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7/9/2025, 3:20:18 AM
>>509871244
It isn't Odin they're scared of.
It isn't Odin they're scared of.
7/9/2025, 12:31:29 AM
>>509857158
Any denomination is fine. They have differences in dogma and culture, but are all Christian.
The important thing is to find a church that you are comfortable with. It should have a warm and inviting group of people.
And look for covenant theology, not dispensationalism.
The Scofield Bible teaches dispensationalism which supports Jews.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dispensationalism
>The Terrible Error of the Scofield Bible
>The Scofield teaching is concerned with a literal Jewish kingdom to last for a millennium. It was first brought into the early church by some Jews who still could not give up the hope taught to them by the scribes and Pharisees. The Bible does not teach it, and the disciples who had been taught it, rejected it after Pentecost. Jesus warned about it in Matthew 16:6-12. Scofield’s work was calculated to promote certain ideas. We must ask ourselves if Jesus ever offered or announced himself as an earthly King or claimed David’s throne? Had he ever in any way suggested he was going to set up an earthly kingdom? He said to Pilate, “My kingdom is not of this world, if my kingdom were of this world, then would my servants fight, that I should not be delivered to the Jews, but now is my kingdom not from hence (John 18:36). They could not prove him guilty before Pilate of any offense against Rome.
https://fgcp.org/terrible-error-scofield-bible
https://christianobserver.net/the-scofield-bible-its-powerful-effect-on-modern-christianity/
The correct framework is Covenant theology, which teaches that God’s covenant is with the Christian Church and not the Jewish race. Most Protestants follow Covenant theology.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Covenant_theology
Any denomination is fine. They have differences in dogma and culture, but are all Christian.
The important thing is to find a church that you are comfortable with. It should have a warm and inviting group of people.
And look for covenant theology, not dispensationalism.
The Scofield Bible teaches dispensationalism which supports Jews.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dispensationalism
>The Terrible Error of the Scofield Bible
>The Scofield teaching is concerned with a literal Jewish kingdom to last for a millennium. It was first brought into the early church by some Jews who still could not give up the hope taught to them by the scribes and Pharisees. The Bible does not teach it, and the disciples who had been taught it, rejected it after Pentecost. Jesus warned about it in Matthew 16:6-12. Scofield’s work was calculated to promote certain ideas. We must ask ourselves if Jesus ever offered or announced himself as an earthly King or claimed David’s throne? Had he ever in any way suggested he was going to set up an earthly kingdom? He said to Pilate, “My kingdom is not of this world, if my kingdom were of this world, then would my servants fight, that I should not be delivered to the Jews, but now is my kingdom not from hence (John 18:36). They could not prove him guilty before Pilate of any offense against Rome.
https://fgcp.org/terrible-error-scofield-bible
https://christianobserver.net/the-scofield-bible-its-powerful-effect-on-modern-christianity/
The correct framework is Covenant theology, which teaches that God’s covenant is with the Christian Church and not the Jewish race. Most Protestants follow Covenant theology.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Covenant_theology
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