



Dake Bible Discussion Board
A Board devoted to the study of God's Word in honor of Finis J Dake.
www.DakeBible.com LOWEST prices and LARGEST inventory of Dake Bibles!
Brother Fisher,fatherfisher wrote:To me, the texts do suggest that both Moses and Elijah showed up in tangible physical bodies. The reason I believe this is the fact that Peter wanted to build three tabernacles (or shelters)... One for Jesus, one for Moses, and one for Elijah. To me, it's clear that Peter thought both Moses and Elijah were there in tangible physical bodies. Otherwise, he wouldn't have thought they needed shelters.
They were not "shelters". They were meant to be tabernacles or memorials of this event (Peter actually didn't know what to say other than something like "Let's remember this occasion forever"). There is no connection to physical bodies whatsoever.
Moses wouldn't have needed to have partaken of the Fist Resurrection in order to appear on the mount any more than Elijah would have to have partaken. The scriptures give at least a few examples of folks being raised from the dead prior to Jesus' resurrection.
But Elijah didn't die. Moses did. And any others raised prior to Jesus' resurrection died again; Jesus was the first to rise from the dead in a glorified body, never to die again.
If a dead person were raised to life before Jesus was raised from the dead and caught up to Heaven like Enoch and Elijah, they could continue living in their natural bodies indefinitely.
Enoch and Elijah were not raised to life; they never died.
The idea of the First Resurrection does not prevent this any more than it prevented Jesus from raising Lazarus from the dead. Had Lazarus been caught up like Enoch and Elijah, he could still be alive in a natural body, in Heaven.
Lazarus was not caught up.
Those of us that that believe (like Clarence Larkin, see page 85 of his book, The Book of Revelation) that God raised Moses from the dead and took Moses to Heaven after Michael and Satan disputed over Moses' body are not required to believe that Moses was given an immortal body any more than we are required to believe that Enoch and Elijah were given immortal bodies when they were caught up.
Moses died and God buried the body. Nothing in the Bible hints at the fact that He changed His mind and raised him bodily from the dead.
And if God had raised Moses from the dead after making sure he was buried, then He certainly would have had to give Moses an immortal body, according to 1 Cor. 15.50: "Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God; nor does corruption inherit incorruption". Enoch and Elijah did not require immortal bodies because they never died. Moses died and his body was buried. Completely different circumstances.
The idea of the First Resurrection does not in any way preclude the idea of Moses being raised from the dead and then taken to Heaven in a natural body.
Yes it does, for the reasons I have given. A non-glorified Moses could not be in heaven bodily. A glorified Moses had to await the resurrection of Jesus.
Hi Ed,Justaned wrote:First of all let me say we are building boxes that we are not qualified to build.
Notice how we say with certainity if x then y can't happen? Yet scripture says with God all things are possible. So while man may say if x then y can't happen scripture says with God if x then y may or may not happen.
We know Enoch and Elijah did not die on earth, they were caught up with God. Did they die on the way? Possible we don't know.
Are they alive but in a section of heaven that they can exist as moral man? Possible.
Have they died and been given a spiritual body much like the Angels that manifested in the past had? Again possible.
Are there only two or three states of man, alive, dead, glorified body, or is there more? Possible.
Now let get our heads out of philosphical debates and back to the word.
The thread is WHO IS GREATER: MOSES OR PAUL
I cautioned everyone to be careful, that I didn't think either PAUL nor MOSES would approve of this discussion.
Here is a verse I want you all to think about.
Romans 14:4 (NASB)
4 Who are you to judge the servant of another? To his own master he stands or falls; and he will stand, for the Lord is able to make him stand.
Since Moses and Paul were both servants of the Lord I think any discussion such as this one falls within the range of the this verse. Don't you?
I believe God buried Moses because he did not want the Children of Israel to end up worshipping Moses. I believe that is still true today. The debate is not which is greater, both were servants of God. God should be our focus not any of his servants.
While I'm on this soap box let me say that is problem with many today with preachers, they attend or follow a mere servant and miss following the servants master. If you get my point. Our focus is not to be on man, whether a great preacher or Moses that lead the Children of Israel to freedom, not on Paul the writter of a big part of the New Testament. Our focus and energy should be on God the master of all these men.
THUD! That was me getting off my soapbox.
Biblemanbibleman wrote:Hi Ed,Justaned wrote:First of all let me say we are building boxes that we are not qualified to build.
Notice how we say with certainity if x then y can't happen? Yet scripture says with God all things are possible. So while man may say if x then y can't happen scripture says with God if x then y may or may not happen.
We know Enoch and Elijah did not die on earth, they were caught up with God. Did they die on the way? Possible we don't know.
Are they alive but in a section of heaven that they can exist as moral man? Possible.
Have they died and been given a spiritual body much like the Angels that manifested in the past had? Again possible.
Are there only two or three states of man, alive, dead, glorified body, or is there more? Possible.
Now let get our heads out of philosphical debates and back to the word.
The thread is WHO IS GREATER: MOSES OR PAUL
I cautioned everyone to be careful, that I didn't think either PAUL nor MOSES would approve of this discussion.
Here is a verse I want you all to think about.
Romans 14:4 (NASB)
4 Who are you to judge the servant of another? To his own master he stands or falls; and he will stand, for the Lord is able to make him stand.
Since Moses and Paul were both servants of the Lord I think any discussion such as this one falls within the range of the this verse. Don't you?
I believe God buried Moses because he did not want the Children of Israel to end up worshipping Moses. I believe that is still true today. The debate is not which is greater, both were servants of God. God should be our focus not any of his servants.
While I'm on this soap box let me say that is problem with many today with preachers, they attend or follow a mere servant and miss following the servants master. If you get my point. Our focus is not to be on man, whether a great preacher or Moses that lead the Children of Israel to freedom, not on Paul the writter of a big part of the New Testament. Our focus and energy should be on God the master of all these men.
THUD! That was me getting off my soapbox.
Above you said: "First of all let me say we are building boxes that we are not qualified to build. Notice how we say with certainity if x then y can't happen? Yet scripture says with God all things are possible. So while man may say if x then y can't happen scripture says with God if x then y may or may not happen."
So are you saying that when God says something in Scripture... that HE does NOT have to do what HE says?
We also offer books by
Smith
Wigglesworth,
R.
A. Torrey,
Clarence Larkin and
Kenneth Hagin up to 50% off!
Companion Bibles and books by
E.W. Bullinger and
E.W. Kenyon also available at discounted prices!
This Board managed by http://www.DakeBible.com