@YourFavXtian@farmingandJesus The point is exposing the heresy & blasphemy. Mormons believe that Christ is the brother of Satan and one day you can be a god of your own planet through your “acts of service, compassion, good nature and ethics”, which isn’t to glorify Christ but for selfish ambition.
THE SECRET HEBREW WORD
God told Noah to cover the Ark with "pitch" (tar) to keep the deadly floodwaters out. The original Hebrew word for pitch used here is Kopher. The mind blowing part? Kopher is the exact same root word translated later in the Bible as Atonement. The Ark was sealed by "atonement" to keep the judgement out.
That system that is opposed to all that God is, and rebels against the reign of God. This rebellion is no longer covert, but it has become overt. It is out there and it is in our faces, and unfortunately, it is being urged along by people in the church who essentially argue that love is always righteous love, is always godly. Love is always appropriate because God loves everyone and God loves everything, and right here the Bible says, “do not love.” — Voddie Baucham
Jesus never talked about homosexuality?
"Jesus is a member of the godhead. Jesus has existed eternally in perfect union with the Father and Spirit. When rocks, fire brimstone were coming down on Sodom and Gomorrah, He was not absent, nor was He in disagreement."
—Voddie Baucham
“When your affections, when your love is pointed toward the world, there is no room for the love of God because when your love and your affections are pointed toward the world, they are pointed toward that which opposes God. Thus, love can become sinful when it is directed at the wrong object.” — Voddie Baucham
Isaiah 14:12-15
How you are fallen from heaven,
O Lucifer, son of the morning!
How you are cut down to the ground,
You who weakened the nations!
For you have said in your heart:
‘I will ascend into heaven,
I will exalt my throne above the stars of God;
I will also sit on the mount of the congregation
On the farthest sides of the north;
I will ascend above the heights of the clouds,
I will be like the Most High.’
Yet you shall be brought down to Sheol,
To the lowest depths of the Pit.
#pride
One of the most chilling verses in the Bible isn’t a prophecy of the future, it’s a description of what happens when a society loses its moral compass.
When evil is praised, truth is mocked, and common sense becomes controversial, the warning signs are already there.
Isaiah saw it thousands of years ago, and his words still ring true today.
Did You Know the Psalms Speak About Yeshua?
Many people read the Psalms as poetry alone.
But the Psalms are also prophetic.
They do not merely describe David’s suffering, victories, prayers, and songs. Again and again, the Spirit points beyond David to Israel’s coming Messiah.
Yeshua is woven throughout the Psalms. Don't believe me? Keep reading...
❖ Psalm 2 — The Reigning King
“Why do the nations conspire and the peoples plot in vain?”
“The kings of the earth rise up… against the LORD and against his anointed.”
The Hebrew word for “anointed” is Mashiach.
Psalm 2 is a royal Davidic Psalm connected to the covenant promises of 2 Samuel 7. Yet its scope stretches far beyond David himself.
God declares:
“I have installed my king on Zion, my holy mountain.” (Psalm 2:6)
And then:
“I will make the nations your inheritance.” (Psalm 2:8)
David never ruled the nations.
Messiah will.
The world still rages against God’s King, but Scripture says the throne in Zion belongs to Him.
❖ Psalm 22 — The Suffering Messiah
“My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”
Centuries before crucifixion was practiced in Israel, Psalm 22 described details astonishingly consistent with Yeshua’s suffering:
“All who see me mock me.”
“They pierce my hands and my feet.”
“They divide my clothes among them and cast lots for my garment.”
Mockery.
Public humiliation.
Pierced hands and feet.
Casting lots for garments.
Yeshua quoted Psalm 22 from the cross because He was fulfilling it.
David suffered deeply, but David was never pierced like this, nor did the nations later worship because of his suffering as Psalm 22 concludes:
“All the ends of the earth will remember and turn to the LORD.” (Psalm 22:27)
The Psalm ultimately points beyond David to Messiah.
❖ Psalm 41 — The Betrayal
“Even my close friend, someone I trusted, one who shared my bread, has turned against me.” (Psalm 41:9)
Yeshua directly applies this Psalm to Judas in John 13:18.
Again, the pattern exceeds David’s own experience and moves toward the greater Son of David.
❖ Psalm 69 — Zeal and Rejection
“Zeal for your house consumes me.”
This Psalm echoes powerfully when Yeshua cleanses the Temple.
His passion for the House of God was not random emotion.
It was Messianic fulfillment.
Psalm 69 also says:
“They put gall in my food and gave me vinegar for my thirst.” (Psalm 69:21)
Even details surrounding Messiah’s suffering appear in the Psalms.
❖ Psalm 16 — The Resurrection
“You will not abandon me to the realm of the dead, nor will you let your holy one see decay.”
Peter directly applies this Psalm to Yeshua in Acts 2.
David died.
David’s tomb was known.
David’s body saw decay.
But Messiah would rise.
The resurrection was not invented centuries later.
Its roots are already embedded in the Hebrew Scriptures.
❖ Psalm 110 — David’s Lord
“The LORD says to my lord: ‘Sit at my right hand until I make your enemies a footstool for your feet.’”
This is one of the most quoted Psalms in the New Testament.
Notice the distinction:
YHWH speaks to David’s “Lord.”
Yeshua challenged the religious leaders with this very Psalm:
“If then David calls him ‘Lord,’ how can he be his son?” (Matthew 22:45)
Messiah is not merely David’s descendant.
He is greater than David.
David was never seated at God’s right hand.
David was never worshiped by the nations.
David never ruled forever from Zion.
The Psalm pushes us toward a greater King.
❖ Psalm 118 — The Rejected Stone
“The stone the builders rejected has become the cornerstone.”
Rejected by the leaders.
Chosen by God.
Yeshua directly applied this Psalm to Himself.
The irony is staggering:
The builders rejected the very cornerstone God appointed.
❖ A Prophetic Pattern Impossible to Ignore
The Psalms describe a Messiah who would:
• Be rejected — Psalm 118
• Be betrayed by a close friend — Psalm 41
• Be mocked — Psalm 22
• Have pierced hands and feet — Psalm 22
• Be given vinegar — Psalm 69
• Rise before decay — Psalm 16
• Sit at God’s right hand — Psalm 110
• Rule the nations from Zion — Psalm 2
Individually, these are striking.
Together, they form a prophetic portrait.
❖ Alfred Edersheim Observed
Alfred Edersheim, a Jewish believer in Yeshua and renowned scholar of Jewish history and Second Temple Judaism, wrote extensively about how the Messianic hope of the Hebrew Scriptures converges in Yeshua.
He famously noted that the Old Testament contains “upwards of 456 references to the Messiah,” many flowing through the Psalms themselves.
Edersheim did not see belief in Yeshua as abandoning Jewish Scripture.
He saw it as its fulfillment.
❖ Why This Matters
The Psalms were precious to Yeshua Himself.
He quoted them on the cross.
He used them in debates.
The Hallel Psalms were sung during Passover.
The earliest Jewish believers constantly appealed to them when proclaiming Messiah.
David was not merely writing songs.
He was also speaking prophetically.
As Peter declared:
“David… foresaw and spoke about the resurrection of the Messiah.” (Acts 2:30–31)
The Psalms begin with blessing and end with universal praise.
And between those bookends stands the Messiah:
Rejected.
Pierced.
Risen.
Exalted.
Coming to reign from Zion.
The Psalms were always singing about Him.
🚨‼️Marriage pain requires more than emotion. This chart gives careful KJV counsel for walking through separation, heartbreak, hope, boundaries, children, prayer, and wisdom without bitterness or panic.
Sometimes the strongest people are the ones silently fighting battles nobody can see.
Psalm 46:1 reminds us that when life becomes heavy God does not stand far away He becomes our refuge our strength and our peace in the middle of the storm.
🚨‼️This chart compares the four Gospels side by side and shows why God gave us four witnesses, not just one record.
Matthew presents Jesus as the King of Israel. Mark presents Him as the Servant of God. Luke presents Him as the Son of man, reaching sinners of every kind. John presents Him as the Son of God, the eternal Word made flesh.
They are not contradictions. They are four Spirit-given angles on the same Lord Jesus Christ. Each Gospel has a different emphasis, audience, style, and set of details, but all four declare the same truth: Jesus Christ came, lived without sin, died for our sins, rose again, and is coming again.
One Saviour. Four witnesses. One perfect truth.
#KJV #FourGospels #BibleStudy #VerseQuest #KingJamesBible #JesusChrist #Matthew #Mark #Luke #John