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My struggle with bibles

Xeno.of.athens

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It's been a while since I looked at this thread in detail, so this may have already been discussed, but wouldn't the footnotes be included under the version's imprimatur and nihil obstat?
Indeed, they are. It should be noted that 'Nihil obstat' and 'Imprimatur' do not signify that the Catholic Church officially endorses the content as Church teaching. Rather, they indicate that the material is permitted to be published and has been reviewed for any teachings that would sufficiently concern the Church's bishops to warrant prohibition of printing.
 
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chevyontheriver

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It's been a while since I looked at this thread in detail, so this may have already been discussed, but wouldn't the footnotes be included under the version's imprimatur and nihil obstat?
I think not. They would maybe be included under a separate imprimatur and nihil obstat. I will have to check and see what my old NAB had.
 
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Strong in Him

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Your post, referenced above as #135, indicates that there are at least 100 posts in this thread not authored by you or me, confirming that a discussion is indeed taking place.
Yes, I would guess people are either agreeing with you or telling you that you are wrong.
Either way, I fail to see how you are struggling with Bibles - you know exactly what you believe and why.
 
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Strong in Him

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And you seem to have a bug about it. Why?
I'm asking the OP what they are talking about.
What is/was their "struggle with Bibles"? Are they saying that they read many versions, were confused but eventually decided to trust the Catholic version? Or are they saying "I struggle to understand how anyone can read/believe a Protestant Bible"?
 
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DennisF

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When I read a Catholic Bible, I am assured that it contains the full canon of Holy Scripture as defined by ancient Church councils and definitively listed by the Councils of Florence and Trent, reaffirmed by the Second Vatican Council. If the Bible includes cross-references, then it will link passages between the Old Testament and the New Testament, including the Deuterocanonical books. If there are annotations provided by the Catholic Church or one of its faithful shepherds (a bishop), then I can trust in their reliability. However, these assurances are not present when I use a Jewish Tanakh or a Protestant Bible. For these reasons, I prefer a Catholic Bible over a Protestant or Jewish one.
It depends on how much you value thinking through your beliefs for yourself versus letting others do your thinking for you and tell you what to believe. These are the two extremes, and all of us are somewhere between them (if we are still sane). The main difference between Catholic-approved and non-Catholic-originated Bible translations is that the Douay Bible contains the Old Testament Apocrypha which was taken out of the "Protestant" Bibles only after Enlightenment skepticism cast enough doubt on them. (The Protestant Reformers had them in their Bibles.) They are insightful in answering some important but not-often asked questions such as: Whatever happened to Israel after the Assyrian deportations? 2 Esdras 13 contributes to the answer to that question. Commentaries by either Protestant Bible scholars or Catholic bishops (or Judaist rabbis) should be verified; as the Russians say: "Trust but verify." These people also are fellow humans and make mistakes or can be both short-sighted and imaginative. Additional extrabiblical comments can be found added to both Protestant and Judaist (Talmudic) scripture.
 
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Xeno.of.athens

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I'm asking the OP what they are talking about.
Are you talking with me or at me? If it is talking with me then I've already said why I wrote the OP. I have had plenty of fruitful conversation with others in this thread.
 
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Xeno.of.athens

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It depends on how much you value thinking through your beliefs for yourself versus letting others do your thinking for you and tell you what to believe. These are the two extremes, and all of us are somewhere between them (if we are still sane). The main difference between Catholic-approved and non-Catholic-originated Bible translations is that the Douay Bible contains the Old Testament Apocrypha which was taken out of the "Protestant" Bibles only after Enlightenment skepticism cast enough doubt on them. (The Protestant Reformers had them in their Bibles.) They are insightful in answering some important but not-often asked questions such as: Whatever happened to Israel after the Assyrian deportations? 2 Esdras 13 contributes to the answer to that question. Commentaries by either Protestant Bible scholars or Catholic bishops (or Judaist rabbis) should be verified; as the Russians say: "Trust but verify." These people also are fellow humans and make mistakes or can be both short-sighted and imaginative. Additional extrabiblical comments can be found added to both Protestant and Judaist (Talmudic) scripture.
DennisF, aren't we letting God tell us what to believe? Wasn't it the Serpent who said to Eve, "has God [really] said ..." and didn't he suggest that there was a benefit to be discovered by testing to see if the forbidden fruit was good? I do not mean to condemn the idea of thinking for yourself but in matters of Christian faith thinking everything through for yourself really isn't a great virtue. In the end every Christian must surrender independent judgement and learn to rely on someone else for truth. So, your right, Catholics surrender independent judgement on the Dogmas of the Christian faith.
 
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Strong in Him

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Are you talking with me or at me? If it is talking with me then I've already said why I wrote the OP. I have had plenty of fruitful conversation with others in this thread.
I was explaining to someone else that I had a question for you and not a "bug" about the Catholic church.

I entered this thread after reading the heading, thinking that you might really be struggling with which version of the Bible to read and wanting an opinion.
As that is not the case, and you wrote this only to say that you don't like "Protestant" Bibles, I'll leave you to it.
 
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DennisF

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DennisF, aren't we letting God tell us what to believe? Wasn't it the Serpent who said to Eve, "has God [really] said ..." and didn't he suggest that there was a benefit to be discovered by testing to see if the forbidden fruit was good? I do not mean to condemn the idea of thinking for yourself but in matters of Christian faith thinking everything through for yourself really isn't a great virtue. In the end every Christian must surrender independent judgement and learn to rely on someone else for truth. So, your right, Catholics surrender independent judgement on the Dogmas of the Christian faith.
Yes, Yahweh's (God's) word to us should be our guiding advice, but in saying "think for yourself" it is with regard to other humans, who are also finite and fallible in what they say. God does expect us to think. He gave the authority to Israel (human beings) to adjudicate his Law. Adjudication definitely involves thinking. As for what other fallible humans give out as dogma, individual discernment is required. The Bishop is not going to be standing before the judgement seat of Christ in our place. We must give account of our own behavior and speech - and thinking, not somebody else's. Christ covers for us in the judgement, but what he is covering is of ourselves. So we have a responsibility for what we think, even though we are influenced by others.
 
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jas3

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The Bishop is not going to be standing before the judgement seat of Christ in our place. We must give account of our own behavior and speech - and thinking, not somebody else's.

"Obey them that have the rule over you, and submit yourselves: for they watch for your souls, as they that must give account, that they may do it with joy, and not with grief: for that is unprofitable for you." (Heb. 13:17)

To a certain extent, the hierarchy of the Church is accountable for their "watch over [our] souls," although we are also accountable for our own beliefs and practice.
 
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Xeno.of.athens

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Yes, Yahweh's (God's) word to us should be our guiding advice, but in saying "think for yourself" it is with regard to other humans, who are also finite and fallible in what they say. God does expect us to think. He gave the authority to Israel (human beings) to adjudicate his Law. Adjudication definitely involves thinking. As for what other fallible humans give out as dogma, individual discernment is required. The Bishop is not going to be standing before the judgement seat of Christ in our place. We must give account of our own behavior and speech - and thinking, not somebody else's. Christ covers for us in the judgement, but what he is covering is of ourselves. So we have a responsibility for what we think, even though we are influenced by others.
By definition, everyone thinks for themselves, including those who follow the teachings of the Church or a pastor. You imply that we shouldn't trust anyone with our salvation. Yet, you trust the assertion that the Bible is God's word and that it contains the books your version includes, which pertains to salvation, doesn't it? You accept a canon and translation of scripture, and likely the Nicene Creed, which isn't solely derived from biblical texts through deductive reasoning. If you tried to formulate the Nicene Creed from scripture alone, it would be challenging, as it would be for anyone. Christians depend on the body of Christ for aspects of eternal life, as intended by Christ. We form a community of believers, each with different gifts—some teach, some pray, some lead, some offer hospitality. Within this body, some study and teach, while others listen and learn. Dogma revolves around learning. It seems you learn too, even if your post suggests a solitary pursuit of the truth.
 
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DennisF

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By definition, everyone thinks for themselves, including those who follow the teachings of the Church or a pastor.
To "think for one's self" means to not accept claims or conclusions offered by others without first going through a mental activity of determining whether the given statements follow rationally from what you know or believe already. Many people do not do this; they accept the conclusions of others (such as what is said in the mainstream media or over the pulpit) without critically evaluating the veracity - the truth-value - of the claims.
You imply that we shouldn't trust anyone with our salvation.
I don't think that follows from what I said, which is more general, though all of us learned of the way of salvation from others. How we accepted the salvific claims is the critical issue.
Yet, you trust the assertion that the Bible is God's word and that it contains the books your version includes, which pertains to salvation, doesn't it? You accept a canon and translation of scripture, and likely the Nicene Creed, which isn't solely derived from biblical texts through deductive reasoning. If you tried to formulate the Nicene Creed from scripture alone, it would be challenging, as it would be for anyone.
Hmm. I thought that the Nicene Creed follows scripture rather closely, though phased or summarized in its own language.
Christians depend on the body of Christ for aspects of eternal life, as intended by Christ. We form a community of believers, each with different gifts—some teach, some pray, some lead, some offer hospitality. Within this body, some study and teach, while others listen and learn. Dogma revolves around learning. It seems you learn too, even if your post suggests a solitary pursuit of the truth.
How can the "pursuit of truth" not involve "learning"? I don't follow this. All I am asserting, to put it simply, is that we should not quit using our brains. To exercise discernment in our times of deceit, for instance, requires it. Discernment is a kind of "thinking for yourself".

I am not disagreeing with you that we all are influenced by other people, hopefully the right ones. The point is that some people reflect on this influence while others accept it uncritically.
 
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Xeno.of.athens

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All I am asserting, to put it simply, is that we should not quit using our brains. To exercise discernment in our times of deceit, for instance, requires it. Discernment is a kind of "thinking for yourself".

I am not disagreeing with you that we all are influenced by other people, hopefully the right ones. The point is that some people reflect on this influence while others accept it uncritically.
Okay, since the above says that was all that you were asserting then we are in agreement. That is very good. God bless :)
 
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Love Fountain

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When I read a Catholic Bible, I am assured that it contains the full canon of Holy Scripture as defined by ancient Church councils and definitively listed by the Councils of Florence and Trent, reaffirmed by the Second Vatican Council. If the Bible includes cross-references, then it will link passages between the Old Testament and the New Testament, including the Deuterocanonical books. If there are annotations provided by the Catholic Church or one of its faithful shepherds (a bishop), then I can trust in their reliability. However, these assurances are not present when I use a Jewish Tanakh or a Protestant Bible. For these reasons, I prefer a Catholic Bible over a Protestant or Jewish one.

Hello,

God through His Holy Spirit has certain styles of writing which He ordered in the Hebrew Bible precisely as He intended. English Bible versions of today are mixed up and out of order in their ordering of the Old Testament, this includes the Catholic Bibles which even go so far to add to the Hebrew Canon set forth by the Holy Spirit of God. Even Jesus speaks in the same style as follows from John 8:47 quoted from the Douay-Rheims Version(Roman Catholic) 1899, the style is called introverted parallelism which matured to being called Introversion of Correspondence. The lettering A, B, B, A is placed so those unfamiliar are able to follow the ring structure of corresponding text/words.

John 8:47,
A | He that is of God
.....B | heareth the words of God.
.....B | Therefore you hear them not,
A | because you are not of God.


God ordered the Hebrew Bible Canon and ordered it precisely as Law, Prophets and Writings/Psalms accordingly as follows and all Bibles that don't follow this ordering are clearly out of order from what God intended.

Should we follow men or God? Can we hear/see His word and symmetrical harmonious styles of speaking and writing?

Hebrew Bible Canon


Law and Prophets structures.png

Writings Psalms structure.png



So where should the supposed Deuterocanonical books go in the above precisely ordered sections of the Hebrew Bible Canon?

At least the Protestant Old Testament has the same books as the Hebrew Bible Canon, even though a different ordering, which is more than can be said of Catholic OT.


Blessings,
Love Fountain
 
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DennisF

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Hello,

God through His Holy Spirit has certain styles of writing which He ordered in the Hebrew Bible precisely as He intended. English Bible versions of today are mixed up and out of order in their ordering of the Old Testament, this includes the Catholic Bibles which even go so far to add to the Hebrew Canon set forth by the Holy Spirit of God. Even Jesus speaks in the same style as follows from John 8:47 quoted from the Douay-Rheims Version(Roman Catholic) 1899, the style is called introverted parallelism which matured to being called Introversion of Correspondence. The lettering A, B, B, A is placed so those unfamiliar are able to follow the ring structure of corresponding text/words.

John 8:47,
A | He that is of God
.....B | heareth the words of God.
.....B | Therefore you hear them not,
A | because you are not of God.


God ordered the Hebrew Bible Canon and ordered it precisely as Law, Prophets and Writings/Psalms accordingly as follows and all Bibles that don't follow this ordering are clearly out of order from what God intended.

Should we follow men or God? Can we hear/see His word and symmetrical harmonious styles of speaking and writing?

Hebrew Bible Canon


View attachment 356367
View attachment 356366


So where should the supposed Deuterocanonical books go in the above precisely ordered sections of the Hebrew Bible Canon?

At least the Protestant Old Testament has the same books as the Hebrew Bible Canon, even though a different ordering, which is more than can be said of Catholic OT.


Blessings,
Love Fountain
I am not Roman Catholic; however, the Catholics retained the OT Apocryphal writings while in recent centuries, the Protestants threw them out. (The Reformers did not reject them.) For instance, there are critical facts in 2 Esdras 13 about the answer to the critical question: Whatever happened to Israel after their Assyrian deportation? The answer is the difference between whether they are a major population group, as Yahweh said they would be to Abraham and sons, and that they consequently would remain in the central thread of human history, or be, as many suppose today, the "Jews", a minor lower-kingdom group throughout the intervening centuries. Also ignored in Israelite history are the Israelite empires such as Carthage and Parthia. Most people do not know who the Israelites are in Western history! So the more inclusive RCC Bible gives us more to go on that is critical to understanding the Bible as history versus being a somewhat mythical Platonic Bible World.
 
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Love Fountain

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I am not Roman Catholic; however, the Catholics retained the OT Apocryphal writings while in recent centuries, the Protestants threw them out. (The Reformers did not reject them.) For instance, there are critical facts in 2 Esdras 13 about the answer to the critical question: Whatever happened to Israel after their Assyrian deportation? The answer is the difference between whether they are a major population group, as Yahweh said they would be to Abraham and sons, and that they consequently would remain in the central thread of human history, or be, as many suppose today, the "Jews", a minor lower-kingdom group throughout the intervening centuries. Also ignored in Israelite history are the Israelite empires such as Carthage and Parthia. Most people do not know who the Israelites are in Western history! So the more inclusive RCC Bible gives us more to go on that is critical to understanding the Bible as history versus being a somewhat mythical Platonic Bible World.
Hello DennisF,

There are many places in the Bible without the Apocryphal writings that tell where the northern tribes went and who they are today spread out throughout the planet and not just one little country, however God does things like assemble and precisely order The Hebrew Bible Canon as this link shows and as showed prior and below. God uses parables, seals things until certain times and covertly operates as needed, even having certain books not meant to be a part of main stream. Keep reading 2Esdras into chapter 14 and see what is said to Ezra.

The books of the Hebrew Bible Canon are the same as the books in Protestant OT's but in different order, they are inspired and the word of God, the extra books you and the RCC want to put in your OT's are not all inspired and meant to be in the OT as shared.

Catholicism claims they established the NT Canon but they can't even get the OT Canon correct. Lol

Where will you put them and stay true to the style that God has placed the texts in the Law, Prophets and Writings? The extra books, deuterocanonical and apocryphal don't fit and God intended them to not be a part of the following for His reasons. Some writings are good for history, some are good for the Hebrew Bible Canon as God intended.


Law and Prophets structures.png

Writings Psalms structure.png



Blessings,
Love Fountain
 
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DennisF

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Hello DennisF,

There are many places in the Bible without the Apocryphal writings that tell where the northern tribes went and who they are today spread out throughout the planet and not just one little country,
Where are the "many" places in the Bible that tell where the north-kingdom Israelites ("Greater Israel") went and are today? I agree that it is not just one modern state ("country"). God said to Abraham, et.al. that their posterity would be a large population group. Where is Greater Israel today?
however God does things like assemble and precisely order The Hebrew Bible Canon as this link shows and as showed prior and below. God uses parables, seals things until certain times and covertly operates as needed, even having certain books not meant to be a part of main stream. Keep reading 2Esdras into chapter 14 and see what is said to Ezra.
I am familiar with 2 Esdras.
The books of the Hebrew Bible Canon are the same as the books in Protestant OT's but in different order, they are inspired and the word of God, the extra books you and the RCC want to put in your OT's are not all inspired and meant to be in the OT as shared.
Why? The early church councils that initially decided on the list of books was a rather political affair, so I wouldn't count on any one group to have divine revelation in selecting the books. There are a continuum of choices; the Shepherd of Hermas and the Didache were almost put in and later, Luther wanted to remove James and Revelation. Some people throw out all of Paul's writings. Theologian Patrick Cooke of Berkeley, CA is on the inclusionary end of the spectrum and believes that there are 211 books that should constitute the Bible. So who was inspired?
My way of handling this is to note the generally applied levels of authenticity historically for each of the books and use all of the books as input data while applying discernment. And that is about all that anyone can do.
Catholicism claims they established the NT Canon but they can't even get the OT Canon correct. Lol
Very funny; I am not catholic but if you look into the history, the OT Apochryphal books were included as scripture from well into the past.
Where will you put them and stay true to the style that God has placed the texts in the Law, Prophets and Writings?
I do not buy into the premise about the ordering being divinely given. They are not chronological, especially if you consider that Isaiah 40 onward was written decades later than Isaiah 1-39. The Proverbs are another case in point in that these proverbs came from multiple sources spanning a significant time period. And Job is considered the earliest book chronologically.
The extra books, deuterocanonical and apocryphal don't fit and God intended them to not be a part of the following for His reasons. Some writings are good for history, some are good for the Hebrew Bible Canon as God intended.
Again, on what basis?
This is interesting but the problem with it is that it is someone's construction and not by some logically necessary criterion that must be the case.
 
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Love Fountain

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Where are the "many" places in the Bible that tell where the north-kingdom Israelites ("Greater Israel") went and are today? I agree that it is not just one modern state ("country"). God said to Abraham, et.al. that their posterity would be a large population group. Where is Greater Israel today?
Hello DennisF,

His sheep know His voice, there is only one Shepherd, who is the Shepherd?

Know the Shepherd and there you will find His sheep.

Why? The early church councils that initially decided on the list of books was a rather political affair, so I wouldn't count on any one group to have divine revelation in selecting the books. There are a continuum of choices; the Shepherd of Hermas and the Didache were almost put in and later, Luther wanted to remove James and Revelation. Some people throw out all of Paul's writings. Theologian Patrick Cooke of Berkeley, CA is on the inclusionary end of the spectrum and believes that there are 211 books that should constitute the Bible. So who was inspired?
My way of handling this is to note the generally applied levels of authenticity historically for each of the books and use all of the books as input data while applying discernment. And that is about all that anyone can do.


James, Revelation and Paul's writings are all inspired, they show forth the styles of Alternation, Introversion and Division in which the Holy Spirit wrote through the Hebrew people. These literary styles of writing appear in the Bible in each chapter, each book as a whole and the Bible as a whole. There are many resources available to learn in depth of Parallelism link and Correspondence link which are just a couple.

The depth and magnitude of these styles and writings are in no other texts in any language or belief written by man. Nothing even comes close to comparing to the magnificent mind of the One Author who wrote through many Hebrew people of different walks of life over many hundreds and hundreds of years.

God has His own style of writing and speaking and all the other stuff you mention don't have God as the One Author and don't even come close to compare.

The following subject structure outlines are a glimpse of His styles of writing which is called Correspondence which contain Alternation, Introversion or Division. He's brought forth and revealed His style over time through many people starting with the Ancient Hebrews. God gave them the Hebrew Canon in the precise order shared with you and yet you cast it aside as a work of men incorrectly in error.

No man writes like the following:



James whole structure.png

Revelation whole structure.png

Romans whole structure.PNG




Very funny; I am not catholic but if you look into the history, the OT Apochryphal books were included as scripture from well into the past.

I do not buy into the premise about the ordering being divinely given. They are not chronological, especially if you consider that Isaiah 40 onward was written decades later than Isaiah 1-39. The Proverbs are another case in point in that these proverbs came from multiple sources spanning a significant time period. And Job is considered the earliest book chronologically.

Again, on what basis?

This is interesting but the problem with it is that it is someone's construction and not by some logically necessary criterion that must be the case.


The Vulgate embraced the Septuagint which changed the books and order of the Hebrew Canon that God gave through the Hebrew people to pass on to the rest of God's people. The Septuagint is out of order and our English Bibles have all followed the confusion set forth by men to the word of God. The OT and NT books that align with the Hebrew Canon books and the Protestant OT/NT without the Deuterocanonical and Apocryphal books are the way God intended which is proven in many ways, especially through His style of writing and ordering of the texts.

While some of the Hebrew Canon is ordered chronologically that is not the way God orders the texts as shared prior, the Hebrew Canon ordered is aligned in a nonlinear style according to subjects and subject matter of the texts.

What you share about Isaiah having more than one writer is nonsense and false doctrine of men. The spirit of God wrote through Isaiah, not multiples Isaiah's or others under the name of Isaiah. This link One Author of Isaiah Link proves the text and so does the subject structure outline of the whole book of Isaiah as follows:

There's much to know and learn from studying the styles that God writes and it AID's in clearing away the blunders of men who rearranged and corrupted what God intends.



Isaiah whole structure.png


Blessings,
Love Fountain
 
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DennisF

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Hello DennisF,

His sheep know His voice, there is only one Shepherd, who is the Shepherd?

Know the Shepherd and there you will find His sheep.
Okay, so where are they? The "sheep" we are discussing, in particular, are the Israelites after being deported by the Assyrians.
James, Revelation and Paul's writings are all inspired, they show forth the styles of Alternation, Introversion and Division in which the Holy Spirit wrote through the Hebrew people. These literary styles of writing appear in the Bible in each chapter, each book as a whole and the Bible as a whole. There are many resources available to learn in depth of Parallelism link and Correspondence link which are just a couple.
I am aware of Hebrew literary structures, which appear also outside of the books of the Bible.
The depth and magnitude of these styles and writings are in no other texts in any language or belief written by man. Nothing even comes close to comparing to the magnificent mind of the One Author who wrote through many Hebrew people of different walks of life over many hundreds and hundreds of years.
I also have a high view of scripture, though the topic of what constitutes divine inspiration as the "Word of God" is a topic unto itself that is not the topic I was addressing. We have "topic creep" here.
What you share about Isaiah having more than one writer is nonsense and false doctrine of men. The spirit of God wrote through Isaiah, not multiples Isaiah's or others under the name of Isaiah. This link One Author of Isaiah Link proves the text and so does the subject structure outline of the whole book of Isaiah as follows:
There are differences in the settings of the the two that are not trivial to address. Perhaps Isaiah lived long enough to write both sections, but that would make him a very old man.

The topic is in answer to the question: Whatever happened to the Israelites who were deported by the Assyrians? There is abundant historical data to answer that question, but Western history is built on the foundation of the Greek and Roman writings rediscovered during the Middle Ages and not on Hebrew or other history. Consequently, Western historiography has been deflected in another direction.
 
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