Yehovah is love. That simple statement explains why Yehovah created the universe as
we know it, and populated it with both spirit beings and human
beings. Furthermore, Yehovah gave those beings free will so He could
interact with them and they could serve Him and interact with Him
because they chose to out of love. Yehovah does not rule over His created
beings as a tyrant, but works with them and allows them to help Him
govern His created universe. For example, God gave Adam and Eve
rulership over the animals on earth (Genesis 1:28) and the
responsibility of managing His garden, the Garden of Eden (Genesis 2:15). As the population on earth increased, Yehovah commanded mankind to
appoint rulers and judges to help Him rule (Deuteronomy 16:18).
When
the Christian Church started, Yehovah again enlisted the aid of His
creation and set up the “equipping ministries” of apostles,
prophets, evangelists, pastors and teachers to help Him administer
the called-out Assembly and “to prepare Yehovah's people for works of service”
(Ephesians 4:11-13 NIV84). But humans are not the only ones Yehovah allows to
help Him rule. It is clear that when Yehovah created the universe He
enlisted the help of various spirit beings to help Him rule creation.
There
is good biblical evidence that Yehovah has a ruling council of spirit
beings with whom He consults. Of course, Yehovah would not need to have a
divine council, He is certainly capable of doing things on His own;
but having such a council is in harmony with His loving nature and
His desire to work together with His creation.
Ancient
Cultures and the Divine Council
Many
cultures recognize that there is some kind of divine council or
“council among the gods.” The online encyclopedia, Wikipedia,
notes: “The concept of a divine assembly (or council) is attested in the archaic Sumarian, Akkadian, Old
Babylonian, Ancient
Egyptian, Babylonian, Canaanite, Israelite, Celtic, Ancient Greek and
Ancient Roman and Nordic pantheons.”[1] The
testimony of these ancient cultures is important, because ancient
myths often have a kernel of truth in them. Especially when the myths
agree with the Bible on basic facts, such as in the ancient accounts
of the Flood, they add credence to what the Bible says. Actually, the
presence of those myths almost certainly shows that Yehovah was at work
in those ancient cultures, revealing Himself and His truth to them
and demonstrating His love for all mankind.
Before
we enter into a study on Yehovah’s divine council, it is helpful to
know the Hebrew word sōd (#5475
סוֹד,
pronounced sōd), which refers to a “council” or “divine
council,” and also sometimes to the results of the deliberation of
a divine council.
Psalm
89
There
are a large number of verses in the Bible that point to Yehovah having a
divine council with whom He consults. Psalm 89 has several references
to a divine council, some of which are very clear.
Psalm 89:5-8 (REV)[2]
5) Let the heavens praise your wonders, Yehovah,
your faithfulness, too, in the assembly of the holy ones.
6) For who in the skies can be compared to
Yehovah?
Who among the sons of Yehovah is like Yehovah,
7) a very awesome God in the council [sōd] of the holy ones
to be feared more than all those who are around him?
8) Yehovah, God of Armies, who is a powerful one like You, O Yah, and your faithfulness is all around you.
These
verses speak of the heavenly council and assembly of the spiritual
beings in heaven. In verse 5, the “heavens” that praise Yehovah is,
or in part is, a metonymy for the spiritual beings that inhabit
heaven. This is clear from the verb “praise” and the second
stanza in the verse, which speaks of the “assembly of the holy
ones,” an assembly of spiritual beings in heaven.
Psalm
89:6 refers to spiritual beings in the “skies” (or “clouds”)
and also to the “sons of Yehovah,” which is a phrase that refers to
the created beings of Yehovah (called “divine beings” in some English
versions). Then, from Psalm 89:7 we learn that there is a “council”
of these spirit beings; however, it is noteworthy that even though Yehovah’s council is around Him, Psalm 89:8 lets us know that none of Yehovah's council is as powerful (or “mighty”) as Yehovah.
Daniel’s
Heavenly Courtroom
In
Daniel 7, Yehovah gave Daniel a vision of the Last Days, and Daniel 7:10
and 26 portray the heavenly court that will convene at that time. In
Daniel 7:8, the man known as the “Little Horn,” one of the
biblical titles for the person commonly known as the Antichrist, was
speaking arrogantly against Yehovah. During that Last Time, Yehovah will sit
with His divine council and give judgment concerning the people on
earth.
Daniel 7:9, 10 (NIV84)
9) As I looked, “thrones were set in place, and the Ancient of Days took His seat. His clothing was as white as snow; the hair of his head was white like wool. His throne was flaming with fire, and its wheels were all ablaze.
10) A river of fire was flowing, coming out from before him. Thousands upon thousands attended him; ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him. The court was seated, and the books were opened.
We
notice in Daniel 7:9 that Yehovah is not the only one who has a throne.
There are other thrones for other judges. The Hebrew word translated
“court” in Daniel 7:10 and 26 refers to a council of judges
(Brown-Driver-Briggs
Hebrew and English Lexicon; Holliday
Hebrew-English Lexicon).
Daniel wanted to know more about the vision and asked about it, and
he was told:
Daniel 7:25, 26 (NIV84)
25) He [the Antichrist] will speak against the Most High and oppress his saints and try to change the set times and the laws. The saints will be handed over to him for a time, times and half a time.
26) “‘But the court will sit, and his power will be taken away and completely destroyed forever.
Daniel
7:10 and 26 both mention the “court” that sits in judgement of
the Antichrist. God could rule and judge on His own, but He does not
want to operate that way; He works in cooperation with His created
beings to restore and maintain order in the universe.
Isaiah
14 and the Devil
Isaiah
14:12-17 is about the Devil, whose description is well translated as
the “Shining One, son of the dawn” in Isaiah 14:12
(NET).[3] Millennia
ago, before his rebellion against Yehovah, he was part of Yehovah’s divine
council, and had a throne in heaven (Isaiah 14:13). But he became
filled with pride and wanted to be above the other angels, the “stars
of Yehovah” (Isaiah 14:13). In fact, it seems most likely that he wanted
to replace Yehovah as the Most High Yehovah.[4] We
see what the Devil was saying to himself in Isaiah 14:13 and 14.
Isaiah 14:13, 14 (NASB)
13) “But you said in your heart, ‘I will ascend to heaven; I will raise my throne above the stars of Yehovah, And I will sit on the mount of assembly in the recesses of the north.
14) ‘I will ascend above the heights of the clouds; I will make myself like the Most High.’
We
should pay special attention to the Devil saying, “I will sit on
the Mount of Assembly” (Isaiah 14:13 CJB). For one thing, the word
“sit” in this context of an assembly of gods means to have a
ruling position. The NET Bible even translates the phrase, “I will
rule on the mountain of the assembly.” In 1 Kings 22:19, in the
vision Yehovah gave Micaiah, Yahweh sat on His throne while the host of
heaven stood around Him.
Also,
the “Mount of Assembly” seems to be a special place where certain
select spiritual beings assemble to meet with God and help Him rule
creation. That is why the Devil wanted to be there and have his
throne “above the stars of Yehovah” who were assembled there.
According to Eastern custom and speech, saying that the Devil wanted
his throne “above” the other thrones did not mean “above” in
the sense of vertically in height (although there may have been a
vertical aspect to it at that particular place). Instead, it referred
to having his throne in a more important position than the other
thrones. We see this cultural use of “high” and “low” in
Jesus’ parable of the wedding feast (Luke 14:7-11). Jesus said when
you go to a feast, take the “lowest place” (Luke 14:10), and when
the host sees you there he will say, “Friend, go up higher,” and
“higher” means closer to the host himself. If the Devil could sit
“above” the other thrones, then he would consider himself “like
the Most High.”
The
“Mount of Assembly” seems to refer to a special assembly of
spirit beings, because if it only referred to a place where all of Yehovah’s spirit beings assembled, then the Devil would not have made
such a big deal about going there. As an important spirit being, he
would have already been invited to any general meeting of all the
spirit beings (cp. Job 1:6).
Jeremiah,
Job, and the Council of Yehovah
Jeremiah
23 contains a very important section of Scripture about Yehovah’s
divine council.
Jeremiah 23:16-18, 21, 22 (HCSB abridged)
16) This is what Yehovah of Hosts says: “Do not listen to the words of the prophets who prophesy to you. They are making you worthless. They speak visions from their own minds, not from Yehovah's mouth.
17) They keep on saying to those who despise Me, ‘Yehvoah has said: You will have peace.’ They have said to everyone who follows the stubbornness of his heart, ‘No harm will come to you.’”
18) For who has stood in the council [sōd] of Yehovah to see and hear His word? Who has paid attention to His word and obeyed?
21) I did not send these prophets, yet they ran with a message. I did not speak to them, yet they prophesied.
22) If they had really stood in My council [sōd], they would have enabled My people to hear My words and would have turned them back from their evil ways and their evil deeds.
In
Jeremiah 23, the false prophets spoke from their own minds and had
not “stood in the council [sōd]
of Yahweh” (Jerermiah 23:18). If they had stood in the divine council of
Yahweh, verse 22 says that they would have heard the truth and been
able to tell it to the people of Israel. These verses clearly
indicate that Yehovah has a council with whom He confers, and those
who stand in that council hear the truth. Yehovah’s prophets sometimes
are given access to the information in those council meetings, which
is why they can speak the truth.
The
book of Job also mentions the council of Yehovah. That is noteworthy
because Job likely lived around the time of Abraham and of some of
those ancient cultures whose mythology included a council of gods.
Job went through a terrible ordeal, and had to defend himself against
his three friends who were accusing him of sin. In Job 15:8 (HCSB),
Eliphaz was accusing Job and he asked, “Do you listen in on the
council [sōd]
of yehovah, or have a monopoly on wisdom?” Clearly Eliphaz believed
there was a divine council of Yehovah where the truth was spoken, and he
asked Job if he had listened in on those council meetings.
Assemblies of Spirit Beings
There
are verses in the Old Testament that show Yehvoah presiding over a large
assembly of spirit beings. These assemblies would include Yehovah’s
intimate divine council but seem to be bigger than just that intimate
group. For example, the prophet Micaiah had
a vision of Yehovah seated on a throne with “the whole army of
heaven” standing before Him (this is often translated: “the whole
host of heaven”). Yehovah confers with them about how to entice the
evil king Ahab to enter battle and be killed. Although it seems
certain that this “whole army” is bigger than Yehovah’s divine
council [sōd],
the council would have been part of that large meeting.
Job
1:6 and 2:1 describe the spirit beings assembling themselves before Yehovah. The wording of Job, that the “sons of Yehovah” (the created
beings of Yehovah, in Hebrew: bene
ha-elohim,
בְּנֵ֣י
הָאֱלֹהִ֔ים)
came before Yehovah, indicates a much larger gathering of the spirit
beings than just a divine council of Yehovah, yet, like the record in 1
Kings 22, it shows that Yehovah did meet with His created beings, and the
divine council would certainly have been at this meeting.
Psalm
82:1 mentions Yehovah taking his place in the edah-el(#5712;
#410 עֵדָה־אֵ֑ל),
a Hebrew phrase that means “assembly of gods,” “assembly of the
mighty,” or “great assembly.” Like in Job and Kings, this
appears to refer to a larger assembly than Yehovah’s intimate council,
as we can see from the context. Psalm 82 is important and gives us a
unique view into what goes on in the heavenly realm because it shows Yehovah reproving these “gods” for their unrighteousness. All the
spirit beings are created beings of Yehovah, but not all of them turned
out to be loving and obedient, and Yehovah calls these gods to account
and confronts them for their actions. Thus, the meeting mentioned in
Psalm 82 is somewhat similar to Job 1:6. In both Job and Psalms there
is a large assembly of gods and in both groups there are some of the
gods who are adversarial to the true God - Yehovah.
Yehovah rules over spirit beings of various ranks and powers who are
sometimes called “gods.” Indeed, there are many “gods” (1
Cor. 8:6). That is why Yehovah is called the “Most High”; because
He is far greater than all the other gods. In fact, Yehovah is called the
“Most High” more than 50 times in the Old Testament (Genesis 14:18). Not all of Yehvoah’s created spiritual beings have the same
rank or power, and that includes both the angelic world and demonic
world, which is why Ephesians 6:12 says Christians fight against
“rulers” (archē),
“authorities” (exousia)
and “world-rulers” (kosmokratōr).
Similarly, Colossians 1:16 mentions “thrones” (thronos),
lordships (kuriotēs),
rulers (archē)
and “authorities” (exousia),
and these are different positions of authority in the kingdom of Yehovah.
The biblical text shows that Yehovah holds large assemblies of His
created beings, but also has much smaller meetings with an intimate
council of His high-ranking and trusted ones.
“Let
Us”
Yehovah confers with and works together with a divine council. This explains
the verses where Yehovah says, “let us.” While Yehovah supplies the power
for what He does, He also works in concert with His creation. Thus,
in Genesis 1:26, He speaks to his divine council and says, “Let us
make man in our image.”[5] Although
some theologians think this use of “us” could be the plural of
majesty (also called the plural of emphasis), where Yehovah uses the
plural “us” to magnify Himself, that is not the case here. For
one thing, Hebrew scholars point out that there is no other example
of a speaker speaking in the plural while addressing himself as the
one being spoken to. If Yehovah says, “Let us make,” then He is
speaking to others. Even more to the point, however, is the work of
recent Hebrew scholars who show that the plural of majesty applies to
nouns but not verbs. “The plural of majesty does exist of nouns…but
Genesis 1:26 is not about nouns; the issue is the verbal forms.”[6] In
Genesis 1:26, the verb “make” in the phrase “Let us make,” is
plural, and so that is not a plural of majesty; that is Yehovah speaking
to others about making mankind.
The
most common objection to the “us” in Genesis 1:26 referring to
angels is that Scripture attests that Yehovah made mankind. But Yehovah could
easily have had a council with whom He conferred, but headed up the
council and did the work they decided upon. In fact, it is likely
that in Yehvoah’s divine council, as with many councils, the members do
not initiate or act as much as they support and give input, and come
to understand what Yehvoah is doing and why.
There
are a couple of other times in Scripture when Yehovah and those He works
with are referred to as “us.” For example, in Genesis 3:22, Yehovah says that the man “has become like one of us.” It seems highly
unlikely that Yehovah would be using a plural of majesty here. It seems
clear that Yehovah is speaking to His council and pointing out that Adam,
like them, now has full knowledge of good and evil. The council would
have become very aware of evil when the Devil sinned and rebelled.
Another
time when Yehovah uses “us” is Genesis 11:7. Genesis 11:1-9 is the
record of the tower of Babel. The people building the tower of Babel
had pride and evil desires. In response to their acting against His
purposes, Yehovah said, “Behold, they are one people, and they have all
one language, and this is only the beginning of what they will do.
And nothing that they propose to do will now be impossible for them”
(Genesis 11:6 ESV). It is clear Yehovah was speaking to His intimate divine
council who supported Him. Thus, in Genesis 11:7 (ESV), Yehovah continues, “Come, let us go down and there confuse their language,
so that they may not understand one another’s speech.” As in
Genesis 1:26, the verb “go down,” which is associated with “us,”
is plural, so this cannot be a plural of majesty. Since Yehovah often
works with angels to accomplish His purposes, like He did at Sodom
and Gomorrah (Gen. 19:13), we conclude that the “us” is the
divine council He was working with.
We
again see Yehovah speaking to others in Isaiah 6:8, and like in Genesis
11, who He is speaking to is not specifically stated. Yehovah wanted to
send someone to help Israel, so He asked for advice.
Isaiah 6:8 (ESV)
And I heard the voice of Yehovah saying, “Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?” Then I said, “Here I am! Send me.”
We
should first notice the interplay between the “I” in “Whom
shall I send,” and the “us” in “…who will go for us?” The
text is showing that Yehovah is in charge, but He is supported by, and
asking advice from, others. The context shows that Yehovah is appealing
to others who support Him in His desire to help Israel, and so the
“others” in this context cannot be the full assembly of spirits,
because some of them did not support Him. Given what we know about Yehovah’s divine council from other places in Scripture, it is logical
that Yehovah is speaking to His divine council and asking them about who
He could send to do His work.
The
record in Isaiah 6 seems to be exactly what Jeremiah 23:22, above, is
speaking about. Yehovah opened a view of heaven up to Isaiah, who saw Yehvoah in His Temple guarded by seraphs and speaking to His divine council
(Isa. 6:1-8). Because Isaiah “sat in on” that council meeting, he
offered to be the messenger and to bring the true words of Yehovah to the
people of Israel (Isaiah 6:9-13).
The
Watchers
Daniel
4 makes references to “the Watchers,” who in that context are
spirit beings who help to watch over Yehovah’s creation and make and
enforce decrees. There is a tremendous amount of insight that can be
gained from the record in Daniel 4. The word “watcher” is unique
to Daniel, and is a good example of Yehovah working with a person in
terms of his understanding. In this case, due to Nebuchadnezzar’s
Babylonian upbringing and culture, he would have already believed in
some sort of heavenly council, but he would have viewed any such
council in pagan terms, not the way the divine council is revealed in
the Jewish writings. So Yehovah gave His revelation dream to
Nebuchadnezzar in a way he could understand it, but that still fit
the truth of the situation, showing that Yehovah was ultimately in
control.
First,
Nebuchadnezzar describes his dream to Daniel, and tells Daniel about
the “watcher” he saw, who he also describes as a “holy one.”
Daniel 4:13, 14, (ESV)
13) “I saw in the visions of my head as I lay in bed, and behold, a watcher, a holy one, came down from heaven.
14) He proclaimed aloud and said thus: ‘Chop down the tree [Nebuchadnezzar himself] and lop off its branches, strip off its leaves and scatter its fruit.
Then
Daniel interprets Nebuchadnezzar’s dream and mentions that what is
about to happen to Nebuchadnezzar is “by the decree of the
watchers” but also a “decree of the Most High.”
Daniel 4:17, 23-25
17) The sentence is by the decree of the watchers, the decision by the word of the holy ones, to the end that the living may know that the Most High rules the kingdom of men and gives it to whom he will and sets over it the lowliest of men.’
23) And because the king saw a watcher, a holy one, coming down from heaven and saying, ‘Chop down the tree….
24) It is a decree of the Most High, which has come upon my lord the king,
25) that you shall be driven from among men, and your dwelling shall be with the beasts of the field…till you know that the Most High rules the kingdom of men….
The
decree the watcher enforces in Daniel 4 is called “the decree of
the watchers,” and “the decision by the word of the holy ones,”
but it is also called “a decree of the Most High.” This shows
that Yehovah is working with a council of spirit beings to make and
enforce decrees. The picture being drawn in Daniel is of a council
that works together to agree upon a decree, but ultimately it is “the
Most High” who rules the council, which then carries out His will.
Here again we see the importance of Yehovah being called “the Most
High.”
New Testament References to a Divine Council
The
New Testament has many clear references to the one who will head up Yehovah’s Divine Council: the lord Jesus God's anointed one. After his
resurrection, Jesus took command as Yehovah’s “right hand man,”
stating that “all authority in heaven and on earth has been given
to me” (Matt. 28:18 REV). Yehovah elevated Jesus and “seated him at
his right hand in the heavenly places,
far above every ruler, and authority, and power, and lordship, and
every name that
is named,
not only in this age, but in the coming one also, and he put all
things in subjection under his feet” (Ephesians 1:20-22 REV). Here again
we see the use of “above” as more than an elevation in height.
The Devil wanted to be “above” the stars of Yehovah (Isaiah 14:13); but
Jesus is “far above” every other earthly and heavenly being, he
is the unique, one of a kind son of God and sits at His right hand. The very
fact that Yehovah was willing to give His son authority over His other
“sons” (created beings) shows that He works with others to rule
His creation; which is good support for His working with a Divine
Council in the Old Testament.
The
authority that God gave to Jesus is very clearly portrayed in the New
Testament in that it is Jesus God's anointed onet who created the spiritual powers
known as “thrones,” “lordships,” “rulers” and
“authorities” for the called-out Assembly today, as per Colossians
1:16.[7] Also,
Jesus is the one who appoints the equipping ministries in the called-out Assembly.
Ephesians 4:7, 11, and 12 (REV) says, “Now each one of us has been
given grace according to the measured portion of God's anointed one’s gift. And
he gave some apostles, and some, prophets, and some, evangelists, and
some, pastors and teachers, for the equipping of the holy ones for
the work of ministry, with a view to the building up of the body of God anointed one.”
Jesus God's anointed one heads up Yehovah’s Divine Council, and there are other New
Testament references that infer it exists. For one thing, the New
Testament continues the use of the term “Most High” or “Most
High God” when referring to the true God = Yehovah(Mark 5:7; Luke 8:28; Acts
7:48; 16:17; Heb. 7:1), indicating that the New Testament writers
acknowledged that there are other “gods” besides Him. Although it
has been assumed by many Christians that the other “gods” are
demons, there is no reason to assume that all the other gods have to
be demons, especially in light of the Old Testament references to a
divine council of gods.
Also,
the New Testament shows that there are 24 elders who sit on thrones
around the throne of Yehovah (Revelation 4:4). Based on the vocabulary involved
and what these “elders” do, E. W. Bullinger concluded that “These
elders are the heads of the heavenly priesthood…the princely
leaders, rulers, and governors of Heaven’s worship. They are kings
and priests. They…are not redeemed…They are heavenly unfallen
beings…as ‘elders’ they are also rulers.”[8] It
seems logical that the 24 elders sitting on thrones around the throne
of Yehovah are part of Yehovah’s divine council. In fact, they are likely
part of the same group of spiritual elders as the ones who sat on the
thrones spoken of in Daniel 7:9.
That Yehovah ruled through “rulers” explains why the New Testament uses
the word “archangel” (1 Thess. 4:16; Jude 1:9), which in Greek is
a compound word built from archē(ruler)
and angelos (angel).
“Archangel” refers to a ruling angel. While it would be possible
that ruling angels were not part of a special council of Yehovah, since
the Old Testament clearly refers to such a council, it makes sense
that the ruling angels would be a part of it.
Conclusion
There
is a lot of evidence that Yehovah works with an inner council of spirit
beings to rule His creation. This is not only supported by Scripture,
but it is in harmony with God’s loving nature. Just like Yehovah asks
man to help rule over mankind, which is why He supports righteous
rulers, God has spirit beings, now headed up by Jesus His anointed one, who
help Him rule over His creation. Also, although there is ample
scriptural support for Yehovah’s divine council, there is not an
overemphasis on it. An overemphasis on Yehovah’s divine council would
detract from the honor due Yehovah. Yehovah is still the Creator, the Most
High, and the One who should get glory from both spirit beings and
human beings.
Endnotes:
[1] “Divine
Council” (accessed 3-31-15; wikipedia.org/wiki/Divine_Council)
[2] There
are many different English versions of the Bible used in this
article. That is primarily due to the fact that the subject of God’s
divine council is not well known and even less understood, and so
verses are often translated much more clearly in one version than
another. In this article we are trying to choose the translations
that communicate the subject matter the most clearly.
[3] Isaiah
14 opens with a taunt-song against the king of Babylon (14:4), but in
14:12 the vocabulary of the text implies that the subject has
switched from the king of Babylon to the evil spiritual power behind
the king, i.e., the Devil himself. He was the morning star, “son of
the dawn,” who had fallen from his position in heaven due to his
pride. This section of Isaiah is similar to Ezekiel 28:11-19 in which
the “king of Tyre” is put for the evil power behind the king of
Tyre, the Devil.
[4] In
Isaiah 14:14, the Devil says, “I will make myself like the Most
High.” The Devil is evil, and full of pride and selfish ambition,
so it seems that he would never be satisfied until he actually took
God’s place, and there are many commentators who assert that the
Devil’s desire is to take over God’s position as the “Most
High.”
Nevertheless, the wording of the text leaves the door open
for the Devil to be saying to himself that he wants to be like the
Most High by being over the other “stars” (angels) of Yehovah; in
other words, reigning over the other spirit beings along with Yehovah.
John Watts writes: “[Hans] Wildberger properly notes that the OT
knows nothing of attempts to dethrone YHWH = Yehovah but often voices the wish
of people and tyrants “to be like Yehovah….” (John Watts, Word
Biblical Commentary: Isaiah 1-33;
Thomas Nelson, Nashville, 2005, p. 265). It is even possible that the
Devil was lying to himself in saying that he only wanted to be “like Yehovah,” but would not have been satisfied once he attained that
elevated position and so would have then aspired to “be Yehovah.”
[5] Many
Trinitarians believe that “Yehovah” worked together with the other
“Persons” in the Trinity when He created things, and they point
to Genesis 1:26 as a proof text for their argument. However, scholars
readily acknowledge that this interpretation is erroneous. Recently,
Michael Heiser, a Trinitarian theologian, wrote: “technical
research in Hebrew grammar and exegesis has shown that the Trinity is
not a coherent explanation. …Seeing the Trinity in Genesis 1:26 is
reading the New Testament back into the Old Testament, something that
isn’t a sound interpretive method….” (Michael Heiser, The
Unseen Realm;
Lexham Press, Bellingham, WA, 2015, p. 39).
[6] ibid.,
p. 39.
[7] Colossians
1:16 is not talking about Yehovah’s original creation in Genesis 1:1,
it is speaking of the positions in heaven and earth that needed to be
set up in order for the called-out Assembly to function. See the commentary on
Colossians 1:16 at www.revisedenglishversion.com.
[8] E.
W. Bullinger, Commentary
on Revelation (Kregel
Publications, Grand Rapids, 1984, reprint of 1935 edition) pp.
218-220.
Edited by Bruce Lyon
Edited by Bruce Lyon
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