Another program powered by the Truth Network. It's Matt Slick live. Matt is the founder and president of the Christian Apologetics Research Ministry, found online at karm.org. When you have questions about Bible doctrines, turn to Matt Slick live.
Francis, taking your calls and responding to your questions at 877-207-2276. Here's Matt Slick. Everybody, welcome to the show.
It's me, Matt Slick, and you're listening to Matt Slick live. Today's date is January 21st, 2025. Man, I am so glad things are happening the way they are. I know a lot of people out there having conniption fits about Trump and everything. I'm delighted. I was telling my wife today, I said that, you know, what if a bunch of us were just sitting around having dinner back, you know, a few years ago and just fantasizing about some of the things we wish would happen in our country like closing the borders and getting rid of the drug cartels and open up drilling so the prices can come back. You know, all this stuff.
But it would never happen. And it is. And I'm delighted. I know that a lot of you maybe not.
I don't know. But that's me. I'm delighted.
And so hopefully God will be glorified in everything. And we will see how things are going. If you want to give me a call, the number is 877-207-2276. And we are having a little bit of a difficulty on Club Deck or Clubhouse. I do it on the computer. We ended up being on my computer and it broke. I have to go into the registry and edit out all of the past stuff that's in there and then reboot the system and do all this stuff. It's a computer tech thing.
Good thing I used to be a computer tech so it kind of works out. And I'll get that going. But for now, if you want to listen or you want to watch the show, you can do that by just going to rumble.com forward slash mattslicklive, all one word, YouTube. I think we have the same thing, mattslicklive and stuff like that. So a lot of things are happening at the CARM intergalactic headquarters. And so we've been working with something called SEMrush to go in and find the problems with the site. We've been working on it for I guess two or three months now. And our percentage of site health, that's what it is, has gone way up.
So that's really good. We're going to be doing a lot more stuff too. And like I said before, we're in the market for hiring a kind of operations director.
I don't know what to call it, but basically it's someone who doesn't mind doing a whole bunch of different things that I don't want to do. It's like pay the missionaries. I mean, I don't mind. I mean, all these technical things that I should be doing, writing and research, but just all kinds of stuff like that and working with Laura and others about getting the site back in shape, learning how to monetize X and Facebook and other things, researching things like how to rent, add space to different sites so we can get the CARM site out there, developing manuals, just a whole bunch of different kind of things.
And the thing about the job, it would be a lot of it repetitious, but a lot of it would just be brand new. The way it is, I know because I've been doing this for years, it's so often the case, I'll just say to the guys I'm working with, the guys and gals, I'll say, okay, I'll figure it out. I don't know how to do it. I'll just figure it out. And I just sit down and sort of Googling something, figure this out, watching videos, trying to figure things out, how to do something on the site, how to whatever. And so when I'm doing that, I'm not writing, I'm not researching, I'm not teaching.
And we want to get me back on the side while doing those other things. So if that sounds interesting to you, it'll be a paid position and you can just send a resume to info at CARM.org. You have to be very, very, very dedicated to the Lord, very, very serious about this. I tell people that when they work with CARM, sometimes it can come under spiritual attack.
So if you're married, your spouse would have to know that. And also you have to agree with the statement of faith. And you can go to the CARM website, C-A-R-M.O-R-G, and just do a search for a statement of faith. And you can read through it.
It's lengthy, very lengthy. But you'll find that there's room in there for variations of orthodoxy. Like you could believe in Preacher of Rapture, it's not even a problem.
We don't here at CARM. But if you believe it, okay, whatever. Just things like that. We think they're within the orthodoxy and don't make or break someone as a Christian or things like that. I'm reformed by theology and you don't have to be. So it's just stuff.
But the statement of faith goes through that. And we go through and talk about all kinds of stuff like that. All right, let's get on the air with someone really special.
Someone I've known for years and years. Hey Eric, welcome. You're back on buddy. Hey Matt, how are you doing? You know me, just busy. Always doing something. Always busy. Not like you. I know you relax a lot.
You don't do anything. Oh yeah. I mean there's not much that we're doing compared to what you have to do and all the, I mean a lot of things that you are privileged to do and God has used your ministry in many ways. And yours too. You know, More Medicine Research Ministry. You and Bill work at MRM.org, More Medicine Research Ministry. You guys do a great job. I was just promoting you guys over the weekend.
People were asking me, I was online and they were saying, where's a really good resource for Mormonism? And I said, just go to MRM. You know, I said, I got stuff, but you guys are the experts.
So yeah. Well, we, we appreciate you telling people about what we're all about. Well, hey, I'm calling because I want to let your listeners know I talked to you a couple of weeks ago about the trip to Jordan that we are going to be doing in November this year with Joel Kramer. It's a 12 day trip. And you're going to be going on that trip.
And so I just wanted to let people know that over the last two weeks you have nine people going with you and we're down to only 10 spots left right now. And so if people are interested in this trip, they really ought to look at the website. It's 2025jordan.com and they can learn all about this trip. We're going to be seeing a lot of sites like Peniel, like Mount Nebo, Sodom, Gomorrah, Lot's Cave, spending an entire day at Petra.
But those are great sites. But the enticement to go is a guy named Joel Kramer, a biblical archeologist who will be guiding us on this trip. He is originally from my state here of Utah and became a biblical archeologist some 15 years ago. And he has a YouTube channel with 775,000 plus subscribers called Expedition Bible. I'd encourage anybody to go to Expedition Bible and see Joel.
And once you have heard Joel, you're going to want to go on a trip where you're going to learn about the Old Testament. But yeah, only 10 spots left. And if somebody is really interested, they ought to go on now and get the spots while they're available because also a week from now, week and a half from now on the 31st, the price is actually going to go up $200. And so we're down to the last few spots.
We think we can sell it out before next week, before the end of next week. But we'd just like to add a few more Karm listeners, supporters, people who go to your site. And so I would suggest highly that if anybody wants to go on that trip to consider it now. And we're going to be flying together out of Chicago, direct flight on Royal Jordanian going to Amman. But like I said, the whole trip is guided by Joel Kramer. Plus, we have a second archeologist on board as well. We're limiting the trip to one bus and it's 80% plus full. So we only have those few spots, but anybody who is interested ought to take it seriously right now and go look at that. We were from the show we did two weeks ago, Matt, we had people sign up.
So I know there are people listening who might go, wow, I want to travel with Joel Kramer, but I want to go with Matt's look and I'll be on the trip as well. Well, okay, here's a question. Is Lebanon, I mean, is Jordan safe?
Yeah, that's a great question. And there has been no stoppage in the past year and a half. Israel has certainly had closure and it was not available some of that time to be able to go. But Jordan never lost its tourism.
It's still going strong. And yes, there's, well, I mean, even Israel now, you can go back to Israel, they've just solved the problem in Gaza by signing that peace accord. Lebanon, Hezbollah, they are no longer a problem. Syria is certainly not a problem any longer and Iran is very quiet. So there really isn't anything wrong with going to Israel, let alone Jordan, which has been open and it's very safe.
You can go on the website and you can read it by, I have a section on that, but we are, uh, very safe wherever we go. Um, tourism is, um, being done all over the world coming to Jordan, especially Petra. That seems to be the big, the big deal to go to Jordan. Well, we're going to see Petra, but we're going to see so much more and it all involves the old Testament. You'll not read the old Testament the same way again, especially when you hear Joel at these sites telling you incredible things. Yeah, he's, you know, I remember when we went to, uh, you and I and he went to, um, Jericho and I remember the first time he went that big hole that the second time they'd filled in and he was explaining that, uh, some of the archeologists buried, literally buried evidence that didn't suit them.
He was explaining that and I thought it was really interesting. Yeah, that was an Italian, uh, archeological group. Uh, they have no desire to, uh, preserve the biblical history.
And I remember going there in 2009 and then every year I go and every year they did damage to that site. What's really cool about this Jordan trip though, is we're going to places where nobody goes. I mean, we're going to be going up to Peniel. We're going to have to hike up. This is where Jacob Russell's the angel of the Lord and nobody goes up there.
We'll be the only ones walking up this huge, huge tail. And, uh, and so you're not going to find any issues like that here. Um, where, uh, there's just not a whole lot of interest besides Mount Nebo, um, and a few other places, Sodom and Gomorrah, it's out in the middle of nowhere, uh, to be able to go there.
We'll have a boat ride on the, on the red sea. Um, and there's, I mean, um, you're not going to see the same kinds of things as Jericho. It's in the West bank.
Jericho is, and the Palestinians certainly don't want to try to encourage anybody to have faith in the old Testament stories. And so they're going to go with Catherine Canyon, who in the 1950s said, Oh, the dates are 150 years off. But Joel shows in his video, if you go onto his website, he has a video called Jericho on earth.
I highly recommend that video. And he interviews one of the excavators at the time under Catherine Kathleen Canyon. And he didn't even know about the story of Jericho in the Bible. And Joel talks to him about that.
And then he admits that the theories that Joel presents as this being an accurate, uh, old Testament site, he actually says, Oh, I never thought of that before, which is interesting because this guy dug there at Jericho. And how many times have you been there? I'm just curious to, uh, to Israel or to Jordan, Jordan, Jordan, this'll be my third trip. We did one in 2023, same exact trip, 12 days.
I was there a few years before that, but this'll be my second time with Joel. So I coordinate all of this. I put it together.
The website is what I run 20, 25, jordan.com. And then I hand it over to Joel. I do nothing. Joel takes care of everything because he knows what he wants to do. This is his trip as far as the itinerary is concerned.
And you go through that itinerary, you're going to be seeing places that you might not know much about, but boy, you're going to learn a lot when you do go on a trip like this. Wow. Good.
So I'm looking forward to it in November. All right, folks, there's a break. So Hey, thanks Eric.
And let me know how it goes and we'll continue. All right. God bless butter. Thanks so much, Matt, for having me. God bless you. All right. Hey folks, be right back after these messages. Please stay tuned. It's Matt Slick live, taking your calls at 877-207-2276. Here's Matt Slick.
All right, buddy. Welcome back to the show. You know, during the break I went to, uh, Google dot maps, whatever it is. And I was going around looking in Jordan, looking at the, uh, you know, going on the street view and some cruising around. It just looks normal. Looks like, uh, it looks like Turkey and has mosques and stuff.
There's people in the park. It looks pretty modern and it is modern. And I'm looking and there's a McDonald's and I'm looking at McDonald's and it says McDonald's, uh, and a lot of the signs are in English, English, English.
I'm looking at a weird word there online. It's interesting. And, um, yeah, it's uh, it's good. The food over there is really, it's different. I enjoy the food. It's just a different pallet, a different set of tastes, but it's good. It's very, it's familiar, but we're used to Americans, you know, spices and styles and things like that. Um, but, uh, I enjoy the Mediterranean foods. It's been, it's been good. Look at this.
I'm going through here looking and a lot of stuff is in English. Yeah, I've never been to Jordan. I think it'll be interesting.
It'll be interesting. And the hotels are great. It's always been good. Oh, I feel very confident, very safe on those buses. I wouldn't go if I didn't feel safe.
And, um, I definitely do feel safe when I go. And, um, so there you go. Anyway, this sounds interesting.
Uh, 2025 jordan.com. All right. So, um, last week I spoke a little bit about, uh, I believe it was last week about, um, uh, battle I had online with an East Orthodox guy over Mary being a functioning goddess. Well, last night, was it last night?
Yeah. Last night I had a very, very interesting conversation with some people in a chat room and voice chat rooms. And so I go into these chat rooms and I just wait. And if people call me up to ask a question, I go up and I answer questions and a lot of times they don't, they just have their discussions and that's fine. I mean, you know, just be polite about me or anything. If they need me, you know, I'll, you know, join in. Well, it happened last night and I said, Hey man, we've got a question for you and blah, blah, blah.
Okay. So we got talking and I was telling my wife about this afterwards. And, um, it's hard to describe, but I'm talking to the East Orthodox and the Catholics and they, how do I describe?
It's really hard to describe. I'll be talking to them about salvation and they would talk about the works part of salvation. And I would respond and show them scriptures about, we don't cooperate with God to maintain our place with God.
And that puzzled them. And one time I asked a guy, cause I had quoted Matthew 5 48 where it says, be perfectly your father in heaven is perfect. And I said, can you be perfect? And the guy goes, yeah, of course I can.
And it blew me because this guy, I think it was Eastern Orthodox, uh, and I was going back and forth with the EO and the RC, the Catholic, Roman Catholics. And, uh, he said, so matter of fact, Oh yeah, yeah, it can be perfect. If God tells me to be, I can be it. And I said, so I said, so really, he says, yeah, God would ever ask you to do something you can't do.
I said, of course he would. He says, be perfect. You can't be perfect. Only God is perfect.
Cause it says be perfect at your heavenly father is perfect on the same level as God. Is that what you're saying you can do? And he said, yes. And this was the beginning of the conversation of my eyes opening up wider and wider.
What you actually teach this? And no one objected. And it was just, it was dumbfounding to me that the, our CEO, one guy spoke for all of them, but when they rotated three or four of them, none of them disagreed with that. None of them said that wasn't true, which is interesting because I focused on it for a while. I said, so you can be perfect on the same level as Jesus was. Cause that's the standard of, of, of righteousness. Isn't that correct? He said, well, yeah. And I said, so on the same level of Jesus is yeah, of course.
And so, you know, it's just like crickets, you know, it's like, you just sit there listening because like I might, am I actually hearing what I'm hearing? Because the arrogance and the pride that it was so common with these comments that he and others were making very prideful, very, very arrogant and they couldn't even see it. And they were saying, no, we don't do it on our own. God enables us to be perfect. He enables us to do pure and good works. I said, really? What are some of the pure good works? He says, baptism, the Eucharist.
Wow. So I said, you know, I had this discussion. I said, so let me get this straight. Are you saying that when you participate in one of the, whatever these sacraments are, that your heart is perfectly pure before God? And they said, well, I don't say it's always perfectly pure, but it comes from God.
So it's pure enough. I said, wait a minute. You just said on the same level as God. And now you're saying it's not quite well, he understands that, you know, we try, we fail.
These guys can't, I've said they don't understand what they're saying on one hand. They'll say, yeah, we can be perfect like Jesus, my God. Well, the other hand, well, we're not, we try, but I thought you said you'd be perfect. Yes, we can. But that means not failing.
Well, he understands our failures. What? The mental disparity of them contradicting themselves right, one after another, after another, and then walking forward as a, that's fine. They couldn't, they couldn't see it.
It was really interesting. Charlie's fine. Was he? Will Duffy, convert.
Will Duffy and others, they're, they're a soulless perfectionist. So this conversation went on, right? And it progressed slowly as I was very calm, just like, wait a minute, let's talk about this. You're saying you do these things like Jesus does the same level. And he says, yeah, yeah.
I'm just, are you serious? And so I said, okay, let me ask you, do you keep yourself right with God for your salvation by your sincerity or you're doing various things? And these people will, yes, we do. You know, you didn't say yes at first. I had to ask him several times. Is it the case or is not the case that you do this by what you do in your ceremonies? You know, your confession, your Eucharistic participation, whatever it is, is that what you do? And they say, yes.
Okay. And what it started to dawn on me even more was the externality of their relationship with God through ceremonies, through ceremonies, it's relationship by ceremony, not relationship by intimate indwelling of God with you. Their idea of relationship with God is through the authority of the church, the priesthood and the ceremonies.
You go through them. That's relationship with God. And the church is that which promotes and guides you through those ceremonies so that you can have a right relationship with God. And that's what I was learning last night.
Now, I've talked about this before, but it really hit me last night. Now, the Greek word for church is ekklesia. And so they're ecclesialitrists.
They worship and serve the church. I'm going to come back. I'll talk a little bit more about this, but if you want to give me a call, the number is 877-207-2276. We'll be right back. It's Matt Slick live, taking your calls at 877-207-2276.
Here's Matt Slick. Everybody, welcome back to the show. If you want to give me a call, the number is 877-207-2276. I've got more to talk about on that topic.
I'll introduce externalism and internalism and salvation. Let's get to Jan from North Carolina. Jan, welcome. You're on the air.
Hello, Mr. Slick. How are you today? Hanging in there.
You know, just hanging in there. You know, I don't really know much about externalism, internalism. I'm learning all the way, but my question is back to a question that's not probably near as complicated for you, but just to me, which I really cannot wrap my mind around is the Trinity. So I am a free will Baptist, and I do attend regularly. I just can't, I'm not looking for contradictions in the Bible, but I do have a specific passage that seems to be contradictive that I would like you to explain to me if you would. And that is when Jesus was baptized and the Holy Spirit came and said, this is my son, and I'm very proud of him.
I'm proud. And then of course it seemed like two different people there. However, then the devil tempts him. And if Jesus, if this devil, the Satan knew that it was God, it seemed like he wouldn't have tempted him the way he did by making him, you know, asking him to turn the stone into bread, et cetera.
Why would he challenge him if he knew that was God? All right. First of all, what you said, I'll hone your theology a little bit more. So you said two different people. And so we don't say people when we talk about the... Well, entities, yes. We don't say entities. We don't say people. We say persons. We say the word person. We say the word person because it means something... Because it means something different in the context of the trinity. A lot of people don't understand that. So a person is someone who has a will, can say you and yours and me and mine and things like that. The Father, Son, Holy Spirit each exemplify that. Yet there's only one God, so we say three persons, not three people, not three entities. Okay?
Yes. All right. Now, the other thing is some people make the mistake of thinking that, well, the devil's rational and he's reasonable, and so that's why he wouldn't tempt Jesus because he knows he's God. But that's not the case. The devil is wholly and completely evil down to his core. And rationality is not the issue. Rationality doesn't mean, hey, he will or won't because it doesn't make any sense. No, he just is so evil he will try no matter what to do that which is contrary to the will of God and the truth of God.
That's why he tempted Jesus. Okay. All right? That makes a lot of sense.
Okay. And one question I have, though, is, I guess, has the trinity always been a belief system in Christianity or is that something that was established later? It was established later because the formal doctrine of the trinity was derived from scripture after the completion of the Bible. And right away at the completion of the Bible, roughly in 90 AD, Christianity was under heavy attack.
So there were a lot of people running for their lives. And though the scriptures were being preserved and disseminated throughout the Mediterranean area, it wasn't until the persecution stopped after two or three hundred years that the Christians could then start having councils and meetings about, well, what is this saying? And then that's when the trinity was officially, so to speak, developed out of what scripture says soon after. Okay. But the Bible itself does not refer to a trinity then, you're saying?
Right. It never says the word trinity. It never says the word atheist either, but it teaches a concept of atheism.
No, it also, but I know that Jesus makes a lot of allusions, like if you know the Father, you know me and you can't go to him without coming through me. So I see a lot of positive reinforcement of that statement. But I just have the hardest time with that for some reason.
Hardest time with what? But I do like the fact that you said that there's no reason for me to think of the devil as a rational, reasonable person. I do see that to make a good explanation. It's simple and it's to the point. I do like that. Well, good.
Well, let me try and help you out with something else, okay? There's an analogy I use about the trinity that helps people. I use the issue of time. Time is past, present, and future. And each, the past, present, and future, are the same thing in that they are time.
They are all three time. But there's a distinction in the relationship to one another. So the past was yesterday, the future is tomorrow, and the present is now. So what we're saying then is that we observe or we are made aware of the distinction between past, present, and future, which is all the one thing time. I see that.
It's time in three parts. I see that. I see where you're going, yes. Yeah, and I don't like to use the word part because as a theologian, part is called partialism, is a false teaching. But you're on the right track. We just don't use the word part because it's been worked out before. I do like your analogy.
I can see that. That's a clear analogy to me, yes. And so the same way that God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, are all the one thing God, but we recognize them being distinct from each other in their relationship to each other and to us, the same as time.
The relationship to each other, past, present, and future, are different. And to us, they relate differently to us as well. And that's a good analogy of the Trinity.
Father, Son, Holy Spirit, there's a distinction internally and there's a distinction when they relate to us. And that's how he recognizes them. I can see that. That's enlightening to me, yes.
That is. I do struggle with this, though, honestly. And I ask my pastor and I get something about Godhead and this and that, and I don't really, it's not clear. And that's why I always come to you and try to get a little more clarification as you know. Well, I hope that helps. I may call again, but I'm going to work on the time analogy and I'm going to think about it more and try to, but you know, I just, for some reason, it seems like at our church too, it's such a point of, it has to be, you know, you can't even talk about it or not believe it or ask questions about it, or you're, you know, you're considered not worthy.
Here's the thing. But I mean, because I don't believe, I just want to know. The people in the Old Testament weren't aware of the Trinity the way we are. Doesn't mean they weren't saved. The people in the New Testament who trusted in Christ, they didn't have a good understanding of the Trinity like we do. It doesn't mean they weren't saved. When people come to me and say, well, they don't know if they believe the Trinity or not, I don't assume they're not saved.
I just say, well, let's talk about it. Let me show you what it is in the scriptures, because ultimately you'll come to believe it if you're really of God and stuff like that, because God gives us what we need at the time and we move through it. So, now, I've written a great deal on the Trinity. I've debated it many, many, many times. And, you know, I've read some of your, some of your calm information on the Trinity because this is not the first time I've called you and asked you about this. So, yeah. Well, good.
You referred me to your, to your reading and I have. Yeah. It's a complicated thing to me. It is. But, look, I'm autistic and so I write complicated things.
I try and write them easy to understand. You do, yes. So, if that helps, go check it out. It did help a lot.
It did. Go ahead. I said, write down some questions and call me up. Go ahead. Yeah, I will. I will.
I definitely will. I mean, I always feel like your answer's like, the whole thing about what you just said about Satan challenging Jesus. Yes, it didn't, that makes total sense. Why would I expect him to be a nice, rational human being or any other type of person? Why would I expect that?
I don't know, but I did until just that moment. So. Right. I guess I expected that he was so devious and intelligent that he would be more, but I can see, I can see what you're saying there.
He would challenge Jesus every chance he got probably. That's right. And one of the analogies I give to people is I say, think about when you've been most angry about something and you do things that you know, even in your anger, you know you're going to regret. We've all done that kind of stupid stuff. Well, just amplify that in Satan and his evilness and that's why he's tempting. That's why he's this and that's, you know. He literally couldn't resist it. He really couldn't stop himself. He literally couldn't resist it in his own personality.
He couldn't resist it to do it. Yeah. See, that was very clarifying. Yeah. There you go. All right. Okay.
Well, you know, I may use your time analogy at church. Please do. It's the best one I've heard. I should come up with it. I used it as that.
I developed it into the distinguishing aspects and it's the best one I know of. So I just tell that to people and it's a good analogy. Yeah, it's a good one.
Yeah, that's a very good one. I think someone else said something about, you know, when you're not at the beach but you smell the air as you're getting close to the beach, that would be the Holy Spirit. You know, it's still part of the whole experience. This is what they were telling you. I just couldn't wrap my mind around that, you know.
Even though I live in North Carolina, I know the beach. It didn't come. It didn't ring a bell, okay? It's not a good analogy.
No, no, it's not. Because I am here. Yeah, you smell the Holy Spirit. What? How does smelling relate to the Holy Spirit?
You smell the Holy Spirit a hundred miles before you get to God, the beach, the Godhead. So yeah, exactly. So yeah. So use the time analogy, okay? Just use it, all right?
I tell you the time analogy. Even though at our church we're very conservative and women are not supposed to get up and make too many demonstrative remarks, but once in a while at Sunday school I am allowed to speak. You can. We should talk about that.
Women should not be restricted in that sense. There's the music. We've got to break, so we've got to go, okay? Okay. I'm going to let you go. Appreciate you so much, sir.
I'll see you soon. You too. Go. Thank you. Bye.
Hey, folks. Be right back after these messages, please. Stay tuned. It's Matt Slick live, taking your calls at 877-207-2276. Here's Matt Slick. All right. I want to welcome back to the show. Hope you're enjoying it so far. If you want to give me a call, the number is 877-207-2276.
Cole from Kentucky. Welcome. You're on the air.
Hello, Matt Slick. Happy New Year, sir. You too. That's right. Praise God. Hey, man, I love your analogy of the Trinity, the time. That's perfect, because God controls time. I never heard that before.
That was excellent. God had to reveal that to you. Well, he had to reveal it to me, because I'm not smart enough to think of it on my own.
So good for you. God revealed it. There you go. That's right. Yes, sir.
That's right. Well, listen, my question is Exodus 4.24. I'm confused about that verse.
Yeah, I looked at it during the break. So you want to know why God was going to kill Moses? Yeah, and the Forrest Gant stuff. What was that all about? All right. So the reason, most probably what the issue here is, the reason he's going to kill him is because in Genesis 17.10, now I'll give you a little bit of theology, a little bit of this stuff here. So Abraham was before Moses. And God said to Abraham, this is my covenant, which you shall keep between me and you and your descendants after you. Every male among you shall be circumcised. It should be the sign of the covenant between me and you.
And that's a requirement. Moses didn't do it. Moses was disobeying the covenant requirement. And so he didn't circumcise the foreskin of his son.
He's supposed to do that. And so Zipporah, his wife, had to intercede. So it came about, the lodging place, the way that the Lord met him and sought to put him to death.
And notice what's interesting. It came about at the lodging place on the way that the Lord met him and sought to kill him. So how exactly did that work? I mean, there's God standing in front of you and he goes, I'm going to kill you. God says he's going to do it. And he means it.
You're in trouble. Why does he need to go there? Why did he just have a meteor come out of the sky? Why didn't he just infect his body with worms or something? Boom, right away. Why doesn't he just make a brain aneurysm?
You're done. No, he meets him there. An encounter with God. And what's interesting is, now circumcision involves a shedding of blood. Very important because it ultimately points to Christ and ultimately the blood there. So Zipporah took a flint and cut off her son's foreskin and threw it at Moses' feet. Now, it does not say in the text that the foreskin touched him.
Threw it at his feet. But it may very well have. But it may very well have not. If it touched him, I like the idea that it did. Then the application of the blood to him saved him, which is a typological representation of the work of Christ. Now, if it didn't touch him, okay, it still works. It's just the blood of Christ ultimately at him, presented to him and before him as Zipporah did what Moses was supposed to do. And that prevented God from coming in and killing him.
It's not because the foreskin had any power to it. It's because it's a covenant sign. Now, a covenant is a pact or an agreement between two or more parties. So, for example, my wife and I have a marriage covenant. And the covenant sign that I wear is my wedding ring.
And she has one, too. And if she and I were in a fight, let's say, an argument, and I took my wedding ring and I held it up at her and I said, this is what I think, and I throw it away, throw it in the trash, what I am doing at that point, if I were to do something like that, is I'm saying, I abandoned a marriage. I don't want anything to do with you anymore in marriage because I'm getting rid of the covenant sign.
So I'm just giving that as an analogy. And so a wedding ring is a covenant sign. And by receiving that wedding ring, we are publicly declaring the participation in a covenant. Circumcision is the public declaration of a covenant.
Now, the reason the father would do this is because the father is the federal head of his family, the representative of his family. And so he's supposed to go in and do that job. Zipporah stepped in when he failed to do his job. Moses blew it. Zipporah saved him by doing what he should have done. Now, the covenant doesn't say that it has to be done by qualified males, like baptism had to be done by qualified males. It doesn't say anything like that.
She did it and it worked. The issue is the covenant sign and what the covenant sign represents because the covenant sign of Abraham, the land and the coming Messiah and prosperity of the gospel and all that. And so by Moses rejecting that for his son, he was, so to speak, slapping God in the face saying, I'm not interested in your covenant faithfulness to us. God said, okay, okay, we're going to take care of you then.
You're going to reject that. We're going to take care of you. And Zipporah had to intercede.
Zipporah got in there and did it and saved him. Does that make sense? Thank God for revealing that to you and me.
Thank you very much. Well, that's, you know, it's just basically, I've learned it from others and that's what I've basically understood is I've read it and learned and stuff like that over the years. So don't think that all this that I've learned is because I'm so smart, I figured it out. I think I've got, I think I'm up to four original thoughts.
I think it's four in 45 years of study like this. So, okay. Wow. Thank God.
Thank God for it. I appreciate it, man. Thanks. You're welcome. You're welcome.
And just give God the glory. Okay. Yes, sir.
Yes, sir. God bless. All right. Well, God bless. Okay.
All right. Well, we lost one caller and let's get to Eric from Ohio. Eric, welcome. You're on the air. Hey, man. It's good to talk to you.
You've been listening for a while now. Sure. Good.
I'm glad. Well, I was just typing on Rumbles and they told me to give you a call. Okay. Sure.
What do you got? So the question I have is about the Holy Spirit and really what are the scriptures you would say are the most definitive for expressing the personhood or the entity, for lack of a better word, of the Holy Spirit? Okay. Sure.
How about this? Romans 8.11, but if the spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead indwells in you, he who raised Jesus from the dead will also give you life. The spirit who indwells you. So the spirit is not referred to as a thing, but as a person. He, the who. And John 6.63, it's a spirit who gives life to flesh, profits nothing.
And John, let's see, he's referred to in the masculine as he. These things I've spoken to you while abiding with you, but the Holy Spirit whom the father will send, he will teach you of all things. Or Romans 8.16, the spirit himself bears witness with our spirit. The Holy Spirit is grieved. Isaiah 63.10, but they rebelled and grieved his Holy Spirit.
If he's not alive and aware, he can't be grieved. The Holy Spirit loves. Romans 15.30, now I urge you, brethren, by our Lord Jesus Christ and by the love of the spirit.
Or how about this one? Romans 8.27, and he who searches the hearts knows what the mind of the spirit is because he intercedes with the saints. The Holy Spirit speaks.
I've got 12 references. So in 2 Samuel 23.2, the spirit of the Lord spoke through me. His word was on my tongue. We can go down to Acts 13.2. And while they were ministering to the Lord and fasting, the Holy Spirit said, set apart for me Barnabas and Saul. The Holy Spirit knows. That's 1 Corinthians 2.11. He has an awareness of goodness. That's Acts 15.28.
He could be lied to. Acts 5.3 can be tested. Acts 5.9.
He makes people overseers. Acts 20.28. He can be a witness. Acts 5.32.
He can be resisted. Acts 7.51. He convicts of sin. John 16.8.
He teaches. John 14.26. He intercedes. Romans 8.26. He leads. Matthew 4.1. Gives life. John 63. Okay? Well, that was certainly a laugh to take in right there. Yeah.
On my website, you can look up karm.org and just say verses showing the personhood of the Holy Spirit. And you'll see the article. I was just reading from my article, which I wrote back in 2008. All right? No big deal.
It's right there. Okay. What would you say with various scriptures that talk about sending the spirit of my son, or sending the spirit of the son, and just kind of like a simple, you know, God is a spirit. God is holy.
So God is a Holy Spirit, but not the Holy Spirit type. Like, I'm stumbling over these terms. I'm not understanding. Say it again.
What? I'm not sure. So God is a spirit, and God is holy. Yes.
So God is a Holy Spirit. No, okay. Well, hold on. I'm really just stumbling over terms.
Yes. This is called the fallacy of equivocation. So a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush, President Bush.
That's wrong. That's called equivocation, when the word changes meaning as you're using it. So God is a spirit, John 4.24, but when Jesus is speaking about that, he's not speaking in the sense of the Holy Spirit, but the issue of the spirit himself does not have flesh and bones, Luke 24.39 that Jesus talks about. So he's spirit in that sense. He's also holy, as God the Trinity is his holy, 1 Peter 1.16. But the phrase, the Holy Spirit, is different, because that's not just, we don't take the word holy and the word spirit, and then combine them from different areas.
We don't have to do that, because the phrase Holy Spirit is used in reference to the third person of the Trinity. That's what's going on there, the phrase. Okay. Make sense? It's, you know, it's tough to understand, and I'm trying, but I really appreciate what you have to say.
Just one more quick, you know, and there are various places in the epistles that talk about the Holy Spirit of the Son. Is that something separate? Is that, can you use these terms interchangeably? Kind of, okay. Let me back up. Let me back up and teach you something better. I'll do it quickly, because we've got, oh, one minute.
You need to call back tomorrow. We need to talk to this. Let me go through this quickly for now. God is one being, one essence. The Father, Son, Holy Spirit are the one essence. It's called divine simplicity. However, they inter-dwell each other, and completely and totally, this is called the perichoresis. And there's a doctrine called divine simplicity, I mean, inseparable operations, where the Holy Spirit, the Father, and the Son do the same thing, because they're all the one being, the one God. So, what we see then is that the Holy Spirit can be called the Spirit of God, the Spirit of the Son, because they are all by one, by definition, the one being.
But we recognize distinction between them in their relationship to each other and to us. And that's what we would need to get into more when we have time, because we've got ten seconds before the music starts. We're out of time. Okay? Can you call back tomorrow? Okay, thank you, man. I appreciate it. Sure. Can you call back tomorrow and we'll talk about this? I have time, I'd love to. Okay, because this is important, and I can hopefully help it make sense and answer those questions, because I think your issue is deeper, and we need to go deeper into it.
It's good deep to good. You're seeing things. Let's put things in place so that makes more sense, okay? All right, buddy? Okay, thank you, Matt. All right, man, God bless. All right.
Well, there we go. Hope you enjoyed that. May the Lord bless you, and of course, as I always like to say, we'll be back tomorrow by God's grace, and I hope that you enjoyed the show. May the Lord bless you, and until then, have a good evening. God bless you.
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