What Does The Bible Say About Quoting Scripture?
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- Опубликовано: 29 июл 2024
- Every verse in the Bible holds so much meaning that you can quote them all the time but, before you do, what does the Bible say about quoting Scripture? In this video, let's explore the different ways Scriptures can be used and discover interesting facts on how often verses were actually quoted within the Bible!
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Key Moments In This Episode
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00:00 Intro & Summary
00:23 Different Ways Scriptures Can Be Used
00:49 How Jesus Quoted Scriptures From The Old Testament
01:21 How Jesus Referenced Certain People & Events From The Old Testament
02:43 How The Epistles Of Paul Quoted Scriptures From The Old Testament
03:33 The Power Of The Word Of God
04:21 How Studying The Scriptures Bring Us Closer To God
04:57 Best Way To Spread The Word Of The Lord
05:30 Learn More About What The Bible Says
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Sincerely curious to know how you reconcile this pattern of referencing past prophets with the current teaching that “unlike vintage cars and comic books, the words of past prophets don’t become more valuable with age.”
Well, I agree with you. The words of past prophets are valuable, but the words of the living prophet are the most valuable!
Let's look back at the Bible for useful examples here.
In Matthew 5, for example, Christ says he is coming not to destroy the prophets, but to fulfill them. That is, the words of the prophets of the past were true and would be fulfilled, but the time had come for something more.
The Lord has to be able to give *new* instructions to the world adapted to their time and circumstances. Indeed, this is described in Ephesians 4 as one purpose of the roles in the Church - the organization of the Church prevents the members from being tossed about "with every wind of doctrine," or in other words they are guided with respect to the false doctrines present in whatever time and place they may be in. The New Testament is full of inspired instructions that the Apostles were giving real time for experiences and challenges the members were then having. They didn't just refer them back to previous prophets.
Revelation from the past is valuable, but the most important prophet to you is the prophet of the time you are living in.
Could you imagine someone rejecting Jesus' instructions because Moses said something different? Well, yes, that did in fact happen, and those who did were not justified. So it is with any current prophet.
Remember that Peter and the other Apostles received new revelation that overturned the practices that Christ Himself had maintained while He was on Earth personally. And that was because they were authorized to update these things by the inspiration and authority of God. The example I am thinking of is the taking of the Gospel to the Gentiles and all the world, which was not the ordained practice prior to Peter's vision of the sheet with four corners.
@@WhatBibleSay I just struggle where they are diametrically opposed without reconciliation or even recognition for potential changes in the future.
Love this
Can you tell me what passage of scripture Yeshua was referring to in Mat. 22: 24-33? Specifically, verses 29 & 30 in the TLV same verses in the NASB.
Great question. From my perspective these verses have caused confusion, because we don’t seem to have the verses Jesus was referring to.
I’m grateful for the passages we have in Doctrine and Covenants that provide a lot more clarity on the topic.
Who gives a crap what a bunch of ancient goat herders wrote who didn’t even know where the sun went at night? They thought thunder was because god was angry….theres 5 mistakes on the very first page and I’m betting you can’t find one!!
Hint: it’s 390 degrees below zero in space!
Ok, are you saying you don’t believe in God? Just trying to understand the point you are making.
It wasn't goat herders who wrote it.
Good point
There is only one book of scripture, the Holy Bible.
Would you be open to the idea that the Bible is a collection of many small books of scripture?
WhatBibleSay is right. The Bible is only a partial collection of many scriptures that Israelite prophets wrote. There are many things that were considered scripture during the time of Christ that were removed by men later, including the Book of Tobit, the Books of Enoch, the Book of Zenos, and many others. Therefore, the Bible is incomplete and therefore does not contain all of God's word, nor should we suppose that he can't cause more to be written.