Children are the Future


Children see the entire world in a different way than adults. The innocence of discovery is something we all enjoyed. I often wonder, had people not interjected certain ideas into my mind at certain times, where would my childlike mind had lead me? So here's to nostalgia, to innocence, and the people that will become our future.


An Apple A Day


Living a healthy life is important, and many people take their concerns with eating right or losing weight to unhealthy extremes. This month, I'll be talking about eating habits, sharing some of my favorite recipes, and focusing on healthy choices.

Legends of Africa


One thing I've noticed during my years attending predominately white schools and having circles of friends that are more diverse, is that the major factor in racism and prejudice is ignorance. There is a lot about black culture that many non-blacks just don't know. Often this lack of awareness rears its head in the form of ignorant assumptions and awkward questions. The Legends of Africa series touches on topics that may be extremely familiar to blacks, but may not be familiar to non-blacks.

Religion & Theology


I've always been interested in Religion & Theology. As I child, I questioned everything. I wanted to know why this denomination was different from that denomination. I wanted to know how Christianity differed from Islam, and how they differed from Buddhism, etc. I found that as I studied with the faith of a believer and the open mind of scientist, the world of religion started to make more sense and I was able to form beliefs that I don't question. April 2015 is dedicated to my journey to those beliefs.

Circus of Words End of Days: the 2300 Days of Daniel

Sunday, May 24, 2015

End of Days: the 2300 Days of Daniel

  • Goal: Breaking down the 2300 days mentioned in Daniel 8 and aligning the prophecy with history
  • Focal Books & Chapters of the Bible: Daniel 8
  • Other Verses/Helpful Books: None
In my post Understanding the Timeline, I started examining the prophetic timeline of the End of Days (foretold in the Bible), focusing on Daniel 9 which details the 70 weeks prophecy. I followed it with an aside on the disagreement between theologians on the placement of the 70th week, in the post Stepping into the Controversy. Now, I'm back to talk about the 2300 days of Daniel 8.

At the end of Daniel's vision in Daniel 8:13-14, two saints are having a conversation. The first saint asks about the length of time spanning the vision, which he tells us concerns "the daily sacrifice and the transgression of desolation, to give both the sanctuary and the host to be trodden under foot." To which the second saint responds with 2300 (prophetic) days. Note that in Daniel 9, Gabriel tells Daniel in verse 26 that "the people of the prince that shall come shall destroy the city and the sanctuary" and "unto the end of the war desolations are determined." In reference to the 70th week, Gabriel tells Daniel in verse 27 that "he shall cause the sacrifice and the oblation to cease, and for the overspreading of abominations he shall make it desolate." Note further that in Daniel 9:23, Gabriel tells Daniel that he has come to show him so that he may understand, at which point he tells Daniel to "consider the vision." What vision?

The last vision Daniel has mentioned is the one in Daniel 8 concerning the 2300 days. In the last verse of Daniel 8 we are told that Daniel fainted and was unable to understand the complete vision. Therefore, it makes sense that Gabriel (who was explaining the 2300 days vision per Daniel 8:16) comes back to finish explaining the 2300 days. That means that the 70 weeks are part of the 2300 days.

Alright, now lets do some math! 2300 prophetic days is 2300 years. We've already established that the 70 weeks equals 490 prophetic days, or 490 literal years. Therefore we know what happened in 490 of the 2300 years. The question is what happened in the other 2300 years and where do those 490 years fit in the timeline. The earliest the 490 years could have occurred is at the onset of the 2300 years, which means the prophecy would take place from the beginning of the 70 weeks (in 457bc) to the 2300th year (in 1844ad). The latest the 490 years could have occurred in the timeline is at the end of the 2300 years, which would mean the prophecy ended in 34ad. and began in 2267bc. The last option makes no sense because it is estimated that the book of Daniel was written in the 6th century bc (i.e. sometime between 600bc and 500bc). If that the prophecy began in 2267bc, most of the events would have already occurred by the time Gabriel told Daniel and thus it wouldn't be a prophecy. We have to assume the 2300 years either started at the onset of the 70 weeks in 457bc or that the it started sometime between Daniel's vision and 457bc... However, we have to keep in mind that the prophecy is quite useless if we don't have a starting point. Let's look at the order of events so that we can figure this out.

The Vision

First, Daniel sees a ram with two horns by the river and no beast can stand before the ram. Then, out of the west comes a goat that doesn't touch the ground and has one horn (between his eyes). The goat attacks the ram, and succeeds in braking (note that Daniel 8:7 actually says brake not break) the two horns of the ram. The horn of the goat is broken while the goat is strong, but four "notable ones" come up and from these four comes a little horn. Then it says "he" magnified himself and caused the daily sacrifice to be taken away. The sanctuary is cast down. Then the truth is cast down, which prospers. This brings us to the saints discussing the length of time in which this will occur.

Gabriel's Explanation

Gabriel tells Daniel that the two horns of the ram are the kings of Media and Persia, the goat is the king of Grecia, and the great horn of the goat is the first king. Four kingdoms come out of the first king's kingdom ("but not in his power"). Near the end of this kingdom there will come a king who understands "dark sentences." He will prosper in destroying, specifically holy people, but he will come by peace. He stands up against the Prince of princes (Jesus), but will be "broken without hand." Between Daniel 8 and 9 the only starting point Gabriel gives is in Daniel 9 with the 70 weeks prophecy.

Aligned With History

Medo-Persia fell in 330bc to Alexander the Great, who was the king of ancient Greece (also called Macedonia or Grecia). After Alexander the Great died, his kingdom collapsed into chaos and war, because he didn't have an heir (who would have taken rule in Alexander's power). Once the area was stable again, there were four kingdoms: Ptolemaic Egypt, Seleucid Syria, Attalid Pergamum, and Antigonid Macedonia[1]. This period is known as the Hellenistic period in history and lasted until 31bc, when Rome conquered those territories[2]. The final king Gabriel speaks of comes from Rome—Rome stood up against Jesus (they crucified Him, actually) and it was during Rome's reign that the temple was destroyed.

The Timeline

With all of this in mind, we see that the 2300 "days" begins with the 70 weeks set aside for the Jews during the reign of Medo-Persia and continues up until 1844ad. Thus according to prophecy the sanctuary was supposed to be cleansed in 1844ad.

The 2300 "Days"

Historical YearProphetic TimeAction/Event
457 BCthe ram with 2 hornsMedo-Persia is the prevailing kingdom
330 BCthe goat/first kingAlexander the Great/Greece
~323 BC4 kingdomsPtolemaic Egypt,
Seleucid Syria,
Attalid Pergamum,
Antigonid Macedonia
31 BCthe king of fierce countenanceRome
34 ADthe end of the 70th weekWord of God preached to the Gentiles
1844 ADthe end of the 2300 daysSanctuary cleansed

What Happened in 1844?

So we've reached the end of the 2300 day prophecy, and we're in 1844. Is this the end? Does that make the Preterists right? Also, how can we be sure Rome is who Gabriel was talking about as the king of fierce countenance? Next week, I'll talk more about the high's and lows of the different viewpoints (give all this information time to sink in), then I'll move into repeated prophecies (the four kingdoms, the little horn, etc. are repeated elsewhere in Daniel—take a look!), and 1844.

Goal: Breaking down the 2300 days mentioned in Daniel 8 and aligning the prophecy with history Focal Books & Chapters of the Bible: ...

Circus of Words When Words Fall Short

Friday, May 22, 2015

When Words Fall Short

I've been quiet too long
Letting the words sit idle
Choked up, suffocating on my tongue
Waiting for them to be perfect,
But there are no words for this.
No literary devices to exact the right tone,
Only eyes to watch the world burn
To see survivors turn to killers
And brace for allies bombing allies...
Only eyes to shed tears over graves 
Where countless bodies are stripped of name
And watch the lights go out...
One after another they wax cold—
There are no words in this darkness
Nothing strong enough to lift murmured cries
Nor loud enough to drown out prattling hate.
Illumination will not come from speech,
This time, we need a sword.

I've been quiet too long Letting the words sit idle Choked up, suffocating on my tongue Waiting for them to be perfect, But ther...

Circus of Words Passageways

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Passageways

Fads and trends come and go
but their effects linger on
scars from half-baked decisions
overflow over-indulged plates,
passed on from person to person,
until it clots and clogs
until the passageway is broken...
until the damage is done.


Fads and trends come and go but their effects linger on scars from half-baked decisions overflow over-indulged plates, passed on from pe...

Circus of Words Listening To Your Stomach

Monday, May 18, 2015

Listening To Your Stomach

I haven't been posting as much as I'd like, but hopefully, that'll improve now that I'm settled in (I moved recently). In Eating A Little A Lot I mentioned that whatever my stomach says goes. Today, I thought I'd elaborate. *Disclaimer* if your stomach is constantly asking for Big Macs it might take some time before you can blindly listen to your stomach.

We all know the body needs certain vitamins, fibers, and other nutrients which it mines from the food you provide it. When I'm running low on a particular nutrient, my body will crave food that is high in that nutrient. A common example for anyone is that after running in the heat you want water—you don't want koolaid, or beer or soda. I struggle with iron deficiency anemia, and when my iron levels drop I have strong cravings for beef—steak, hamburgers, roast beef sandwiches, etc. Similarly, I crave oranges or tomatoes when my vitamin C levels are low. I also find myself not wanting foods I normally love when I've consumed too much of a particular ingredient (for example not wanting cake if I've had too much sugar).

One of my cardinal rules in terms of watching what I eat to make sure I'm giving my body enough of what it needs without giving it too much, is to listen to my stomach's cravings. Have you ever noticed your favorite food suddenly tasted  funny and you didn't actually want it? I take note when Pepsi suddenly tastes to sweet to me, and I cut back may be even stop drinking them for awhile. I take note when all I want are meals containing beef. Not only does this help me identify when I'm bordering on Anemia, but it helps me to keep a balanced diet.

So, next time you find yourself craving something constantly, take a minute to re-evaluate your eating habits, and make sure you're getting everything you need.

I haven't been posting as much as I'd like, but hopefully, that'll improve now that I'm settled in (I moved recently). In E...

Circus of Words End of Days: Stepping Into The Controversy

Saturday, May 16, 2015

End of Days: Stepping Into The Controversy

  • Goal: Understanding the placement of the 70th Week in Daniel 9
  • Focal Books & Chapters of the Bible: Daniel 9
  • Other Verses/Helpful Books: Deuteronomy 12:32, Revelation 22:18-19, Deuteronomy 4:2
In my post End of Days: Understanding the Timeline, I started examining the prophetic timeline of the End of Days (foretold in the Bible), focusing on Daniel 9 which details the 70 weeks prophecy. Most Christians agree on the first 69 weeks of that prophecy, but it is from that point on that Preterists, Historicists, and Futurists, begin to diverge.

Futurists believe that we are suspended between the 69th and 70th week. This is where the idea of a 7 year tribulation, such as the narrative from the Left Behind series by Jerry Jenkins and Tim LaHaye come from. According to this school of thought, the final week in Daniel 9 is going to occur at some unknown point in the future. Historicists and Preterists hold that the entire 70 weeks occurred in the past (as described in my last End of Days post).

When Is the 70th Week?

It is the answer to the question of whether the 70th week is to come, or already past that will guide your interpretation and views of the End of Days. Based on my previous post, it's obvious that I disagree with the Futurists, but before we continue, lets consider the possibilities. Daniel 9 first mentions the 70 weeks in the verse 24:

Seventy weeks are determined upon thy people and upon thy holy city, to finish the transgression, and to make an end of sins, and to make reconciliation for iniquity, and to bring in everlasting righteousness, and to seal up the vision and prophecy, and to anoint the most Holy. (Daniel 9:24 KJV)

Nothing in this passage suggests separation between the weeks. Daniel 9:24 is basically allotting a time period for "thy people" and "thy holy city" to finish acting out against God's law, make an end of sins, reconcile for immoral behavior, bring in everlasting righteousness, and to close up the sight (of God?) and prophecy. Since the angel is speaking to Daniel, thy people means Daniel's people and thy holy city means Daniel's holy city—the Jews and Jerusalem. If there is a break in the time frame there is one major ramification with stemming from this verse: more than 70 weeks are given to the people. If you tell me I have 2 weeks to do something, there are only two possibilities, I have 14 consecutive days to do something, or I can spend 14 days to do something. In the first case, there is a clear beginning and end. In the second case, I can only be permitted to do this something on a chosen set of days, otherwise I am exceeding my time limit. When applying this logic to the 70 weeks prophecy, you must conclude that there is either 70 consecutive weeks or these tasks are to be completed in no more (or less) than 70 weeks. Why would we be given a beginning, followed by a chronological ordering of events only to be told the final week is completely unpredictable and disjoint from the rest of the prophecy? Also, if the 70th week has not happened yet, then we can't accomplish any of the tasks in Daniel 9:24 because that would be allowing more than 70 weeks. This means that we are unable to reconcile for iniquity (sin) which directly contradicts Jesus' death and resurrection, which occurred after the 69th week.

Let's look at the prophecy concerning the last week, again, shall we?

And he shall confirm the covenant with many for one week: and in the midst of the week he shall cause the sacrifice and the oblation to cease, and for the overspreading of abominations he shall make it desolate, even until the consummation, and that determined shall be poured upon the desolate. (Daniel 9:27 KJV)

One point of contention here is who "he" refers to. Futurists believe "he" refers to the antichrist. If you read all of Daniel 9 KJV, you will see that the only "he" mentioned leading up to Daniel 9:27 is Messiah the Prince. He is the prince of the people who come to destroy the city (after all He did come to save all people). Many think that because it says "the prince that shall come," it refers to the antichrist, but the antichrist is not a prince—he will rule, he will become a king, but he is never referred to as a prince in the Bible. By definition, a prince is someone who inherits the right to rule through his bloodline (in this case his father). Jesus is a prince as He is the Son of God (the Father). The antichrist is not a prince because he is not the son of God and he won't inherit kingdom, he will try to steal it. 

Shenanigans with Biblical Wording

Note that the NIV translation does not mention the Messiah specifically but uses the wording "Anointed One," further changing "prince" to  "ruler." This is probably part of the cause of confusion. "Prince" must refer to Jesus, while ruler is more ambiguous.  You should read up on all the changes and omissions in NIV (and other English translations), keeping in mind that in Revelation 22:18-19, Deuteronomy 4:2, and Deuteronomy 12:32 we are warned not to tamper with God's word.  You should also watch this video on why the KJV is the most accurate English Bible we have.

What Next?

In terms of the timeline, this post was more of an aside. Next time, I'll jump back into the timeline. Following that post I'll do a "pros" and "cons" of the different schools of thought on the end of days.

Goal: Understanding the placement of the 70th Week in Daniel 9 Focal Books & Chapters of the Bible: Daniel 9 Other Verses/Helpful ...

Circus of Words Eating A Little A Lot

Friday, May 08, 2015

Eating A Little A Lot

May is here! So it's time for the "Apple a Day" portion of the new challenge! I thought I'd start off with a post on eating habits—that's definitely an important part of your health.

People who eat with me for the first time often comment on "how little" I eat. If we're out to eat, they'll make comments about me not cleaning the plate, and revert back to sayings they probably heard as a child about "happy plates" and "clean plates." People who know me, however, know that eat a little a lot. Friends and family often remark that I'm always eating, which is probably closer to the truth. I believe in listening to my stomach. I'll talk more about that at another time, but my point for this post is basically, I eat when I'm hungry and as soon as I'm full, I stop.

A typical day in terms of food looks like this for me:
Time of DayMealExample of a Typical Meal
8:00 - 9:00amBreakfast2 Eggs (scrambled whole or fried whites) or cheese grits
10:30 - 11:30amBrunchfruit salad or Caesar salad
1:00 - 2:00pmLunch6-inch sub or 2 slices of pizza
4:30 - 5:30pmDinnerA bowl of spaghetti or grilled cheese sandwich
7:30 - 8:30pmSupperchicken & broccoli with rice casserole or red beans & rice with grilled steak
10:30 - 11:30pmBedtime SnackA piece of fruit or a slice of pie
2:30 - 3:30am"Midnight" SnackA few ritz crackers or a handful of peanuts
I know, I know, you're not supposed to eat before bed, but if I don't I can't sleep!

M ay is here! So it's time for the "Apple a Day" portion of the new challenge! I thought I'd start off with a post on eati...

Circus of Words End of Days: Understanding the Timeline

Thursday, May 07, 2015

End of Days: Understanding the Timeline

  • Goal: Understanding the timeline for the End of Days
  • Focal Books & Chapters of the Bible: Daniel 8 & Daniel 9
  • Other Verses/Helpful Books: Mark 13:32-37, Numbers 14:33-34, Ezekiel 4:6, Nehemiah
If you order a package online and the estimated delivery date is 2 weeks away, you won't begin looking for it until the 2 weeks is almost over. When the two weeks are almost over, you will likely check daily for your package, and once you receive you package you have no need to continue looking for it. There are three phases in this process: the phase in which you expect the package in the future, the phase in which you expect the package at any moment, and the phase in which the package has already been delivered. Now imagine that the package is not something you ordered online, but the second coming of Christ. Jesus already told us that only God knows the hour that this will occur but we are instructed to keep watch (Mark 13:32-37). There are still three phases, and thus there are three notions on the interpretation of Christ's second coming.

Preterists believe that the book of Revelation (and all prophecy in the Bible) refers to the past. Essentially, they believe the end times have already happened. Preterists believe they've already gotten their package, so they aren't standing watch because there's nothing to watch for. Futurists believe the opposite, that everything is going to be fulfilled in the future (in the hour that only God knows). In our analogy, they ordered their package yesterday. They don't expect it to come tomorrow, but they expect it sometime in the future. Historicists believe that the events and prophecies concerning the end of days began during John's (the writer of Revelation) era and continue on into the present. Historicists are always watching for their package; they believe it may arrive at any moment. Outside of these three phases, there exists a fourth idea—the Idealistic interpretation of Revelation. Subscribers of this belief do not take Revelation literally, but view it as a continuing allegory for good and evil.

So which concept is right (if any)? To answer this question, we need to nail down all that we can about the timeline of the End of Days.

Resources & Study Materials

One of my favorite sites for information on the end times is Presents of God Ministries—they have tons of current events and documentation about the end times. I haven't read every article on the site (there's ALOT of text there) so I can't attest to the validity of the whole site, but it was definitely a great starting place for me. A lot of the information is presented with the inference that you already know and accept where they're going with it, which means the reader has to just go along with it until they agree or quit because they don't agree. I prefer a concrete starting place that leads to a conclusion rather than throwing everything out there at one time. I also like to research the information presented. So throughout this series, you may find similarities to Presents of God Ministries, but you'll see references to several sites. You should always look for confirmation that the information presented to you and the interpretation given is accurate. That may mean double checking historical facts, or reading biblical passages from the beginning of a chapter as opposed to drawing from just one verse.

The Prophecy

There are two major prophetic vision given concerning the timeline of the end of days: Daniel's 2300 days prophecy and Daniel's 70 week prophecy. These two prophecies are found in Daniel 8 and 9 respectively.

2300 Days Prophecy

In Daniel 8, Daniel is given a vision involving a ram, goat, and horns, and within the vision he is told there will 2300 days until the sanctuary will be cleansed. The angel Gabriel, comes to Daniel and begins to explain the vision. We are told that the ram's two horns represent the kings of Media and Persia (you'll notice that horns always represent power/kingdoms), the goat represents the king of Grecia, and that four kingdoms will come out of this kingdom. The final kingdom will have a king that "stands against the Prince of princes" and will destroy many. We are told that this king comes in the latter times (i.e. the end of days) and that he will destroy holy people. This is obviously a reference to the antichrist, with the Prince of princes being a reference to Jesus. Daniel faints before he is able to understand the vision. We will come back to this visions, just as Daniel had to, as we learn more about the end times prophecy.

70 Weeks Prophecy

Now in Daniel 9, the 70 week prophecy gives us a better sense of how biblical prophecy and history line up. Before we start digging into Daniel's prophecy, trying to match up dates, remember that in Numbers 14:33-34 and Ezekiel 4:6 God defines one day as one year. More information on the "day for a year" principle can be found here. Ok, back to the point, Daniel 9:21-27 outlines the 70 week prophecy as follows:

21 Yea, whiles I was speaking in prayer, even the man Gabriel, whom I had seen in the vision at the beginning, being caused to fly swiftly, touched me about the time of the evening oblation. 22 And he informed me, and talked with me, and said, O Daniel, I am now come forth to give thee skill and understanding. 23 At the beginning of thy supplications the commandment came forth, and I am come to shew thee; for thou art greatly beloved: therefore understand the matter, and consider the vision.24 Seventy weeks are determined upon thy people and upon thy holy city, to finish the transgression, and to make an end of sins, and to make reconciliation for iniquity, and to bring in everlasting righteousness, and to seal up the vision and prophecy, and to anoint the most Holy. 25 Know therefore and understand, that from the going forth of the commandment to restore and to build Jerusalem unto the Messiah the Prince shall be seven weeks, and threescore and two weeks: the street shall be built again, and the wall, even in troublous times. 26 And after threescore and two weeks shall Messiah be cut off, but not for himself: and the people of the prince that shall come shall destroy the city and the sanctuary; and the end thereof shall be with a flood, and unto the end of the war desolations are determined. 27 And he shall confirm the covenant with many for one week: and in the midst of the week he shall cause the sacrifice and the oblation to cease, and for the overspreading of abominations he shall make it desolate, even until the consummation, and that determined shall be poured upon the desolate. (Daniel 9:21-27 KJV)

We know that 1 week = 7 days, thus 70 weeks = 70 * 7 days = 490 days. Using what we know about the day for a year principle (compounded with the obvious fact that this cannot and did not occur over 70 literal weeks), we understand that the seventy weeks Daniel is discussing covers 490 years. Furthermore, notice that in Daniel 9:25, Gabriel tells Daniel exactly when the prophecy begins so that we can match it with the historical timeline. From this verse we see that from the time the Jews are commanded to rebuild Jerusalem until the time of the actual rebuilding is to make up 7 of the 70 weeks (remember 7 weeks = 49 days = 49 years). Now we add the threescore and two weeks (62 weeks = 434 days = 434 years), this should bring us to the time of Jesus. This is a total of 69 weeks which is actually 483 years. The final week defines Jesus' crucifixion and the confirmation of the covenant. There are several decrees in history for the rebuilding of Jerusalem (4 to be exact), but the one issued by King Araxerxes in 457bc is the only one that matches the prophecy. The timeline looks like this:
Historical YearProphetic TimeAction/Event
457 BC(the beginning)King Artaxerxes commands Jerusalem to be rebuilt
408 BC(7 weeks)Jerusalem to be rebuilt
27 AD(62 weeks)The Messiah comes
31 AD(Midst of the Week)Ending of the Sacrifice
34 AD(1 week)Confirmation of the Covenant
Ok, so we've already confirmed the date that the command was given to rebuild Jerusalem. Was it completed in 408bc? The book of Nehemiah is concerned with the rebuilding of Jerusalem. We see in Nehemiah 2:1 that Nehemiah goes to take to Artaxerxes in the 20th year of his reign—a simple Google search will confirm this to be 445bc—where he actually begins the process of rebuilding the city. Nehemiah tells us when the wall was built (remember Daniel 9:25 mentions the wall specifically) in Nehemiah 6:15 (it's remarkable how they provided us with exact dates for the things that are important). Nehemiah goes on to say that the city was finished except the homes weren't completed yet in Nehemiah 7:4. According to history the last act of Nehemiah in restoring the city occurred in the 15th year of Darius Nothus's regin, which would be 408bc.

Next, we want to confirm the beginning of the ministry of Jesus (the Messiah). We are told in Luke 3:23 that Jesus is 30 years old when at the time of baptism and the beginning of His ministry. Historian conclude that Jesus was not born in year 0, as there were mistakes in calculating the calendar, but that Jesus was born in 4bc (also verifiable via Google search). This would make him 30 is the year 27ad.

The prophecy tells us that in the "midst of" the final week "he shall cause the obligation and sacrifice to cease." The he referred to in this verse is Jesus, who replaced the Passover Lamb as a sacrifice during is death and resurrection—this ended the Jews obligation to sacrifice a lamb for God each year. It is common knowledge that the date of Jesus' crucifixion and resurrection are placed in 31ad, perfectly aligning with the prophecy. (*EDIT: There is actually a debate as to whether Jesus died in 31ad [source] or 33ad [source]—after some more digging I'll get back to you. Based on the prophecy and the generally assumed idea that His ministry lasted 3 1/2 years I'm inclined to go with 31ad, but I'll do some research and get back to you on concrete evidence.)

That brings us to the end of the vision and the end of the week, in 34ad. Remember Jesus created the new covenant and taught the disciples who then continued to teach this covenant after Jesus's crucifixion and resurrection. Stephan was the last of the prophets to speak directly to the Jews (once Paul began his ministry, he spoke to the Gentiles). His death (by stoning at the hands of the Jews) occurs in Acts 7. Note the prophecy is stating that the Jews had this time "to make reconciliation for iniquity, and to bring in everlasting righteousness, and to seal up the vision and prophecy." The stoning of Stephan is the official rejection by the Jewish population (of the time) of Jesus' message and the end of the their time as God's chosen people. From his death on, Jesus' message is preached to all people. The accepted date of this occurrence is 34ad.

More on the 70 Week Timeline

Putting it Together

Everything in the 70 weeks prophecy has already happened (which leans towards the Preterist view and contradicts the Futurist belief that we're suspended between the 69th and 70th week), but what exactly does the 70 weeks prophecy have to do with the end times, what does the 2300 days prophecy mean at all, and why are they told to us in succession? All of these questions have to be answered before we can accurately determine which school of thought is pointing us to the right timeline. For fear of making this post too long, I'll save this discussion for the next post. In that post I'll discuss how and why the 70 weeks make up part of the 2300 days and how it sets up our timeline.

Goal: Understanding the timeline for the End of Days Focal Books & Chapters of the Bible: Daniel 8 & Daniel 9 Other Verses/Hel...

Circus of Words Media Girl

Monday, May 04, 2015

Media Girl



That image of a woman, perfectly styled just so
Or her hair done up fancily, or her face painted to just the right shade
So men and women alike marvel into her beauty—
How she could be so fair and unblemished
That she could wear any gown or compliment any style
Or maintain such a perfect hourglass figure
Or tame the fly-aways of frizz in her curly coils
Or walk with such ease in towers of terror
Or smile when the world continues to pull her down
Or if she's really there, if she's even real at all.


That image of a woman, perfectly styled just so Or her hair done up fancily, or her face painted to just the right shade So men and women ...

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