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AMP 1 Tim 5:20

20 As for those who are guilty and persist in sin, rebuke and admonish them in the presence of all, so that the rest may be warned and stand in wholesome awe and fear. 

It is true when Jesus rebuked Peter and said:

AMP Mark 8:33

33 But turning around [His back to Peter] and seeing His disciples, He rebuked Peter, saying, Get behind Me, Satan! For you do not have a mind intent on promoting what God wills,

 

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Hello AnnaNana,  I can't seem to send you a private message,  so I'll place it here:   Hello AnnaNana, again I appreciate the scriptures that point to God's people as recipients of His

AnnaNana/Audrey said - "The context shows which temple the writer was talking about. Since we are a spiritual nation, it's not possible for a man or group of men to physically "sit" in us." Since

Audrey - "Interpretations belong to God. Jehovah doesn't give "visions" today. The Bible is complete. The Bible is its own interpreter." In the Temple body of Christ, we find prophets listed in t

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3 hours ago, Audrey Kennedy-Tripp said:

You don't know God at all and you have no desire to know Him. You want to prevent the little children from knowing Him. It is not God's holy spirit that motivates you. I will not speak with you anymore.

Audrey, I perceive that you show no fear by creating your assumptions about God, no matter what His word tells us. Even Elihu, one of the false comforters of Job, spoke of God’s glory, which you are shaming, by expecting Him to bend to your blasphemous desire that you are stating as a fact.

“Out of the north comes golden splendor;
    God is clothed with awesome majesty.
23 The Almighty—we cannot find Him;
    He is great in power
;
    justice and abundant righteousness he will not violate.
24 Therefore men fear Him;
    He does not regard any who are wise in their own conceit. (heart)”  Job 37:22-24

Refresh your memory on the power, glory and awesomeness of the Almighty God, by reading HIS words to Job: 

https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Job+38&version=ESV

https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Job+39&version=ESV

God continues to tell Job in chapter 40:2

“Shall a faultfinder contend with the Almighty?
    He who argues with God, let him answer it.”

Your argument is being heard by God, you expect Him to become a human on the earth in His own Kingdom.  You expect Him to lower Himself to the human He created.  Jesus “emptied” himself to obey the Father and bring us to a cleansed, repentant standing through his sacrifice, so that we can be found righteous with heads bowed before God. Jesus is now exalted and sits at the right hand of the power of God.  He always will be God’s “right hand”. Psalm110:1,2; 20:6;63:8.  But you want to look at God at eye level. You want God who is Spirit, to “empty" himself, so that He can meet you at your level.  You have a conceited heart to demand that this will happen.

 

Then Job answered the Lord and said:

“Behold, I am of small account; what shall I answer you?

    I lay my hand on my mouth.
I have spoken once, and I will not answer;
    twice, but I will proceed no further.”  Job 40:3-5

Good advice to take note of.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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In silence and preparation. How can one false comforter comfort another false comforter? The same can be said about bible knowledge.

 

Silence: -- What is silence? Not the absence, the negation of speech, but the pause, the suspension of speech. Speech is, we all admit, one of God's choicest gifts to man, for the employment of which man is specially and awfully responsible. Must not something of the like sacredness and responsibility belong to that correlative power--the power of silence? As if to impress this truth upon our minds, Scripture invests silence with circumstances of peculiar interest and awe. Thus, when Solomon dedicated the Temple to Jehovah, after that the priests had arranged all the sacred furniture, and completed the solemn service of consecration, there was silence, and during that silence the glory of the Lord, in the form of a cloud, so filled the whole building that the priests could not stand to minister by reason of the cloud. Thus, again, in the text, when the angel "had opened the seventh seal, there was silence in heaven about the space of half an hour." Very wonderful and mysterious is this instance of silence. It was as though, upon the opening of the mystic seal, events so strange and amazing were to follow throughout the universe, that the very hosts of heaven were compelled to suspend their worship and adoration in order to behold and listen! Now, the first sort of silence to which I would call your attention is the silence of worship, of awe, and reverence. "The Lord is in His holy temple; let all the earth keep silence before Him." Such is the canon for worship laid down by Habakkuk; and it is a canon as much binding upon us as upon those to whom it was originally addressed. When we come up to the house of prayer, there to meet Christ upon the mercy-seat--there to hear His voice speaking to us in the read and spoken Word--there to receive Him into our very souls in the Sacrament of His broken Body and shed Blood--we are bound to observe the silence of awe and reverence. Except when we open our lips to join in prayer and praise to God, our attitude within these hallowed walls should be that of silence, of those who are impressed with the sanctity of the place, and who know and feel that the Almighty God is indeed in their midst. Yes; and it would be well, could we put more of this holy silence into our religious acts. Our religion shares too much in the faults of the age in which we live. It is too public, too outspoken, conducted too much as a business; and so the inner and contemplative element is too much lost sight of. The silence of self-examination, the silence of the heart's unsyllabled supplication, the silence of meditation on the mysteries of redeeming love--these are forms of silence which every one must observe often who would have the flame of spiritual life to burn bright and clear in his soul. Then, again, there is the silence of preparation. Every great work that has ever been achieved has been preceded by this-the doer making himself ready, by thought and study, for action. Every great achievement, whether in the moral or the intellectual world, has been in a sense like Solomon's temple--it has risen noiselessly, silently, without sound of axe or hammer. Therefore, is that great primary act in religion--the conviction of sin--invariably preceded by deep and solemn silence, while the sinner stands before God self-accused and self-condemned. Therefore, also, is silence ever present at all the more solemn passages of our life. Sorrow -- real, genuine sorrow -- is ever silent. A cry -- a tear -- what relief would these be; but they must not intrude into the sacred ground of sorrow, the sorrow of the just -- bereaved widow or orphan. And so, too, sympathy with sorrow is ever silent. Idle words, or still idler tears - these are for false comforters, like those who troubled the patriarch Job; the true sympathy is the sympathy of a look -- of the presence of silence, not of uttered consolation. And now think of that last silence--a silence that we must all experience, and for which, by silence, we must prepare now -- the silence of death. What exactly the silence of death is, none but the dying can know. May we have known what it was, day by day, to be many times alone with that God who must then be alone with us, to judge or else to save.

(Charles H. Collier, M. A.)

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