Ben Masada
New member
Repent and Be Saved.
Repent and Be Saved.
Psalm 22 could not mean any thing about Jesus. First of all, Psalm 22 is a reference to King David trying to escape his enemies. In the second stage, it is a reference to the Holocaust if you complete the reading of it with Psalm 44:14-24 as a reference to the People. It could not be Jesus because Jesus was not the only one to be crucified by the Romans. They crucified thousands of Jews only in the First Century, using the same means no different from Jesus.
The Scapegoat was Israel, the Ten Tribes when they were conquered by Assyria and removed to Assyria never to return. That's what Prophet Amos referred to when he said, "The virgin Israel is fallen." (Amos 5:2) As the Scapegoat was forced into the desert Eastward, every year as we celebrate Yom Kippur, Israel was sent Eastward to Assyria for good. That's when the Lord rejected the Tabernacle of Joseph and confirmed Judah to remain as a People before the Lord forever. (Psalm 78:67-70)
Repent and Be Saved.
He could have called upon 10 legions of angels. But he knew what Psalm 22 meant. And after all this time, you still don't. What is that about a snare?
Made up. The goat for the Lord is the one the sin goes to. This is why no man can take sin for another, only God can. And the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of David, is God in the flesh.
Psalm 22 could not mean any thing about Jesus. First of all, Psalm 22 is a reference to King David trying to escape his enemies. In the second stage, it is a reference to the Holocaust if you complete the reading of it with Psalm 44:14-24 as a reference to the People. It could not be Jesus because Jesus was not the only one to be crucified by the Romans. They crucified thousands of Jews only in the First Century, using the same means no different from Jesus.
The Scapegoat was Israel, the Ten Tribes when they were conquered by Assyria and removed to Assyria never to return. That's what Prophet Amos referred to when he said, "The virgin Israel is fallen." (Amos 5:2) As the Scapegoat was forced into the desert Eastward, every year as we celebrate Yom Kippur, Israel was sent Eastward to Assyria for good. That's when the Lord rejected the Tabernacle of Joseph and confirmed Judah to remain as a People before the Lord forever. (Psalm 78:67-70)