomon’s 666 talents of gold was kept — the Temple Mount! Various passages point in this direction:

“His armed forces will rise up to desecrate the temple fortress and will abolish the daily sacrifice. Then they will set up the abomination that causes desolation… At the time of the end… the king of the North… will invade the Beautiful Land… He will gain control of the treasures of gold and silver… He will pitch his royal tents between the seas at the beautiful holy mountain” (Dan 11:31,40-45).

“You [the king of Babylon: Isa 14:4] said in your heart, ‘I will ascend to heaven; I will raise my throne above the stars of God; I will sit enthroned on the mount of assembly, on the utmost heights of the sacred mountain. I will ascend above the tops of the clouds; I will make myself like the Most High’ ” (Isa 14:13,14).

“Blow the trumpet in Zion; sound the alarm on my holy hill. Let all who live in the land tremble, for the day of the LORD is coming. It is close at hand — a day of darkness and gloom, a day of clouds and blackness. Like dawn spreading across the mountains a large and mighty army comes, such as never was of old nor ever will be in ages to come” (Joel 2:1-3).

” ‘Hear the word of the Sovereign LORD. This is what the Sovereign LORD says: ‘… You [Ammon: Eze 25:1] said “Aha!” over my sanctuary when it was desecrated and over the land of Israel when it was laid waste and over the people of Judah when they went into exile’ ” (Eze 25:3; cp Eze 36:2,3).

“You [Edom: Oba 1:1] drank [in celebration of victory] on my holy hill [Zion: Oba 1:17]” (Oba 1:6).

“So when you see standing in the holy place ‘the abomination that causes desolation,’ spoken of through the prophet Daniel [Dan 9:27; 11:31; 12:11] — let the reader understand — then let those who are in Judea flee to the mountains” (Mat 24:15,16; cp Mar 13:14,15; Luk 21:20-24).

“That day [of Christ’s coming] will not come until… the man of lawlessness is revealed, the man doomed to destruction. He will oppose and will exalt himself over everything that is called God or is worshiped, so that he sets himself up in God’s temple, proclaiming himself to be God” (2Th 2:3,4).

Some of these passages are not the easiest to understand in all their details (if only because they point to events yet future). But in general terms they all present or supplement the same basic picture.

Further parallels: Daniel and Revelation

“I was given a reed like a measuring rod and was told, ‘Go and measure the temple of God and the altar, and count the worshipers there. But exclude the outer court; do not measure it, because it has been given to the Gentiles. They will trample on the holy city for 42 months. And I will give power to my two witnesses, and they will prophesy for 1,260 days, clothed in sackcloth’… Now when they have finished their testimony, the beast that comes up from the Abyss will attack them, and overpower and kill them. Their bodies will lie in the street of the great city, which is figuratively called Sodom and Egypt, where also their Lord was crucified [Jerusalem, obviously!]…” (Rev 11:1-3,7,8).

Just as there were those faithful Jews who protested the enforced worship of the first golden image of the beast Nebuchadnezzar, and faced martyrdom as a result (Dan 3), so in the Last Days there will be faithful witnesses who protest the “image” of the Beast defiling the holy Temple Mount. Unlike Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, they will actually be killed (Rev 11:7,8).

But it is the “Beast-Man” whose days — like those of his Babylonian counterpart — are numbered (cp Dan 5:26). His power will be limited to “a time, times and half a time” (Dan 12:7), equivalent to 42 months (Rev 11:2) or 1,260 days (Rev 11:3). At the end of this time, the abominating power will be destroyed, the faithful martyrs (of all ages) will be resurrected, and the Temple Mount will be restored to its glorious holy use by Christ and his saints in God’s Kingdom:

“Yet he will come to his end, and no one will help him…Michael, the great prince who protects your people, will arise… At that time your people — everyone whose name is found written in the book — will be delivered. Multitudes who sleep in the dust of the earth will awake… to everlasting life… Those who are wise [mg: who impart wisdom: cp Rev 13:18!] will shine like the brightness of the heavens” (Dan 11:45–12:3).

“I will crush the Assyrian [equivalent to “the king of Babylon”: Isa 14:4; see Lesson, Babylon = Assyria] in my land; on my mountains I will trample him down. His yoke will be taken from my people, and his burden removed from their shoulders” (Isa 14:25).

“The LORD will roar from Zion and thunder from Jerusalem; the earth and the sky will tremble. But the LORD will be a refuge for his people, a stronghold for the people of Israel. Then you will know that I, the LORD your God, dwell in Zion, my holy hill. Jerusalem will be holy; never again will foreigners invade her” (Joel 3:16,17).

“I will make a covenant of peace with them [Israel]; it will be an everlasting covenant. I will establish them and increase their numbers, and I will put my sanctuary among them forever. My dwelling place will be with them; I will be their God, and they will be my people. Then the nations will know that I the LORD make Israel holy, when my sanctuary is among them forever” (Eze 37:26-28).

“But on Mount Zion will be deliverance; it will be holy, and the house of Jacob will possess its inheritance” (Oba 1:17).

“At that time they will see the Son of Man coming [to Jerusalem and the Temple Mount] in a cloud with power and great glory. When these things begin to take place, stand up and lift up your heads, because your redemption is drawing near” (Luk 21:27,28; cp Mat 24:30; Mar 13:26).

“And then the lawless one will be revealed, whom the Lord Jesus will overthrow with the breath of his mouth and destroy by the splendor of his coming” (2Th 2:8).

“The seventh angel sounded his trumpet, and there were loud voices in heaven… ‘The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ, and he will reign for ever and ever’… The time has come for judging the dead, and for rewarding your servants the prophets and your saints and those who reverence your name, both small and great — and for destroying those who destroy the earth [or ‘the Land’]” (Rev 11:15,18).

And so the number of the man of sin — 666 — will give way to the number of the man of righteousness — the 144,000 on Mount Zion, who have the name of the Lamb and of his Father (in contrast to the name of the Beast: Rev 13:17) written on their foreheads (Rev 14:1)!

Addendum 1

Here is the simplest “explanation” of the 666: there are six Roman numerals that, taken in various combinations, account for all the smaller numbers. They are I (= 1), V (= 5), X (= 10), L (= 50), C (= 100), and D (= 500), Thus the SIX common Roman numerals have a total value of 600 (500 + 100), 60 (50 + 10), and 6 (5 + 1). These are all the numerals involved in the Roman system, at the lower level, until the number 1,000 is reached (which is denoted by “M” — for “mille”, or thousand). This is itself is significant: the lesser numbers, in all their possible combinations, represent all men, or all mankind (Roman, at least!) — until we come to the “M” (the SEVENTH numeral) — which, obviously, represents the Millennium! When the Millennium begins, all the numbers of “man” (totaling 666) will cease!

Addendum 2

A further possibility, to supplement, not to replace the above: The number of the Beast is the number of MAN. Not necessarily a (single) man, nor a (special, unique) man, but the number of man in general. Six may be the number of man, since man was created on the sixth day, and since six falls one short of seven, the Scriptural number of perfection. Consider, for example, the multiple uses of six in describing Goliath, in 1Sa 17. (Is it a coincidence that this blasphemous brute of a man was a Philistine, or Palestinian?)

As such, 666 makes a triple emphasis on this falling short of perfection, whereas the gematria of JESUS (in Greek) yields 888, which puts triple emphasis on the fact that he is risen from the dead on the eighth day, a new Beginning, the Firstborn of God’s New Creation.

One other suggestion along these lines: 666 is written, in Greek, as c x ?. This is c ? (which is in New Testament manuscripts the standard abbreviation for Christ, or Messiah) plus x (the symbol of the serpent). In other words, c x ? could signify “the Serpent’s Messiah”, or the false Christ!

Addendum 3

Suppose that the Beast/Man is a composite/culmination of all those who have trampled Jerusalem under their feet (cp Rev 11:2). Then there may be merit in the following point:

The total years from the first subjugation of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar — March 16, 597 BC — to the beginning of the final siege of Jerusalem by the Roman Empire — early April AD 70 — is almost exactly 666 years! 597 plus 70 less 1 (there is no year “zero”!) = 666!

70 years captivity

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” ‘This whole country will become a desolate wasteland, and these nations will serve the king of Babylon seventy years. But when the seventy years are fulfilled, I will punish the king of Babylon and his nation, the land of the Babylonians, for their guilt,’ declares the LORD, ‘and will make it desolate forever’ ” (Jer 25:11,12).

“This is what the LORD says: ‘When seventy years are completed for Babylon, I will come to you and fulfill my gracious promise to bring you back to this place’ ” (Jer 29:10).

“The land enjoyed its sabbath rests; all the time of its desolation it rested, until the seventy years were completed in fulfillment of the word of the LORD spoken by Jeremiah. In the first year of Cyrus king of Persia, in order to fulfill the word of the LORD spoken by Jeremiah, the LORD moved the heart of Cyrus king of Persia to make a proclamation throughout his realm and to put it in writing” (2Ch 36:21,22).

21 suggestions for success

ChristadelphianBooksOnline The Agora Bible Articles and Lessons: 1-9

  1. Marry the right person. This one decision will determine 90% of your happiness or misery. If the right person isn’t available, under no circumstances marry someone else.

  2. Work at something you enjoy and that is worthy of your time and talent.

  3. Give people more than they expect, and do it cheerfully.

  4. Become the most positive and enthusiastic person you know.

  5. Be forgiving of others, and of yourself.
  6. Be generous.
  7. Have a grateful heart.

  8. Persistence, persistence, persistence.
  9. Discipline yourself to save money on even the most modest salary.

  10. Treat everyone you meet like you want to be treated.

  11. Commit yourself to constant improvement.

  12. Commit yourself to quality.
  13. Understand that happiness is not based on possessions, power, or prestige, but on relationships with people you love and respect.

  14. Be loyal.
  15. Be honest.
  16. Be a self-starter.
  17. Be decisive even if it means you will sometimes be wrong.

  18. Stop blaming others. Take responsibility for every area of your life.

  19. Be bold and courageous. When you look back on your life, you will regret the things you didn’t do more than the ones you did.

  20. Take good care of those you love.
  21. Don’t do anything that wouldn’t make your mother proud.

22 OT books?

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Our English versions of the Hebrew Scriptures (the Old Testament) contain 39 books, while the Hebrew Scriptures themselves contain 24. Josephus mentions 22, combining Ruth with Judges and Lamentations with Jeremiah. This was done to correspond with the 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet.

The Jews did not divide the writings in the same manner as today’s translators divide them. For example: The minor prophets are grouped together as the “Twelve”; Ezra and Nehemiah are taken together; Samuel, Kings and Chronicles are each one book rather than two. These 24 (or 39) books constitute the “Canon” of the Old Testament. The word “canon” is Greek and means a straight rod, rule or measure; or, that which is measured by the “canon”. The canon of the Old Testament as we have it today was set in the time of Josephus; by his time (circa 90 AD) the Apocryphal books, which had found their way into the Septuagint, had been rejected. The Old Testament in the days of Josephus was recognized as of ancient authority and divinely inspired.

2Co, overview

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Author: Paul

Time: AD 55

Summary: This second letter to the church at Corinth was written after Paul had made a “painful” and unsuccessful visit to the small church in an attempt to give instruction and guidance on several divisive issues. Upon learning that a majority of members had repented, he wrote to them the second time. The letter gives encouragement, yet teaches of the suffering that each member must face for the Lord Jesus’ sake. He concludes by stating when he is weakest, then God is able to work through him most powerfully. This letter was, in all likelihood, written about six months after the first letter to the Corinthians.

Key verse: “We are therefore Christ’s ambassadors, as though God were making his appeal through us. We implore you on Christ’s behalf: Be reconciled to God” (2Co 5:20).

Outline

1. Greeting and thanksgiving: 2Co 1:1-11
2. Paul’s explanation of his conduct and ministry: 2Co 1:12 – 7:16
a) His motives: 2Co 1:12-2:4
b) Forgiving the offender at Corinth: 2Co 2:5-11
c) God’s direction in his ministry: 2Co 2:12-17
d) The Corinthian believers: a letter from Christ: 2Co 3:1-11
e) Seeing the glory of God: 2Co 3:12-4:6
f) Treasure in clay jars: 2Co 4:7-16a
g) The prospect of death for a Christian: 2Co 4:16b-5:10
h) The ministry of reconciliation: 2Co 5:11 – 6:10
i) A spiritual father’s appeal to his children: 2Co 6:11 – 7:4
j) The meeting with Titus: 2Co 7:5-16
3. The collection for the Christians at Jerusalem: 2Co 8-9
a) Generosity encouraged: 2Co 8:1-15
b) Titus and his companions sent to Corinth: 2Co 8:16-9:5
c) Results of generous giving: 2Co 9:6-15
4. Paul’s vindication of his apostolic authority: 2Co 10-13
a) Paul’s defence of his authority: 2Co 10
b) Paul forced into foolish boasting: 2Co 11 – 12
5. Final warnings and conclusion: 2Co 13
a) Final warnings: 2Co 13:1-10
b) Conclusion: 2Co 13:11-14