May
13
2010
or Jesus, the Destroying Angel
James Jordan says the Revelation is like one of those old human anatomy teaching aids, the ones with layers of acetate. One starts with the skeleton and overlays the nervous system, arteries, organs, etc. They are all connected and yet each is a system that is individually identifiable. This is literature that is irreducibly complex.
Continue reading
1 comment | tags: AD70, Creation Week, James Jordan, Jericho, Jezebel, John, Lampstand, Literary Structure, Revelation, Totus Christus | posted in Biblical Theology
May
8
2010
or Plagues, Plunder and Platoons
“And the posts of the door were shaken by the voice of him who cried out, and the house was filled with smoke.” Isaiah 6:4
“The temple was filled with smoke from the glory of God and from His power, and no one was able to enter the temple till the seven plagues of the seven angels were completed.” Revelation 15:8
Step 5 in the Bible matrix appears to be the trickiest. Out of the seven points, it was the last one James Jordan figured out (see his article Re-Creation in the Ascension Offering.)
This step concerns the Covenant “body.” It is fundamentally “plural.” It concerns armies, or “hosts.” The symbols all picture multitudes, so some unlikely companions are tied together here: birds and fish, incense clouds, brothers, soldiers, and cold, hard cash.
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: Bible Matrix, Creation Week, Isaiah, Leviticus, Revelation | posted in Biblical Theology
May
4
2010
For he is our peace, who has made us both one, and has broken down the dividing wall of hostility, by abolishing in his flesh the law of commandments and ordinances, that he might create in himself one new man in place of the two, so making peace, and might reconcile us both to God in one body through the cross, thereby bringing the hostility to an end. And he came and preached peace to you who were far off and peace to those who were near; for through him we both have access in one Spirit to the Father. (Ephesians 2:14-18)
So, the New Jerusalem—at least the way it is described in Revelation 21—is the culmination of all the “Day 6s” since the original in the Garden of Eden. And, like the walls of water at the Red Sea and Jordan crossings, this entire, miraculous arrangement is held together by the Mediator-Man, the Lamb standing at the centre.
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: 666, AD70, Ezra, Genesis, Herod, Nehemiah, oikoumene, Revelation, Solomon, Totus Christus | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days, The Restoration Era, Totus Christus
May
3
2010
“Blessed are the meek, For they shall inherit the Land.” (Matthew 5:5)
Some more thoughts related to Walking on Water. Please read Joshua 3 before proceeding.
If the New Jerusalem is the fulfilment of the “wall of water” at the Jordan crossing, the Lamb at the centre of the city is the Ark in the middle of the riverbed, surrounded by a human government. [1] If you know your James Jordan, the Ark of the Covenant was an image of the Light that shone on Day 1. The Lamb remains at the centre of the city, surrounded by the firstfruits saints, until the last saint is redeemed and Christ hands the kingdom to the Father.
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: Against Hyperpreterism, Ark of the Covenant, Atonement, Communion, Hezekiah, James Jordan, Joshua, Melchizedek, Resurrection, Revelation, Satan | posted in Against Hyperpreterism, Biblical Theology, The Last Days
Apr
9
2010
Band of Brothers – 2
Part 1 here.
One thing the Bible Matrix demonstrates is the nature of history. Sure, it repeats itself. Everyone knows that. But our personal histories are microcosms of the lives and deaths of families, churches, nations and empires. Reading the Bible is like looking through a glass onion.
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: Abel, Ahab, Bible history, Bible Matrix, Cain, David, Firstfruits, Genesis, Herod, Jezebel, Jonathan, Lamech, Postmillennialism, Revelation, Seth, Solomon, Systematic typology | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days, Totus Christus
Mar
15
2010
Okay, so The Earth is Flat after all. The Atlar’s being a symbol of the mediatorial Land, (a priesthood between the heavenly sky and Gentile sea) is the key to a fair amount of weird stuff in the Bible. It also means that a lot of what goes on in the Torah is the key to understanding some later enigmatic events.
The Bronze Altar had a grate inside it to support the sacrifice. The ashes would fall through the holes in the grate and the smoke would rise as a pleasing aroma to God.
In Numbers 16, concerning the rebellion of Korah and his sons, after the “censer” showdown between them and Aaron, the ground opened up and swallowed their tents, all their belongings and their families. However, fire consumed the wannabe priests who were offering the “false” incense. Even the rebellion was divided according to the priestly divisions within Israel. Ashes and smoke. [1]
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: Aaron, Crucifixion, Korah, Liturgy, Revelation, Tabernacle, Zechariah | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days
Feb
9
2010
The astral bodies signified those who are glorified and exalted. While this is true of all the saints, it is also true of all human rulers as well. Revelation 1:20 says that the rulers of the church are like stars, and Jude 13 says that apostate teachers are “wandering stars.” —James B. Jordan, Through New Eyes, p. 55.
Jude’s epistle follows the themes of the Bible matrix. In Adam’s pattern, the first half (forming) was good, but he forfeited the glories of the last half (filling). Like God, he was to create with a faithful Covenant word. His failure made him a false prophet, one who cries “peace, peace” when Leviathan is at the gate.
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: Balaam, Bible Matrix, Creation, Jude, Korah, Revelation, Tabernacle | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days
Feb
2
2010
41. The cities of the nations never fell in A.D. 70 (Rev. 16: 19).
This is a symbolic passage, but when we understand its nature, its message is astonishing. The reference to Jerusalem being divided into three parts alludes to Deuteronomy 19:3 concerning cities of refuge. There is also a “trinitarian” judgment in Ezekiel 5. Both are the outflow of the structure of the Tabernacle, which in turn images the pattern of heaven. This verse in Revelation 16 is, ironically, at the Tabernacle/Ascension step in this matrix pattern:
Continue reading
2 comments | tags: AD70, Dispensationalism, Ezekiel, Melchizedek, Revelation | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days, Totus Christus
Jan
8
2010
[Link to parts 1 and 2.]
In Revelation 4-5, Jesus ascends and opens the New Covenant scroll (Firstfruits). As Moses, He then opens the Law to Israel (Pentecost). These open seals lead into the partial judgments of the Trumpets. They summon a new generation of Israel and warn the old. The last trumpet, as in Joshua, is itself “seven thunders” (John’s “Little Book”) that bring total destruction to the defiant city, in this case, Herod’s Babylon (Atonement). This is the last trumpet Paul referred to.[1]
Continue reading
Comments Off | tags: Elijah, Feasts, James Jordan, Moses, Peter Leithart, Revelation | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days
Jan
7
2010
Revelation can’t be fully appreciated without attention to its literary structure. I’m no expert, but have a gander at this…
Continue reading
4 comments | tags: AD70, Atonement, David Chilton, Feasts, James Jordan, Literary Structure, Pentecost, Revelation | posted in Biblical Theology, The Last Days, Totus Christus