The indication is that we all are born out of or from God. Which, yes, means you too have come out from God. The point being...that because our roots stem from that place of God; and because we are told and learn by our own experience here, that this lesser existence is as if we are walking dead to which we eventually succumb; that unless we choose to return to what is greater, even eternal--we will not, but indeed will succumb to this collision course ending in death.
I agree with you, Scott. :)
I've learnt about multiple translations, and that the more
popular one is
"among", instead of
"within".
I guess that the main objection is : How could the kingdom of God
possibly be
"within" these Pharisees?
My question is: How could the kingdom of God
possibly be
"among" these Pharisees?
In my humble opinion, the most important
question, in the context
of
Luke 17:20–21, and also considering the fact that Jesus the Christ
had said that to these Pharisees
before his resurrection,
is :
OBJECTION --
How could the kingdom of God possibly be
"among"
anybody else than Jesus' closest disciples,
because at this moment there were
no Christians
yet. :)
The way I see it, there are two reasons why the
"within"
is correct, and the
"among" is wrong in
Luke 17:20–21 only.
If we assume, despite the above
OBJECTION, that what Jesus the Christ
meant was that the kingdom of God were to be
among these Pharisees,
then we could also say, ‘Look, here it is!’ or ‘There it is!’
because the kingdom of God would have come with things
that can be observed, like with these Pharisees and a place
where they are:
‘ Look, the kingdom of God is
there, among these Pharisees! ’
Because, as Jesus the Christ said, the kingdom of God will
not come
with things that can be
observed, then in my humble opinion,
it
will come to us
un-observed, hidden deep
within us,
the baptized Christians, exactly like it is illustrated in
the Parable of the Leaven
:
What is the meaning of the Parable of the Leaven? Why did Jesus often speak using parables instead of teaching more clearly?
www.gotquestions.org
The Parable of the Leaven speaks about
the kingdom of Heaven,
and
not about the kingdom of God. Is the kingdom of Heaven
something else than the kingdom of God?
I doubt.
God lives in Heaven, and therefore Heaven is the kingdom of God. :)
From GOTQUESTIONS.org
: " In the current age, the kingdom
of Heaven is spiritual, existing
within the hearts of believers. "
So, why Jesus the Christ said that the kingdom of God
already is within these Pharisees?
In my humble opinion, it is because all humans, without exception,
have a God-given soul, which isn't a thing that can be observed.
However, this God-given soul within these Pharisees, and within
all non-Christians, as a
"Passport to the Heavenly Kingdom of God"
still needs to be stamped with the
"Permanent Resident Visa"
by Jesus within our heart, for our
inner journey to be fully successful.
www.christianityboard.com/threads/is-the-kingdom-of-god-within-me-too.60435/post-1743749/