In Matthew 23:39, Jesus declares that the people of Jerusalem will not see him again until they acknowledge and welcome him as their Messiah. This verse reflects Jesus' longing for the people of Jerusalem to recognize him as their awaited Savior, despite their rejection of him at that time. It also foreshadows his eventual return in glory.
The last verse of the book of Malachi in the Bible says, "And he will turn the hearts of the fathers to their children and the hearts of the children to their fathers, lest I come and strike the land with a decree of utter destruction."
In the Bible book of Malachi, written after 443 BCE, God asked Malachi to censure the priests who had deviated from their worship of God and were worshiping pagan gods, allowing sorcery, adultery, lying, fraud and oppression to exist among the Jews. In Malachi chapter 3 verse 7 he related Gods plea 'Return to me, and I will return to YOU'.
It refers to a lyrical verse.
There is much controversy about The Bible and whether verses like Daniel chapter 12 foresees pre-trib rapture. The definition truly depends on how a person interprets the text
There is much controversy about the bible and whether verses like Daniel chapter 12 foresees pre-trib rapture. The definition truly depends on how a person interprets the text
Matthew 24:40 refers to a time of separation at the Second Coming of Christ, with one taken and the other left. This verse is often associated with the concept of the rapture, but interpretations vary among different Christian traditions. Some view it as part of the process of the rapture, while others see it in a different context.
A:Most of the post-exilic prophets were anonymous and wrote in the name of earlier prophets such as Isaiah, so their names are unknown to us. The post-exilic Book of Malachi was written anonymously, and the word 'Malachi' merely rfers to a verse that mentions a 'messenger'. The Books of Haggai and Zechariah are named after two known post-exilic prophets.
There is no "rapture" of the church, as this is not in the Bible. The rapture is a man made teaching that is based upon the words "caught up" in the book of Thessalonians. (1 Thess. 4) The belief is that the church will be raptured away to heaven before the second coming of Christ Jesus. The problem is, the verse they base this rapture theory on IS describing the physical second coming of Christ. It is AT the second coming of Christ Jesus that the church is "caught up" to meet Jesus in the air, NOT before.
The verse should be identified by book and then chapter and verse number within that chapter. For example John 3:16 refers to the Book of John, 3rd chapter, 16th verse.
The boy is in rapture when he is with his girlfriend.
Yes it says youare ambassadors of Christ.