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BibArch�
is a website concerned with biblical archaeology, since it enables people to
have a deeper and fuller understanding of the Hebrew Scriptures and the New
Testament and their relevance in the present-day world, and whose editors and
publisher hold to the following Christian doctrinal precepts:
God
The living God is
one, wherein the Father, Son and Holy Spirit exist in Unity, and there is no
other.
-
God is one (Deuteronomy
6:4,
I Corinthians
8:6).
-
The Father, Son and Holy Spirit exist in Unity (Matthew
28:19).
Jesus of Nazareth is the Son of God, the only begotten of the
Father, engendered in the human flesh of the virgin Mary through the power of the
Holy Spirit (Matthew
1:18-25;
16:16;
Luke 1:34-35;
John 1:14,
3:16).
-
Jesus of Nazareth is the Christ, or Messiah, sent from God to be the
savior and redeemer of humanity (John 1:29;
3:15-17;
Acts 4:12).
He is the only mediator between God and Man (I
Timothy 2:5).
-
Jesus Christ, truly God and truly man, is God incarnate
in whom the divine and human natures are perfectly and inseparably united.
-
Before his human birth, Jesus existed eternally with God and as
God (John 1:1-2,
1:14;
II Peter 1:1;
Revelation 1:8).
-
Jesus is the eternal Word, through whom and for whom God
created all things (John 1:1,
1:14;
Colossians 1:15-17). God created everything in the universe by and through Jesus
Christ (Colossians 1:16;
John 1:3).
God raised Jesus from the
dead (Romans 6:4;
Revelation
1:18).
God has given him a name which is above every name (Philippians 2:9-11).
Eternal salvation is only through Jesus' death on the cross
and "there is salvation in no one else; for there is no other name under
heaven that has been given among men, by which we must be saved" (Acts 4:12
NASB).
-
Salvation and life eternal is the gift of God, by God's grace,
only through faith in Jesus Christ (Galatians 2:16;
3:26;
Ephesians
2:8).
The Bible
The Bible,
consisting of the Hebrew Scriptures and the New Testament, alone and the
Bible in its entirety is the Word of God written and therefore inerrant in
the autographs.
-
The Bible, the only infallible rule
of faith and practice, is the inspired Word of God (II
Timothy 3:16).
The task of selecting writings
for inclusion in the New Testament as an apostolic compendium of Christian
Scripture was not left to chance, custom, or tradition, but to the apostles
themselves. This duty did not rest with Judeo-Christians of later generations
nor with Gentile Christian groups not in their fellowship (II
Peter 1:15;
3:15).
-
The New Testament serves to protect
the people of God by ensuring that future generations have an accurate
account of "The Way" (Hebrews
13:7;
II Peter 1:15;
John 14:6).
Humans
Humans, the only
beings created by God for salvation, are not animals but exist in the image
of God.
-
God, who created Adam in his own
image, formed Adam from the dust of the earth, and breathed into his
nostrils the breadth of life, and he became a living being (Genesis
1:27;
2:7).
-
The natural human mind with its
human nature is hostile toward God and it does not subject itself to the law
of God for it is not able to do so (Romans
8:7).
-
All humans have sinned and come short of the Glory of God
(Romans
3:23). All will remain in an
eternally lost condition, having no life eternal they will cease to exist, apart from the saving grace of the Jesus
Christ (Revelation
20:12-20).
-
The wages of sin is death, but the
free gift of God is eternal life
through Jesus Christ our Lord (Romans
6:23).
-
Salvation is by grace through faith,
and it is the gift of God, and not of works (Ephesians
2:8-9).
-
Faith without works is dead (James
2:26) which calls for all Christians to live lives of "faith working
through love" (Galatians
5:6).
-
Salvation or "being
saved" is not a one time event but a process that lasts a lifetime (Matthew
10:22;
24:12-13).
-
God's gift of eternal life is to
those who remain faithful to God to death. If a converted person truly falls away
it is impossible, even for God, to renew him or her again to repentance (Hebrews
6:4-7).
-
God loves his people and will do all
possible to help
them work out their salvation with fear and trembling (Philippians
2:12).
Reconciliation
The purpose of the incarnation of
the Son of God was that he might become the Mediator between God and humanity,
as a high priest, both fulfilling the divine law and dying in the place of
humankind. In this manner the whole sinful world became reconciled unto God.
Jesus made atonement for the whole human race
(Romans 5:8-11) and in him the whole sinful world became reconciled to
God (Galatians 4:4-5;
3:13).
-
This reconciliation is evident in
II Corinthians 5:18-21 where Paul not only says that God reconciled humanity to Himself through
Christ, but quite expressly states that God "made him [Christ] to be [a] sin
[offering] who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness
of God" (v. 20). This lies at the very heart of biblical reconciliation. To
become the righteousness of God speaks to the ultimate purpose of humans to
become the children of God.
-
It is God�s intent that all
humans come to the knowledge of the truth and to receive life eternal. "God so loved the world that
He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not
perish, but have everlasting life" (John
3:16). God fulfills His purpose through a step-by-step salvific plan
for bringing humanity to the full knowledge and stature of Jesus Christ. (Acts 4:12;
John
6:44;
17:2-8,
17:17-21;
Matthew 28:18-20;
Acts 1:7-8;
2:22-39;
3:17-26 and
Ephesians 4:11-15;
Romans 1:16;
5:8-10;
11:22-26;
II Peter 3:9;
I Timothy 2:4-6).
-
God�s purpose for each human being
is his or her becoming a member
of God�s divine kingdom. In that resurrection each individual shall be
spirit and possess and the attributes of Godly character and life
everlasting
(John 1:12-13;
Romans 8:14-19,
8:28-29;
I Corinthians 15:39-54;
Hebrews 2:5-10).
-
Jesus Christ lived without sin
setting us an example to live likewise (John 15:9-12;
I Peter 2:21-25;
I John 2:6;
Ephesians
5:1-2;
I Corinthians 11:1).
-
God performed the work of
reconciliation through Christ�s sin-bearing on the cross wherein Christ died for us
while we were yet sinners. Christians are justified by his blood (Romans
5:9 cf.
Ephesians 1:7,
2:13;
Hebrews 9:14). Through Christ human sins are imputed to Christ (Hebrews 9:28). By
this the alienation is set aside.
-
Justification and salvation are a
gift of God through faith in Christ�s blood (Romans 3:23-25;
5:1-2;
6:23).
They are not earned by our works (Romans 3:20-23;
Galatians 2:16;
Ephesians 2:8-10). Nevertheless, those who abide in Christ should live as
he lived (I John 2:3-6) as ambassadors of Christ. A form of self-deception
consists of seeking only grace and ignoring works.
-
During this age Christians are
called, justified, and perfected into the image of Jesus Christ, that is,
through the Christian life they acquire holy, righteous, impeccable
character (Romans 8:29-30).
-
God is not reconciled to the world
nor does God reconcile Himself with the world (II Corinthians 5:19). The world
must be reconciled with God. However, God loves us even while we are yet
sinners.
-
Nevertheless, God does not change
as His character is unchanging. God has no fellowship with sinners. God
remains unrelentingly opposed to sin but God does not abandon God's love for
sinners. Instead, as we receive this message and respond to it, we are
reconciled to God and become
ambassadors for Christ in bringing others to
reconciliation (II Corinthians 5:20).
Conversion
Entering the New Covenant, and
thereby becoming part of the Church of God, is not a matter of absolute free
choice, but each individual must encounter God in his or her own order
through a divine calling, repent, accept the sacrifice of Jesus Christ, and
receive the indwelling of the Spirit of God through the laying on of hands.
-
To become converted one has to
receive an invitation in the form of an irrevocable personal calling (Romans
11:29) directly from God the Father (John
6:44,
6:65).
-
If anyone does not have the
indwelling of Spirit of Christ, the Holy Spirit, then he or she is not a
converted Christian (Romans
8:9).
-
God's calling is a heavenly calling
(Hebrews 3:1
cf.
Romans 8:28,
Ephesians 4:1-6,
I Corinthians 1:2,
1:26,
II Thessalonians 1:11,
II Timothy 1:9,
Hebrews 3:11) of
setting apart (I
Thessalonians 4:7) for a holy purpose (II
Timothy 1:9).
-
Once an individual receives such a
calling, that person becomes capable of a repentance acceptable to God and
accountable for furthering his or her own relationship with God.
-
God
ordained both repentance and water baptism by complete immersion for all that believe (Matthew
3:13-15;
Romans 6:3-5;
Acts 2:37-39).
-
The newly baptized Christian receives
the Holy Spirit through the laying on of hands (Acts
8:17-19,
19:3-7, cf.
Acts 9:17-18,
I Timothy 4:14 and
II Timothy 1:6)
placing him or her into the body of Christ which is the Church of God (Colossians
1:18,
1:24,
2:17).
-
The indwelling of the Holy Spirit
in a person changes the very nature of that individual, through a process of
radical transformation of the human heart, and "converts" him or her into a
new creation whose life is one emanating God�s love, joy, peace, patience,
kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control (Galatians
5:22-23).
-
Those indwelled with the spirit of
God are not sinners but saints or holy ones (Romans
1:7;
8:27;
I Corinthians
1:2) in whom Christ lives (Galatians
2:20) whom God enables and expects to be his holy people all of the
time.
-
God's people are to live by every
word of God (Matthew
4:4) and to bring every thought captive to the obedience of Jesus
Christ" (II
Corinthians 10:5).
Covenants
The New Covenant is an all inclusive one,
wherein the people of God are not physical Israelites but spiritual Jews made
the heirs of the promises to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, with no dual, or double,
standard for Christians of Jewish or of Gentile descent.
-
The Sinaitic covenant with the
people of Israel ended
at the death of Jesus of Nazareth in order to establish a New Covenant (Hebrews
8:7,
8:8,
8:23;
9:10,
9:15;
10:9).
-
Any continuing relationship with the God of Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob, requires faith in Jesus Christ of Nazareth and not reliance on the
onetime covenant mediated through Moses (Galatians
2:16;
3:11).
The apostles James,
Peter, and John, held as did Paul that the Mosaic
Code did not apply to Christians of either Gentile or Jewish descent including its
ceremonial demands concerning food and circumcision (Galatians
2:9-10;
Acts
15:1,
15:5).
-
God chose a remnant taken from the
children of Israel by fleshly descent to begin the qehal'el,
the new Israel of God, which we know in the apostolic times as the Church of God
composed of Judeo-Christians (Romans
11:5-9,
11:17-20).
-
When
Gentiles become spiritual Israelites, grafted into the new Israel of
God, they become subject to the Law of Christ not the Law of Moses.
The promises to them are those of the new covenant people not the
people of the Sinaitic covenant for "it is not the children of the
flesh who are children of God, but the children of the promise are regarded as
descendants" (Romans
9:8).
-
The New Covenant consists of a unique agreement between God
and the individual Christian containing all the rights, duties, and obligations
of each party. The individual had to repent of sin (Acts
2:38), accept Jesus Christ as his or her Lord and Savior, and undergo ritual
baptism as a demonstration of repentance and acceptance of the atoning sacrifice
of Jesus of Nazareth on their behalf.
-
The new covenant is a unilateral one wherein the people of
God enter into it and perform their part until death, awaiting the promises as
did Abraham (Hebrews 11:10-13), to be fully executed beginning with the resurrection of the dead
in Christ.
The Law
God's
law, which is eternal but codified in different ways for different
times and circumstances, is the royal law, the law of Christ, and
the standard by which all humans shall receive eternal judgment.
The law given at Sinai, including
the Ten Commandments, was the law of God for Israel (Leviticus 26:46;
Deuteronomy 4:13), and it was the law of God for Israel until Christ
came (Galatians 3:19). It was not the law of God for all people, nor
the law of God for all time, nor the law of God for the people of
God today. It was for Israel, temporary in force until Christ died.
Transcended by the law of Christ it faded (II Corinthians 3:7-11).
The Torah, therefore, is now null and void as a
divinely sanctioned legal code for the people of God (II Corinthians 3:7-11;
Galatians 3:23-25;
4:24-31;
5:2-6;
John 1:17) but the Hebrew
Scriptures, inspired by God, are profitable for teaching, reproof, correction,
and training in righteousness (II
Timothy 3:16).
Early Judeo-Christianity,
understanding itself to be �a chosen people, a royal
priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God� (I
Peter 2:9), rejected not only the Oral Torah and all Jewish halakhic customs
but denied that the Church
of God, as the new Israel of God, was subject in any way whatsoever to the Law
of Moses.
-
The halakhic traditions and interpretations of the
Pharisees (Matthew
15:6-9;
Mark 7:5-9;
Titus
1:14) and the teachings of the Essenes (Colossians
2:20-23) are of no spiritual substance as they are the ideas, fables and
rites of men
Mark 7:8-9,
Colossians
2:8).
-
The commandments of God (I
Corinthians 7:19;
I John 5:2-3;
Revelation 12:17;
14:12),
that is, the law of God and the law of Christ are one and the same.
-
The royal law (James
2:8), the law of
Christ (Galatians
6:2), which is also
the law of God (I Corinthians 9:20-21), can be summarized by two
overarching commands: "And this is His commandment that we believe in
the name of His Son, Jesus Christ, and love one another just as He commanded
us" (I John 3:23).
-
The law of Christ is not a codified
set of regulations, though the New Testament provides unambiguous
descriptions of the kind of conduct that is characteristic of those who
abide by the law of Christ (Galatians 5:22-26;
6:2;
Ephesians
4:20-6:20;
Philippians 2:1-18;
Colossians
3:1-4:6) for its focus is on the intent of the heart not on physical
acts as God places his very nature,
character, and values into his begotten children through the indwelling of
the Spirit of God.
-
Sin is the transgression of the law
of God, the royal law, the law of Christ (I
John 3:4;
I Corinthians 9:20-21;
James
2:8;
Galatians
6:2).
The Church
The Church of God is a chosen
people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God.
-
The Church of God, or more accurately the Congregation of God,
is the formal proper noun rendering of ekklesia tou Theou, the Greek
equivalent of the Hebrew qehal'el, or qehal �eloh�m,
referring to the eschatological assemblage who have been "assembled" or
"called together" as the spiritual Israel of God.
-
The Church of God consists of the elect and saints�the
members of the body of Christ (I
Peter 2:9).
-
Collectively, they became
spiritual Jews (Colossians
3:11;
Romans 2:28-29) and the new "Israel of God" (Galatians
6:16).
-
Under
the terms of the New Covenant, with a promise of an "eternal inheritance" (Hebrews
9:15), individuals, rather than a national ethnic group, became the
descendants
of Abraham designated as the heirs of the promise (Galatians
3:29).
-
As the descendants of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob end their unbelief they
again become heirs of the promise (Romans
11:23-24).
-
The Church of God, His people chosen pursuant to a new covenant, are to grow in grace
and knowledge (II Peter 3:18).
-
The prophetic history of the Church
of God is embedded in the account of the seven churches in
Revelation 2-3.
Worship
Christians worship
God in spirit and truth.
-
Those who worship in the Spirit of
God and glory in Christ Jesus and put no confidence in the flesh are the
true circumcision (Philippians
3:3).
-
Christians are to present their
bodies as living and holy sacrifices, acceptable to God, which is their
spiritual service of worship (Romans
12:1).
-
Christians
are to worship God in spirit and truth (John
4:23-24).
-
When two or
three come together in Jesus' name he is there with them (Matthew
18:20).
-
Although Christians no longer need
to assemble on the Sabbath to hear the Scriptures read, for few in apostolic
times had private copies of the rolls of Scripture, Christians even in
today's world need the fellowship provided by corporate worship (Hebrews
10:25).
-
The normal pattern
of corporate worship in the New Testament is on the seventh day Sabbath,
beginning sunset Friday through sunset Saturday, and relating to the
Christian Passover and the seven annual Sabbaths (Acts
13:14;
13:42;
13:44;
16:13;
Hebrews 14:9). The
occasion of other meetings in the New Testament are simply incidental
exceptions not the rule.
-
The seven annual
Sabbaths, in the apostolic hermeneutic, provide for the Church of God an outline of the plan
of salvation (Colossians
2:16-17).
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