Well, God the Father does not have a right hand like human beings do, so yeah. <
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Right.
Ugh. <
smile> I mean, Christ is going to (literally, of course) return and defeat Satan once and for all. It will certainly have spiritual implications, but it will be a real event. I hope we all agree on that... <
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You know, just as a side note (yet very relevant here), this idea that the spiritual and the physical are mutually exclusive and/or that the spiritual aspect of things makes them out to be non-literal... those ideas, or assertions (if made) are quite ridiculous. To put it simply, to understand things in Revelation (and elsewhere in the Bible) as spiritual is absolutely not to imply in any way that the actual events are not literal. Rather, these
very real things are
described by using symbolism to do so, thus representing very real things... and thus are
absolutely pointing to and descriptive of literal things/events. And this is in keeping with the multitude of Old Testament prophecies that used all sorts of different things ~ people, animals, even inanimate objects ~ to represent and thus to point to the true Savior to come.
Yeah, so this is a great example. In answer to your question... yes... and no. <
smile> In other words, Jesus is our hero, our, well, knight in shining armor... <
smile> But when He returns, He will not look literally look like this:
Revelation is a picture book. <
smile> What I mean is, Revelation is a picture book, not a puzzle book. We should read it like a child's picture book, in a way... <
smile> But it's about very real things. Now, I'm not saying this is what you are doing, but we shouldn't try to puzzle it out; we shouldn't become preoccupied by isolated details. Rather, we should become ~ and maybe you are ~ engrossed in the story. In reading it, we should praise the Lord. We should cheer for the saints. We should detest the Beast. We should long for the final victory. Yeah?
Right, but "seated" means
far more than just sitting down (in a chair or not), and at God's right hand means far more than just on God's on the Father's right (which, again, God does not have a right and a left hand like we do; God is Spirit, as John says in John 4:24). Jesus is "seated" in the sense that His work in accomplishing redemption (primarily through His work on the cross and His resurrection) is done, and He "sits at God's right hand" ~ as God, in the power of God, ruling over creation (not taking over the place of the Father, but one with Him, just as He said of Himself in John 10:30 and 17:21. His power and His rule may not look like we want it to yet, but it will; one day there will be no more sin and no more death. Right?
Fair enough, but... see above. <
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Grace and peace to you, grafted branch.