Questions about Isaiah 61:1-2 and Luke 4:16-21
- Was
Jesus reading from Isaiah 61:1-2
Yes.
- No.
- Who
was the subject of the prophecy speaking of?
- Isaiah.
- David.
- John the Baptist.
Jesus
Christ.
- Was
the prophecy from Isaiah 61:1-2 fulfilled at the time that Jesus read
it?
- Yes.
No.
- Did
Jesus read the whole prophecy from Isaiah?
- Yes.
No.
- When
will the Day of Vengeance of our God occur?
- This is another name for the Day of the Lord.
- This is another name for the time of God's wrath.
- This is another name for the great tribulation.
All
of the above.
- Why
did Jesus stop where he did, and then proclaim that what he read was fulfilled?
He
stopped when he did and proclaimed it fulfilled because it was, but because
the day of vengeance of our God was not to come for many years he did
not include that part of the prophecy.
- The prophecies are subject to interpretation, meaning that Jesus could
pick any part and declare it fulfilled?
- Only part of every prophecy will be fulfilled and so you must determine
what part is real, and what part of it is to fool the unsuspecting.
- This prophecy was not fulfilled at the time of Christ and that is why
the good Bible reading folks tried to kill Jesus.
- What
does it tell us about the nature of time and the Bible prophecies, that
Jesus would declare one part of a sentence fulfilled and the next part
of the sentence will not be fulfilled for thousands of years?
- That the Bibles ways are beyond understanding.
That
time is mostly meaningless in the prophecies.
- That the Bible is wrong.
- That most of the Bible is only filler and will not come to pass.
- Which
biblical Age transpired during the time that Jesus declared that what
he read of the prophecy will fulfilled and when the unread portion will
be fulfilled?
The
Church Age.
- The end of the age of Israel.
- The Industrial Age.
- The Computer Age.
- Thinking
back to Daniel 9:24-27, between which 'weeks' does the hidden portion
of Isaiah 61:1-2 take place?
- Between the seventh and eighth.
Between
the sixty-ninth and seventieth weeks.
- After the seventy weeks are finished.
- It does not relate to that prophecy.
Questions about Malachi 3:1-5
- Who
is the messenger spoken of in Malachi 3:1?
- An angel of God.
- Jesus the coming Messiah.
- The angel Gabriel sent to Mary the betrothed of Joseph.
John
the baptizer.
- Which
Coming of the Lord is spoken of in Malachi 3:1-3, the First or the Second?
- The First Coming of the Lord.
The
Second Coming of the Lord.
- It is not talking of the Lord's Coming at all.
- What ever you want because the prophecies are subject you your interpretation.
- Which
Coming of the Lord is marked by fire, the First or the Second?
- The First Coming of the Lord.
The
Second Coming of the Lord.
- The Great Day of Judgment, when the rebels are cast into the Lake of
Fire.
- Neither, the Lord's Comings are all days for rejoicing.
- Which
biblical Age transpired during the time between the coming of John the
baptizer and the Second Coming of the Lord?
The
Church Age.
- The end of the age of Israel.
- The Industrial Age.
- The Computer Age.
- What
does it tell us about the nature of time and the Bible prophecies, that
the time between the coming of John the baptizer and the Second Coming
of Jesus is invisible?
- That the Bibles ways are beyond understanding.
That
time is mostly meaningless in the prophecies.
- That the Bible is wrong.
- That most of the Bible is only filler and will not come to pass.
- Thinking
back to Daniel 9:24-27, between which 'weeks' does the hidden portion
of time between the coming of John and the Second Coming of Jesus take
place?
- Between the seventh and eighth.
Between
the sixty-ninth and seventieth weeks.
- After the seventy weeks are finished.
- It does not relate to that prophecy.
- Which
Age is mostly hidden in the Old Testament?
The
Church Age.
- The Mosaic Age.
- The Millennial Kingdom Age.
- The Space Age.