Peter called the followers of Jesus "Christians" in 1 Peter 4:16. So yes, the disciples did use this term - eventually, once it was coined.I don't think the disciples called themselves Christians. Mull that over for awhile, if you would.
Peter called the followers of Jesus "Christians" in 1 Peter 4:16. So yes, the disciples did use this term - eventually, once it was coined.I don't think the disciples called themselves Christians. Mull that over for awhile, if you would.
Don't say "is" - that is your opinion.Roman's 14 is referring to something in particular, so that is stretching the context there.
You're right. Seems they did accept it.Peter called the followers of Jesus "Christians" in 1 Peter 4:16. So yes, the disciples did use this term - eventually, once it was coined.
True. They called themselves primarily followers of "The Way," and also frequently used the Hebraic-mindset-oriented servant-description, that they "came in the Name of" their Master, Yahushua. (the name 'jesus' didn't appear for another 16 centuries, and followed the introduction of the letter 'j' in the English language (It wasn't in the 1599 Geneva, but was in the 1619 KJV.)I don't think the disciples called themselves Christians. Mull that over for awhile, if you would.
My understanding (subject to change - it's NOT confirmable via Scripture explicitly) is that 'christian' was first used as a pejorative, then ultimately became a "red badge of courage" - to use a much later metaphor.You're right. Seems they did accept it.
That's pretty much how I would also define a Christian.A Christian is one who has submitted to the Most High as Lord over their life and believed on the finished work of Jesus.
What if being a Christian means resting on and in the Man Himself, rather than a particular day?But I will note, speaking ONLY for "me and my house," that if being 'christian' meansworshipingresting on sunday, rather than the Sabbath He Himself kept, and said to keep 'forever,' than I am NOT one of those. (Most of those 'churches' wouldn't accept my wives anyway!)
What if it means discerning between the Real Messiah, and everything He said, rather than "another jesus"?What if being a Christian means resting on and in the Man Himself, rather than a particular day?
Your refusal to answer is telling.What if it means discerning between the Real Messiah, and everything He said, rather than "another jesus"?
I DID answer. That's why He said the "path is NARROW," and "few there be that find it."Your refusal to answer is telling.
IncorrectI DID answer. That's why He said the "path is NARROW," and "few there be that find it."
I get the impression there are some who prefer to be entangled in the yoke of bondage rather than stand fast in the liberty there is in Christ.Somehow, I always get the gut impression that you probably haven't yet found the True Sabbath Rest of Christ.
I see you have made a clever attempt to resurrect the Old Torah Observance debate, and you succeeded in that attempt, but it looks like the debate didn't go exactly as you had hoped. Perhaps we can start a debate on what this word "YAHushuWaH" is supposed to mean! We are better off focussing on what we agree on, and we will NEVER accomplish anything if we continue to have internal strife. "But if you bite and devour one another, watch out that you are not consumed by one another." Gal 5:15How do reconcile what you assert here
With what the master said here....
Then said Jesus to those Jews which believed on him, If ye continue in my word, [then] are ye my disciples indeed; And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free. — John 8:31-32 KJV
"If you love Me, keep My commands."You did not answer the question about resting in the Man Himself vs resting on a particular day.
You are, in fact, very wrong, and forgiven. I refer to the deceptive doctrine that inverts the message of Galatians as arguably the "most twisted" in Scripture. "Been there, done that," and the T-shirt is banned besides.Please forgive me if I am wrong, but I am concerned you may hold to something similar to the false gospel Paul opposed in the book of Galatians, and may lead others into error.
There's no 'debate' - it's Hebrew 101. And Matthew 1:21 tells us* that His Name literally means His mission: He is 'Yahu-shua' because He is the 'shua' (salvation) of Yah. (And note that the name of the prophet who wrote so much about Him has the name which is a virtual anagram, Yeshe-Yahu, and means, "Salvation is of Yahu.")Perhaps we can start a debate on what this word "YAHushuWaH" is supposed to mean!
You are correct, it is Ἰησοῦς Χριστός. But the translations vary depending on the language it's translated into.And it doesn't say the modern 'jesus' in ANY version for the first 16 centuries.
Which is ironic, because it's not SUPPOSED to. Proper nouns are to be transliterated, to reflect phonetic pronunciation in the new character set. Or just left alone. Or given a rendering AND explanation, as for the prophetic in Matthew 1:23.You are correct, it is Ἰησοῦς Χριστός. But the translations vary depending on the language it's translated into.
He says, "don't murder." I hope we can all see that. "Don't commit adultery." We all here know that does NOT mean what the Whore Church now claims. But still, whatever it means, don't do it. "Don't steal," (unless you steal elections first.)I get the impression there are some who prefer to be entangled in the yoke of bondage rather than stand fast in the liberty there is in Christ... [followed by a prime example of that 'twisting'!]