Hi , this is a part of an email sent by my bro to a 'friend ' The ' friend ' needs some help in pulling his arguments apart . Any takers ? :)) Btw , the 'friend' is a pretend Bible study , ex catholic :))
Thanks
Leo999
You still ask about the 144000 J . So I was doing some research for you, and trying to think of some things to tell you, just now, while it was fresh in my mind. - I can understand that all this is a bit new for you, and different to Christendom’s ideas.
To understand better I always like to look at the timeline. I think you accept that the first person to go to heaven was Jesus because no scriptures from the Old Testament talked about heavenly life. So that means that the concept was new to Jesus early disciples. Remember about Lazarus, -how he was dead 3 days, Mary said I know he will rise in the resurrection on the last day. (So for him resurrection wasn’t automatic. -to contrast with the ideas of Christendom- the ‘immortal soul’ idea -that you can’t die.) Lazarus did die; -so why didn’t he go to heaven then? , And why didn’t Jesus say that he had gone to heaven (as he was a good man). The answer is because Jesus hadn’t yet died as ‘first fruits’ from the dead. -So heaven isn’t automatic for all good people (as Christendom says). And only those who died after Jesus could go to heaven.
As for the verses in John (6:52-71) -the question is, whom was he actually talking to? The disciples believed in what Jesus said -but the rest went off stumbled at what he said. (Vs. 70 says “I chose 12…” -so clearly many there present actually weren’t chosen to receive the heavenly calling -but apparently only the 12. So heaven wasn’t automatic for all. So the point is that Jesus was in reality only speaking to his true disciples, -not to the people in general, -both the crowd then, and millions in Christendom today. .
But many in Christendom have clung to this idea, -without qualifying in their lifestyles, to qualify to actually gain that privilege. (EG. Do the people engaging in wars, etc, and all the other evil things done today in society, actually think they really going to go to heaven?? When God condemns these sorts of things. (1 Cor6: 9-11) Hardly!)- Yet 1 billion people take (or should take) communion!
Did the sister refer to the ‘Reasoning’ book? -Just to quote a point …(around p166)
Matt. 25:31-33, 40, 46: “When the Son of man arrives in his glory, and all the angels with him, then he will sit down on his glorious throne. And all the nations will be gathered before him, and he will separate people one from another, just as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats. And he will put the sheep on his right hand, but the goats on his left. . . . The king will say to them [the sheep], ‘Truly I say to you, To the extent that you did it to one of the least of these my brothers, you did it to me.’ And [the goats] will depart into everlasting cutting-off, but the righteous ones [the sheep] into everlasting life.” (Notice that these “sheep” are not the same as the King’s brothers, who are “partakers of the heavenly calling.” [Heb. 2:10–3:1]
But these sheep like ones would be alive during the time that Christ was on his throne and during the time when some of his “brothers” would still be experiencing hardship on earth.)
As for the number being literal … Is thenumber144,000merelysymbolic?
The answer is indicated by the fact that, after mention of the definite number 144,000, Revelation 7:9 refers to “a great crowd, which no man was able to number.” If the number 144,000 were not literal it would lack meaning as a contrast to the “great crowd.” Viewing the number as literal agrees with Jesus’ statement at Matthew 22:14 regarding the Kingdom of the heavens: “There are many invited, but few chosen.”
Do thoseofthe“greatcrowd”referredtoatRevelation7:9, 10 alsogotoheaven?
Revelation does not say of them, as it does of the 144,000, that they are “bought from the earth” to be with Christ on heavenly Mount Zion.—Rev. 14:1-3.
The description of them as “standing before the throne and before the Lamb” indicates, not necessarily a location, but an approved condition. (Compare Revelation 6:17; Luke 21:36.) The expression “before the throne” (Greek, e·no´pi·ontouthro´nou; literally, “in sight of the throne”) does not require that they be in heaven. Their position is simply “in sight” of God, who tells us that from heaven he beholds the sons of men.—Ps. 11:4; compare Matthew 25:31-33; Luke 1:74, 75; Acts 10:33.
Rev. 20:6: “They will be priests of God and of the Christ, and will rule as kings with him for the thousand years.” (Also Daniel 7:27)
1 Cor. 6:2: “Do you not know that the holy ones will judge the world?”
Rev. 5:10: “You made them to be a kingdom and priests to our God, and they are to rule as kings over [“on,” RS,KJ,Dy; “over,” AT,Da,Kx,CC] the earth.” (The same Greek word and grammatical structure is found at Revelation 11:6. There RS,KJ,Dy, etc., all render it “over.”)
I just cut and paste the above from that book, to help you. This seems to be the bit that is relevant, but the whole book, is excellent to cover these deep points. J I hope I have sort of covered most of your points. Some of this will fit together in your mind better, later on as more of the fundamental truths get clearer in your mind, -even if you cant fully grasp all of these details right now. Remember that Jesus disciples often, at the time, didn’t understand all what Jesus was saying, but later on did