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5/19/2025, 5:41:12 PM
>>95682687
Mainly the Old Testament to the end of the first four books of the New Testament; Matthew, Mark, Like, and John. I'm making a seven part series where I've divided the Old Testament into six books with the seventh being that of Jesus' ministry.
The first is Genesis with a large focus on creation (including the day of Rest), but also of sin, scattering, and the foundation.
The second is Exodus followed by the hardships the Israelites went through while wandering through the Sinai for forty years (Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and then Deuteronomy).
The third is based on the Book of Joshua where the Israelites have to fight to take the land promised to them by destroying seven nations there. It's a book to be read from a spiritual angle, that the Israelites should be careful not to do the things those seven nations are said to do. I also think that, maybe, that was where the Deadly Sins notion from the church was inspired by, but I may be wrong. The Girgashites for instance were those who go back from pilgrimages; never finishing them and returning to their houses of earth on earthen foundations. The Perizzites had no walls and were thus undisciplined and unrestricted. More darker and more political, the other word for Perizzites is Philistines, which in modern vernacular are Palestinians. I think that the megachurch "pastors" had been taught this way that the Palestinians are the enemy of Christians through the Scofield Reference Bible and their other blasphemous teachers, when the interpretation is that of a spiritual war to keep your walls high and sturdy so as to continue to live in the Lord. Also, Canaanites are there and they are obsessed with accruing the treasures of the earth to where they exchange the treasures of heaven for them. Joshua is fascinating.
1/?
Mainly the Old Testament to the end of the first four books of the New Testament; Matthew, Mark, Like, and John. I'm making a seven part series where I've divided the Old Testament into six books with the seventh being that of Jesus' ministry.
The first is Genesis with a large focus on creation (including the day of Rest), but also of sin, scattering, and the foundation.
The second is Exodus followed by the hardships the Israelites went through while wandering through the Sinai for forty years (Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and then Deuteronomy).
The third is based on the Book of Joshua where the Israelites have to fight to take the land promised to them by destroying seven nations there. It's a book to be read from a spiritual angle, that the Israelites should be careful not to do the things those seven nations are said to do. I also think that, maybe, that was where the Deadly Sins notion from the church was inspired by, but I may be wrong. The Girgashites for instance were those who go back from pilgrimages; never finishing them and returning to their houses of earth on earthen foundations. The Perizzites had no walls and were thus undisciplined and unrestricted. More darker and more political, the other word for Perizzites is Philistines, which in modern vernacular are Palestinians. I think that the megachurch "pastors" had been taught this way that the Palestinians are the enemy of Christians through the Scofield Reference Bible and their other blasphemous teachers, when the interpretation is that of a spiritual war to keep your walls high and sturdy so as to continue to live in the Lord. Also, Canaanites are there and they are obsessed with accruing the treasures of the earth to where they exchange the treasures of heaven for them. Joshua is fascinating.
1/?
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