Sep
24
2009

“According to I Chronicles chapter 15, 16:4-6, 37-43, David rearranged the Levitical priesthood into 24 courses (orders); he assigned 16 courses to Eleazer, and 8 courses to Ithamar. This rearrangement was chartered because of a population explosion in David’s reign.” [1]
More evidence for a human government installed in heaven in AD70 (the firstfruits church). If the rebuilt Tabernacle (the Tabernacle of David [2]) prefigured both the restoration of the Jews after the captivity (which is what Amos is actually referring to) and the Jew-Gentile church, what could David’s rearranged priesthood mean typologically?
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: AD70, Against Hyperpreterism, Amos, Baptism, Bible Matrix, Feasts, Firstfruits, Jericho, New Jerusalem, Revelation, Tabernacle, Tabernacles | posted in Against Hyperpreterism, Biblical Theology, The Last Days, The Restoration Era, Totus Christus
Sep
22
2009
or Understanding Dominion by Covenant

The New Covenant is not about salvation. It is about dominion. Before you call in the inquisitors, have a look at this diagram from my book:

Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: AD70, Caleb, Covenant Theology, Dominion Theology, Feasts, Firstfruits, Gnosticism, Joshua, Judges, Moses, Passover, Postmillennialism, Ray Sutton, Revelation, Solomon | posted in Against Hyperpreterism, Biblical Theology, Christian Life, The Last Days, Totus Christus
Sep
19
2009
Revelation is laced with the Dominion pattern like brandy through a Christmas pudding. As a literary structure, its identification highlights some interesting things.
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: AD70, Bible Matrix, Feasts, Gehenna, Herod, Joke, Literary Structure, Revelation, Scavengers | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days, Totus Christus
Sep
18
2009
Excerpts from Peter Leithart’s new book, Deep Exegesis: The Mystery of Reading Scripture:
“My insight, if such it is, into the workings of humour was reinforced and generalised when I watched Shrek, a movie that I now tell my students is a gold mine of hermeneutical insight. All the funny parts of that film assume that the viewer has information the movie does not provide, information from three main sources: nursery rhymes, fairy tales, and popular culture, especially movies…”
Johannine Jokes
…How does all this apply to our reading of Scripture? Scripture has the same literary properties as the texts we have been examining. Just as Eliot read Dante who read Virgil who read Homer, so Matthew had read Jeremiah, who knew Kings (or wrote it), and the writer of Kings had read the Hexateuch. Let us look at some examples. Let me tell some biblical jokes, again taken from John 9.
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: Culture, Hermeneutics, John, Joke, Peter Leithart | posted in Biblical Theology, Quotes
Sep
18
2009
Comments Off | posted in Biblical Theology
Sep
17
2009

or The Hungry Eyes of Jesus
The content of this post has been revised and included in Bible Matrix II: The Covenant Key.
Comments Off | tags: Crucifixion, Greater Eve, Masculinity, Totus Christus | posted in Biblical Theology, Christian Life
Sep
16
2009

or Why Four Horsemen but Seven Seals?
“…the Egyptians are men, and not God; And their horses are flesh, and not spirit.” Isaiah 31:3
One of the three laws for Israelite kings was a command against multiplying horses and chariots—especially Egyptian ones. Solomon’s horse trading was, for a nation with a miraculous escape ON FOOT, in the eyes of the Lord, just like the faithless behaviour of the Hebrews in the wilderness. It’s always better to dwell in a tent with God than in a palace with the devil. Solomon’s kingdom of chariots and oppression became a new Egypt. By the end of the era, the pigs ruled the farm.
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: Chariots, David, Egypt, Four Horsemen, Isaiah, Lampstand, Psalms, Solomon, Zechariah | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days, The Restoration Era
Sep
14
2009

NOTE: THIS POST HAS BEEN REMIXED AND INCLUDED IN GOD’S KITCHEN.
Behind Closed Doors
“…who shut in the sea with doors, when it burst forth and issued from the womb?” Job 38:8
As with all good government, important kingdom decisions are carried out in private. This is pictured in many ways, not least in God’s design of our everyday lives.
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: AD70, Ezekiel, Herod, Prayer, Temple, Totus Christus | posted in Biblical Theology, Christian Life, The Last Days
Sep
11
2009
Comments Off | posted in Biblical Theology
Sep
10
2009

But the LORD said to Joshua, “Do not be afraid because of them, for tomorrow about this time I will deliver all of them slain before Israel. You shall hamstring their horses and burn their chariots with fire.” Joshua 11:6
‘Thus says the Lord GOD: “Are [you] he of whom I have spoken in former days by My servants the prophets of Israel, who prophesied for years in those days that I would bring you against them? Ezekiel 38:17
James Jordan’s correlation of Ezekiel 38-39 with the book of Esther makes a great deal of sense.[1] I have found it plays out in many ways, including the structure of the book of Ezekiel. None of the books of the Bible are thrown together haphazardly. They all follow strict literary conventions. The validity of this Esther interpretation is supported by the structure of the book of Ezekiel.
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: Esther, Ezekiel, Feasts, Haman, Joshua, Translation | posted in Biblical Theology, Quotes, The Restoration Era