Anonymous ID: f28787 Dec. 21, 2017, 7:32 p.m. No.144643   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4654 >>4837 >>4866 >>4956

God alone is our Savior! He always has been and always will be. No Jesus is required. To believe that anything or anyone but God is our Savior is idolatry, as it projects the providence of God onto something else.

 

See the following verses:

 

Exodus 34:6-7

Numbers 23:19

Deuteronomy 33:29

 

<The 5 big problems with Christianity:

 

<1. Believing in Jesus as god.

This is idolatry, and essentially blasphemous. No way around that. See Numbers 23:19 and study the 1st and 2nd commandments. We are made in God's likeness and figurative 'image', as a self-conscious being with individuality and free will; however, God has no form, for He was before all Creation. When God said, “let 'us' make man in 'our' image,” he was talking with the angels (created before man) who do have a semblance.

 

<2. Believing that Jesus' sacrifice is necessary for our forgiveness from God.

God already said Himself that He is the forgiver of iniquity, rebellion, and sin. See Exodus 34:6-7. He taught us His penalties for breaking the laws, and prescribed animal offerings for guilt or sin as a ritual of repentance. He also gave us The Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur) as a yearly fast and holy day to repent and ask for atonement, and He empowered the high priest to intercede on behalf of the whole people.

 

<3. Believing that the Torah's laws are nullified.

It was made clear that the Torah was an everlasting Covenant (Genesis 17:19). It says in Deuteronomy 4:2 to neither add nor subtract from it. Even if we take Jesus' words according to the NT, he said, “Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfill.” So why would any follower of Jesus (or follower of God) not seek to fulfill the laws of the Torah, which is an everlasting Covenant?

 

<4. Believing that Jesus was the Messiah.

The Messiah relates to Israel, and that figure must fulfill certain conditions. Such as being a descendant of king David, ushering in the final redemption of Israel, including the total destruction of all our enemies (i.e. the war against Amalek – Exodus 17:16), the gathering in of all the lost and exiled Children of Israel from the diaspora back to their land, and the establishing of God's kingdom of Israel on Earth through the throne of king David. This can only be done by someone who is alive, and Jesus is not. Even though his spirit/soul may live on, he cannot fulfill these conditions. God also forbids us from talking to the dead (Deuteronomy 18:10-11).

 

<5. Believing in a virgin birth.

The concept of a “virgin birth” is foreign to the Hebrew Bible. It is a pagan ideology. Isaiah 7:14 is a misunderstood verse to justify the “virgin birth prophecy.” It was referring to a sign that would be given to king Ahaz in his time, of a young woman (mistranslated as virgin – 'almah' does not mean 'betulah') who could not conceive but would miraculously give birth, so that king Ahaz would be reassured that God would be with him. There are several instances in the Hebrew Bible of miracle births by women who could not conceive, but none of a “virgin birth.” Furthermore, even if it were hypothetically true that Jesus was “born of a virgin” and therefore not Joseph's biological son, he would not be a descendant of David because tribal identity is paternal.

 

<Conclusion:

Christians have been deceived by Rome who created a false religion. Jesus did not come to start a new religion, he came to embody the teachings of the Torah and rebuke the hypocrites. God may have used him to do miracles, and perhaps he was a prophet, but he was not the Messiah. It was Paul and the Romans who fabricated Christianity (ex: Council of Nicaea) and injected it with occult paganism, such as the "man-god" concept, “virgin birth,” and a human blood sacrifice for sins. They created this false religion to usurp Israel, their religion, and to conquer the world. The good side is that it was a much less malevolent form of idolatry than the former paganism of the Roman Empire. If Christianity had not been created, History may have been much darker, and billions of Christians today would not have had access to the Torah/Hebrew Bible (which Rome had stolen and rebranded as the “Old Testament”).

 

I implore all Christians to consider these facts, and to wake up and smell the Torah! Come back to God and His true religion! Many Christians are actually those of the lost tribes of Israel fulfilling the curse (mentioned in Deuteronomy) of worshiping false gods in the nations where they (the lost tribes of Israel)will be scattered.

 

Praise the Eternal Sovereign, our Holy Creator!

Anonymous ID: f28787 Dec. 21, 2017, 8:19 p.m. No.145124   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>144837

Yeshua is only "all over the Tanakh" according to mistranslations/misinterpretations twisted to support that idea.

 

Isaiah 53 is a allegory for Israel (God's servant) as a whole. Verse 10 contradicts it being Yeshua, because he didn't prolong his days nor saw children. Verse 12 can only make sense if talking about the whole of Israel, some of whom died for their sins as atonement, and some of whom lived through repentance and were rewarded.

 

My view is that Yeshua fulfilled an individual role in that process of Israel as a whole; however, he is not the messiah (as my previous post elucidates), nor does this chapter suggest that at all.