No, BR, who is the Rider on the white horse in Revelation 19.
And please, don't just post the scripture. Tell me who is the Rider.
Him who is faithful and true.
No, BR, who is the Rider on the white horse in Revelation 19.
And please, don't just post the scripture. Tell me who is the Rider.
Him who is faithful and true.
Jesus is Faithful and True
Yep, second coming.
Yes but Jesus had a choice. He could have done his will if he wished, as can we, And he also said that he had a will, your bank account has no will.
But Jesus chose to do the will of the Father who sent him. Thus he's not the father and the father is his God, Christ Jesus even followed commandments given to him. He wouldn't have been given commandments from God. If he was God.
And it's clearly written in the bible, by the apostles "the God and father OF our Lord Jesus Christ.
I have to believe what's written, and Jesus himself even called God his God and father, and he called the father the only true God. So why shouldn't I believe him?
That is right. It is Jesus on the white horse.
So now tell me about the sword he has with him.
Is it his sword?
It's the Word of God
Is it his sword?
That's what i said, but did you miss the words of your own quote?
The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.
Do you think punishment is for repentance of the soul or do you regard it as eternal destruction? Don't you know that even the fallen angels are in the pit for but a term?
GOD is not slack concerning HIS promise.
We know literally all things will be reconsiled to GOD, by HIS Word that is truth and promise.
That is right, it is Jesus' sword.
So tell me why you do not believe Jesus is the Spirit?
Ephesians 6:17 Take the helmet of salvation and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.
Did you read that?
The scripture says the SWORD of the SPIRIT.
That proves that Jesus is the Rider on the horse, and he is the Spirit.
He is not the Spirit. The Father sent the Spirit.
The Rider on the horse is the Spirit, it is his sword, coming out of his mouth.
What is the sword?
The Rider on the horse is the Spirit, it is his sword, coming out of his mouth.
What is the sword?
Ah, I understand what you were reacting to now. I sincerely apologize. It's just that you sounded really strange and random.
1 Corinthians 9:9 KJV
(9) For it is written in the law of Moses, Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the ox that treadeth out the corn. Doth God take care for oxen?
No one has made any allegation that Moses is God. Moses sinned against God, God did not let him enter the promised land. No one ever came to Moses and said "you maketh yourself God" and Moses never ever called himself by names or titles of God.
1 Corinthians 9:21 KJV
(21) To them that are without law, as without law, (being not without law to God, but under the law to Christ,) that I might gain them that are without law.
We have a different situation with Christ, whom John introduces as the Word who was God, and then ends his gospel with "my Lord and my God." If Jesus were not actually our God in the flesh (which it actually does say elsewhere) then it would be very important for Paul (and any other writer) to make that distinction clear.
So to me this is a fairly obvious correlation and evidence, it's another strand woven around all the others that are already there. I am not asking you to be persuaded by that passage. There's far stronger and more direct. That was an indirect reference I noticed in passing that I'd not noticed before.
Already answered that question.
The rider on the white horse of Rev 19:11-13 is the Lord Jesus Himself returning physically, bodily to planet earth to execute judgement at His second coming.
My objection, was with your argument that, since Paul used the term "Law of Christ", that indicates or somehow proves Christ's divinity. If using the term "Law Of Christ", suggests that Christ is God, then when the bible identifies God's law, as the "Law of Moses", that would also, following your line of reasoning, suggest Moses' is God. What's good for the goose, is good for the gander. If the term "Law of Christ" points to Christ's divinity, then "Law Of Moses" would point to Moses' divinity. I don't believe Christ or Moses are YHWH. I'm simply making an observation, of the implications of what you're proposing.