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The man that links Adam & Abraham

I love to work on my genealogy and when family members want to know something about our ancestors – they call me. I guess this is one of the reasons I love the genealogies preserved in the Bible. I understand that there are textual variations that raise certain challenges, but the traditionally accepted versions reveal some very interesting things. When we read the book of Genesis we first learn about a man traditionally called Adam in the first four chapters. Almost eight chapters pass before we are introduced to Abraham. There are lots of events that happen in those eight chapters, including the Great Flood. How did Abraham learn about Adam and the Great Flood? One possibility is that he learned it from Noah or his son Shem. Noah was 892 years old and Shem was 390 years old when Abraham was born. Did you get that? They were both still alive! Abraham was 58 years old when Noah died and 110 years old when Shem died. [i] Lamech, Noah’s father, was alive for the final 58 years...

Should “serpent handling believers” be lauded for their faith?

CHARLESTON, W. VA. – A West Virginia Pentecostal pastor who used poisonous snakes during religious services has died of a rattlesnake bite. Mack Wolford, who just turned 44, was killed by a snake he had owned for years.  Wolford was performing a religious ceremony when the incident happened.    Wolford’s father, who was also a serpent-handling pastor, died in the same way nearly 30 years ago. [i] In a recent article by published by the Washington Post, Ralph Hood wrote: The   death of Pastor Randall Mack Wolford   from a serpent bite over this Memorial Day weekend has raised once again a familiar pattern: a serpent handler is bit, he or she succumbs to the bite, and media coverage   focuses upon questioning   what is arguably America's most unique form of religious expression.  The fact that this took place in America is understandable, since there are now an estimated 40,000 types of Christianity practiced here by people who hold ...

Where Was Adam’s Homeland?

Adam, the first man created in the Bible, and is probably one of the best known men of the Bible. His decision to eat the forbidden fruit made him famous. Have you ever thought about where his homeland was? I am going to use a few transliterations to highlight some important points in this study. They will be words with letters that are all capitalized. Then YAHWEH the ELOHIYM formed HAADAM of the dust of the ADAMAH, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul. And YAHWEH the ELOHIYM  planted a garden eastward, in Eden; and there He put the man whom He had formed. (Genesis 2:7-8) The usual translation of YAHWEH the ELOHIYM is “LORD God.” YAHWEH (LORD), however, is the name of the ELOHIYM (God) in this account. The Hebrew word HAADAM is made of the definite article HA- and the root word ADAM. HA- is translated “the.” ADAM may be translated as “man,” “mankind,” or as the name “Adam.” Since this word has the definite article, translatin...

Was Paul a Law Keeping Jew?

This is our third study from the Book of Acts . The answer to the above question may depend on what period in his life you are asking about, which sources you use and your beliefs about the Bible. Our beliefs “ ABOUT ” the Bible can cloud our ability to accurately understand what we are reading “ IN ” the Bible . The two primary sources of biblical information about Paul are the Book of Acts and Paul’s Epistles . The person who is traditionally thought to be the author of Acts is Luke , who was a companion and follower of Paul. This would indicate that Luke was a “pro-Paul” author, not an opponent. Paul is traditionally credited with being the author of the Epistles . When were the books written? Traditionally Paul is said to have written his Epistles between 50 and 60 CE, which would mean that he began over a decade after the crucifixion of Jesus. Luke’s writings have been placed in a period between 60 and 100 CE, with the majority of scholars agreeing on the date of 80 ...

What would Jesus think about public whippings and cutting off ears?

The people who were members of founding generation of America clearly understood the dangers of linking religion to the government. When the leaders of religious organizations gain access to the government’s power to use force against those who disagree or refuse to submit to their beliefs, the consequences can quickly become deadly. I am sure they were well-aware of the Inquisitions and persecutions that were taking place in Europe, but something that a lot of Americans don’t seem to be aware of today is what was taking place in America. In Virginia, the first law in the code of laws of 1610-11, usually called Dale’s code, commanded that God be daily served and that anyone not attending prayers twice daily would be “duly punished.” The second law provided for death to anyone who maliciously spoke against the doctrine of the Trinity, any person of the Trinity, or the “Articles of the Christian faith.” The next law tersely fixed death as the penalty for blasphemy against God. [i] ...

Which sect was Paul’s?

This is our second study from the Book of Acts . Have you ever asked yourself which sect did Paul call his? A quote of Paul provides the answer when he was questioned by Governor Felix during his trial. But this I admit to you, that according to the Way , which they call a sect , I worship the God of our ancestors, believing everything laid down according to the Law or written in the Prophets (Acts 24:14). [1] What is a sect? The author of Acts provides that answer too. Then the high priest took action; he and all who were with him (that is, the sect of the Sadducees ) . . . (Acts 5:17) But some believers who belonged to the sect  of the Pharisees  stood up . . . (Acts 15:5) We have found, in fact, found this man a pestilent fellow, an agitator among the Jews throughout the world, and a ringleader of the sect of the Nazarenes (Acts 24:5) Based on the evidence provided by the author of Acts , the Way was a group like the Sadducees...

Usury

Money in the ancient world was viewed very differently from what it is in the modern world. Aristotle’s simple but powerful belief that “money was barren” and therefore interest was unjust. This belief is found in various forms both in the Old and New Testaments. [i] In the ancient world usury was not limited to charging exorbitant interest rates on loans, which is how it is usually understood today. Usury was synonymous with almost any sort of economic exploitation. Charging excessive prices for goods, simply because they had become scarcer naturally or by “engrossing” ( buying commodities in such quantities as to raise the price in market [ii] ), as well as any form of monopoly or foreclosure, were all deemed to be “usury.” [iii] In the fourteenth century John Wycliffe preached, “It was their vulnerability to usury that made men curse and hate it more than any other sin.” The prohibition against usury was considered to be a matter of protecting the everyday livelihood o...