The Bible

 

Danielius 10:20

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20 Jis atsakė: “Ar žinai, kodėl atėjau pas tave? Dabar vėl grįšiu kovoti su persų kunigaikščiu ir, kai išeisiu, ateis Graikijos kunigaikštis.

Commentary

 

#97 Fighting over the Body of Moses (Jude 1:9)

By Jonathan S. Rose

Title: Fighting over the Body of Moses (Jude 9)

Topic: Second Coming/ Word

Summary: This time we deliberately pick perhaps the most obscure verse in the most obscure book of the Bible--Jude verse 9, and explore its imagery and allusions, finding that it actually ties in with huge themes throughout Scripture.

Use the reference links below to follow along in the Bible as you watch.

References:
Jude 1:9
Deuteronomy 34:5-6
Zechariah 3:1
Daniel 10:10-end
Daniel 12:1
Matthew 24:21, 15
Revelation 12:1, 7
1 Thessalonians 4:15-17
Luke 9:28-36
Matthew 5:17
Luke 9:35-36; 24:22, 49
Jude 1:9
Ephesians 6:10-12
Jude 1:9, 11, 21

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Spirit and Life Bible Study broadcast from 6/27/2012. The complete series is available at: www.spiritandlifebiblestudy.com

Commentary

 

One

  

A company might have executives setting policy and strategy, engineers designing products, managers handling personnel and others handling various functions. They all do different things -- but if they're doing them with a shared underlying purpose, the company -- and the individuals in it -- will likely be successful. The Lord wants all human society to function in a similar way. We have different skills and individual loves, but if we all share a mutual love -- a love of serving others -- then society will function as one, will be a reflection of heaven and will be a good receptacle for the Lord's love. This can also happen within each of us, as we unify our talents and ideas around a central love. And in an abstract sense, it illustrates how a wide collection of varying ideas can be unified around a shared good intention. That is the kind of love pictured when “one” is used in the Bible, either as a specific number or in the sense of several people or objects “being one.” In more casual references -- when used to identify a specific person or object -- the meaning is relatively literal, and is connected to that person or object.