- May 28, 2015
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Oh boy, let's see...
#12:
#16:
#22:
#24: (this one directly conflicts with Proverbs 25:2!)
#32: (again, ignoring Proverbs 25:2)
So basic summary of what he said in the above:
"The reformers are right. We should stop allegorizing the Bible and take it literally, God never hides stuff in the texts, He never has stuff meaning more than one thing at once, and there are no "deeper meanings"."
Then that means... Christ was never mentioned in the Books of Moses which directly conflicts with John 5:46 where Jesus specifically says that Moses wrote of Him.
Well, ok. Tell me what verse in Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, or Deuteronomy that literally speaks of Christ, or even "a messiah"?
You won't find one AFAIK. The only way you find Jesus in the Torah, is to actually look for... yes... multiple meanings behind some of the verses (or use ELS in the original Hebrew, but I won't go into that here).
Or the Cross diagram in Numbers 2. etc. Which @Hoghead1 says not to do.
Thank you for proving my question.....It is precisely this layer approach that I have trouble with. I am skeptical about it because it seems to completely contradict and the stated content of the passage. What it does is turn the passage into a kind of Rorschach card so that you can read in anything you want. How, for example, dos one go from the mere surface layer to the deep, hidden, inner secret meaning? What makes you think that your interpretation is correct? I mean, I could easily go to anyone of the above posts and read in a hidden meaning completely different from yours. That's why the Reformation cracked down on the allegorical approach and recognize the Bible speaks directly to us, that what the passage states right up front is what the author means.
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