lord


Chapter 41a - IS GOD SITTING NEXT TO HIMSELF?

Chapter 41a - IS GOD SITTING NEXT TO HIMSELF?

Continued from Chapter 40 (Psalms 110:1) Who’s your daddy? On the basis of Mark 12:35-37, Christians ask: “If the Jewish Messiah is not the Son of God, how do you answer Jesus’ question?” The Messiah is the Son of David. Yet David calls him “Lord.” How can David call the Messiah “Lord” if he is David’s descendant? Some Christians answer that the Messiah is David’s descendant according to his humanity and David’s Lord according to his divinity ̶ ̶ he is God come down from Heaven and incarnat


Zalman Kravitz

Zalman Kravitz

Isaiah 52 starting at 12

Isaiah 52 starting at 12

12When you come to appear before Me, who requested this of you, to trample My courts? 13You shall no longer bring vain meal-offerings, it is smoke of abomination to Me; New Moons and Sabbaths, calling convocations, I cannot [bear] iniquity with assembly. 14Your New Moons and your appointed seasons My soul hates, they are a burden to Me; I am weary of bearing [them]. 15And when you spread out your hands, I will hide My eyes from you, even when you pray at length, I do not hear; your hands are


Zalman Kravitz

Zalman Kravitz

What Everyone Should Know About The Meaning of Sacrifice

What Everyone Should Know About The Meaning of Sacrifice

Continued from Part 27 The servant’s rewards for faithfulness to God In verse 12, God speaks of the servant, who, as a result of his selflessness, is willing to give up all that he possesses in the service of God.  This is the meaning of sacrifice within the context of our discussion. The alleged sacrifice of the Christian Jesus is greatly exaggerated.   There is a gross misuse of the concept of “sacrifice” where one who is alleged to be a supernatural being knows that by giving up a flesh-and


Zalman Kravitz

Zalman Kravitz

Chapter 10a - THE ANGEL OF THE LORD

Chapter 10a - THE ANGEL OF THE LORD

Continued from Chapter 9 (Exodus 3:2-8, 10-16, 18) The Angel of the Lord Some trinitarians claim that whenever the Scriptures mention malach ’Adon-ai (Y-H-V-H), “an angel of the Lord,” the angel is Jesus. They translate all passages mentioning such an angel as “the Angel of the Lord,” although the Hebrew may just as well mean “an angel of the Lord” (literally “a messenger of the Lord”; cf. Judges 2:1, 6:11-22). True, in the construct state, when the second noun has the definite article, the f


Zalman Kravitz

Zalman Kravitz