An Ear To Hear GOD

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An Ear To Hear GOD: February 2025

John 14: 4-9

John 14: 4-9

Jn 14:4And where I am going you know the way. Jn 14:5Thomas said to Him, Lord, we do not know where You are going; how can we know the way? Jn 14:6Jesus said to him, I am the way and the reality and the life; no one comes to the Father except through Me. Jn 14:7If you had known Me, you would have known My Father also; and henceforth you know Him and have seen Him. Jn 14:8Philip said to Him, Lord, show us the Father and it is sufficient for us. Jn 14:9Jesus said to him, Have I been so long a time with you, and you have not known Me, Philip? He who has seen Me has seen the Father; how is it that you say, Show us the Father?


 

The book of ROMANS audio bible

 Book of ROMANS = audio 

The book of Proverbs audio bible

 Book of PROVERBS = audio 

Do not be deceived, God is not mocked; for whatever a man sows, that he will also reap.

Followers

Thursday, February 20, 2025

Dead Sea Scrolls: What are They?

Dead Sea Scrolls: What are They?

Dead Sea Scrolls


Dead Sea Scrolls: What are They?
The Dead Sea Scrolls have been called the greatest manuscript discovery of modern times. They were discovered between 1947 and 1956 in eleven caves along the northwest shore of the Dead Sea. This is an arid region 13 miles east of Jerusalem and 1,300 feet below sea level. The Dead Sea Scrolls are comprised of the remains of approximately 825 to 870 separate scrolls, represented by tens of thousands of fragments. The texts are most commonly made of animal skins, but also papyrus and one of copper. They are written with a carbon-based ink, from right to left, using no punctuation except for an occasional paragraph indentation.


Dead Sea Scrolls: Why are they Important?
The Dead Sea Scrolls can be divided into two categories—biblical and non-biblical. Fragments of every book of the Old Testament (Hebrew canon) have been discovered, except for the book of Esther. Now identified among the scrolls are 19 fragments of Isaiah, 25 fragments of Deuteronomy and 30 fragments of the Psalms. The virtually intact Isaiah Scroll, which contains some of the most dramatic Messianic prophecy, is 1,000 years older than any previously known copy of Isaiah.

In addition to the biblical manuscripts, there are commentaries on the Hebrew canon, paraphrases that expand on the Torah, community standards and regulations, rules of war, non-canonical psalms, hymnals and sermons. Most of the texts are written in Hebrew and Aramaic, with a few in Greek.


The Dead Sea Scrolls appear to be the library of a Jewish sect, considered most likely the Essenes. Near the caves are the ancient ruins of Qumran, a village excavated in the early 1950’s that shows connections to both the Essenes and the scrolls. The Essenes were strictly observant Jewish scribes, who appear Messianic and apocalyptic in thinking. The library appears to have been hidden away in caves around the outbreak of the First Jewish Revolt (66-70 A.D.) as the Roman army advanced against the Jews.

Based on various dating methods, including carbon 14, paleographic and scribal, the Dead Sea Scrolls were written during the period from about 200 B.C. to 68 A.D. Many crucial biblical manuscripts (such as Psalm 22, Isaiah 53 and Isaiah 61) date to at least 100 B.C. As such, the Dead Sea Scrolls have revolutionized textual criticism of the Old Testament. Phenomenally, we find the biblical texts in substantial agreement with the Masoretic text, as well as variant translations of the Old Testament used today.


Dead Sea Scrolls: Dramatic Evidence for the Reliability of Messianic Prophecy
The Dead Sea Scrolls comprise the oldest group of Old Testament manuscripts ever found, dating back to 100--200 B.C. This is dramatic, because we now have absolute evidence that Messianic prophecies contained in today’s Old Testament (both Jewish and Christian) are the same Messianic prophecies that existed prior to the time Jesus walked on this earth. It goes without saying, manuscript reliability and textual criticism have taken cosmic steps forward! Check it out – There is no question that Jesus Christ was the Messiah that the Jews were waiting for!


Read Dead Sea Scrolls Page 2 Now!

Monday, February 3, 2025

Wes Huff and Mike Winger

Feb 2, 2025

Saturday, February 1, 2025

About the Bible: What Is the Holy Spirit? How the Third Person of the Trinity Illuminates Christ.

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About the Bible: What Is the Holy Spirit?

 How the Third Person of the Trinity Illuminates Christ

👆 - read more here ☝

Have you ever felt next to nothing in your faith? It’s not uncommon to feel despair and resignation in your relationship with God. I felt that deeply during my early adult years. The book of Psalms especially records emotions of God’s people feeling abandoned, left alone by God, full of restless anxiety.

If we live in the experience of feeling nothing from God for too long, however, we risk letting our lives slide into quiet desperation. We might become hypocrites talking about our love for God when we don’t experience it; or we might walk away altogether, saying this Christian thing doesn’t work, it’s all pretend

So where do we go for help? The Holy Spirit. Very simply, what we want and need is personal, relational comfort from God, and the Holy Spirit is the Comforter (John 14:26).

Specifically, we need to meet the Holy Spirit in the Bible. Because the more we understand about the relationship between the Holy Spirit and Scripture, the more we can become like the child in Psalm 131: filled, confident, resting contentedly in our experienced relationship with God.

Our topic then is the Bible, the Holy Spirit, and our personal relationship with Christ — a triad, which has also been called a “three-fold encounter.”

What Is the Bible?

The first part of the triad is the Bible. We’ll do this briefly.

Very simply, the Bible is God’s Word. It’s God’s communication to us. It has authority because God has authority. It’s God’s revelation of who He is and what He’s done, is doing, and will do — it’s the story of creation, the Fall, of redemption in Christ, the church, and of the coming New Creation.

In other words, the Bible is about the Gospel, the true story of Christ, and it points to Christ (John 5:39). “Ignorance of Scripture is ignorance of Christ.”

What — or Who — Is the Holy Spirit?

The second part of the triad is the Holy Spirit. The first point I want to make about the Holy Spirit is that the Holy Spirit is God, the third person of the Trinity.

The Holy Spirit Is God

In the Bible the Holy Spirit is described as God’s Spirit, as Christ’s Spirit (Romans 8:9). The Holy Spirit is fully God, worthy of praise Himself, but His primary responsibility in the Trinity is to point to Christ so that Christ gets our attention and glory.

The Holy Spirit shines a spotlight on Christ so we can be awestruck by Jesus, so we come to know, love, and follow Him.

Picture a large auditorium that is completely dark. In the back, up top, there’s a world class musician, and he’s pointing a spotlight down on his favorite world class musician on stage. The musician in the back is excited for everyone in the auditorium to meet, hear, and be blown away by the musician on the stage. That’s what the Holy Spirit wants to do for Christ, to shine the spotlight on Him (John 16:13-14). It gives Him the deepest joy to help us to see and hear Jesus.

The Holy Spirit Inspired Scripture

The second point about the Holy Spirit is that the Holy Spirit inspired Scripture. “Inspired” comes from the Latin word inspirare, which literally means “breathe into.” The Holy Spirit breathed life into the Scriptures (2 Timothy 3:16).

The Holy Spirit is the source of the Bible. If we ignore the Bible, we’re ignoring the work of the Holy Spirit, and since the Holy Spirit is God, we’d be ignoring God. Scripture is an intentional communication from one Living Person (God) to another (you and me).

This is a parallel to God breathing His life into human beings in Genesis. In Genesis 2:7 Adam became a living being when God breathed into his nostrils. The Holy Spirit, God, has also breathed His life into the Scriptures. The Bible, in some amazing sense, is a living book (Hebrews 4:12).

To tell you the truth I don’t fully understand the idea of a book being alive, but I’ve experienced it. I hope you’ve experienced this too — the Holy Spirit using the words of the Bible to speak directly to your soul so that you knew it was God speaking to you. Maybe helping you catch glimpses of God’s holiness, power, or lovingkindness. Maybe convicting you of your sins and then comforting you after you’ve confessed them. Those are very real Holy Spirit experiences, and they remind us that God is active in our lives.

When you come to God’s inspired Word, in a very real way you’re coming to God. It’s an amazing biblical truth that we have access to God, through Jesus, by the Holy Spirit, through the words of the Bible.


What the Bible says about Reconcilation with Brother

  What the Bible says about Reconcilation with Brother ( From   Forerunner Commentary ) Isaiah 1:4 The prophet Isaiah is saying the same thi...