Why Nostr? What is Njump?
2024-03-08 03:32:29
in reply to

Ash on Nostr: >Now too bad it says whosoever believeth Yet he turns away the Canaanite woman (i.e. ...

>Now too bad it says whosoever believeth

Yet he turns away the Canaanite woman (i.e. Edomite), despite her calling after him, despite her acknowledging he's who he says he is. (Even the demons cast into the swine believe he is who he says he is.)
He even tells her it is not meet to give to dogs what is meant for the children.
His disciples (having followed him for some time) ask whether they should send her away.
Eventually, after calling her a dog, he heals her daughter so that she'll go away and leave the disciples alone.

Compare and contrast this to the very similar situation of the centurion who had a servant (afar) needing healed.

Christ's response to the two are very different.

Believing matters. When Christ says believing matters--absolutely, it does. So do other things Christ says.

Not everyone is from Adam, friend.
Notice that extensive list of the "nations that spread over the earth" in Gen 10 after the Flood are all White nations.
Yet we know other races live.
Notice that the prophecies of empires are never of Asian or African empires--yet only empires where Whites are.

Notice that Christ said that unless one is born of above, of the water and Spirit (flesh and Spirit), one will not enter the kingdom.

He explicitly gives the parable of wheat and tares and an explanation shortly after. (The tares are thrown into a lake of fire.)
Notice that in Eden are the trees God planted and then in the midst are two trees. [Parable of wheat and tares.] At the end of Revelation, there is only one tree. And the *nations* (not individuals) are divided. The devil and his angels are thrown into the lake of fire (i.e. they and their descendants are the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, the tares).
Author Public Key
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