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How to read DIFFICULT passages in the Old Testament | EP.5 The Bible with Richard and John

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Seeing the Old Testament through Christ

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tinted spectacles is to see it for the

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first time in 3D.

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>> In the Old Testament, it particularly

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difficult when coming across passages

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where God seems to command violence. How

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should we read passages like that?

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>> I think we should read them. God is

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called the Lord of Hosts, which means

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the Lord of armies, right? He is a

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military god. He commands that teenagers

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be stoned to death if they misbehave. In

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the New Testament, you've got well

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Jesus. [music] He seems nice. But

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actually, it's not that simple because

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Jesus doesn't always seem as nice as you

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might think.

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>> Richard, a lot of people find in the Old

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Testament it particularly difficult when

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coming across passage where God seems to

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command violence. A classic example

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being the book of Joshua and they

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entering into the promised land and the

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defeat of the Canaanites. How should we

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read passages like that?

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>> I think we should read them. We should

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read them with humility. That's the

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first thing. We should accept the fact

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that these are difficulties and not try

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to paper over them or say, "Oh, but it's

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fine." Because it really isn't fine.

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It's extremely discomforting and we

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should allow these passages to

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discomfort us. I think that's the first

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thing to say. I think the second thing

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to say is we need to read them in the

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light of Christ

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because I think without Christ it seems

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to me those passages are most obviously

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to be read quite literally.

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One could sympathize if we didn't have

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Christ with a fairly fundamentalist

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reading of book of Joshua which would

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insist that for example that what we

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call the holy land belongs to the Jewish

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people because God says so that uh the

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people of Israel have the absolute right

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to use any means necessary to impose

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their will upon that land.

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we've seen even today uh the kind of

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difficulties that that attitude um

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brings with it. So it seems to me that's

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problematic.

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If you read them in the light of Christ,

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if you insist that every passage in the

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scriptures must speak to us of Christ,

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then you deal with it by saying, "How

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might this passage speak to us of

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Christ?"

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Christ who gives way in the end to the

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Cyrophenician woman. She's a she's a

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Philistine, right? She's a Canaanite and

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and he gives her what she wants because

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I think as she makes him laugh reading

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kind of between the lines, he likes her

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and likes her cheek. Um

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>> this is the scraps off the table.

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>> The scraps from the table. Exactly. So

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we have Christ saying to the apostles um

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from the mountain at the end of St.

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Matthew's gospel go out to all the

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nations you know teaching them to do all

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I have commanded you etc etc so in that

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light these things take on a new hue and

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I think we have to read them where the

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literal meaning is obviously

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unacceptable

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that's when we have permission to read

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them in some kind of figurative way

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origin the great um early Christian

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biblical scholar makes precisely this

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point he says as a general rule you

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should read the Bible literally and the

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spiritual meaning should come from the

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literal meaning rather than being an

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alternative to it but when the literal

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meaning is obviously unacceptable is

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obviously wrong then you can look for a

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spiritual meaning which is distinct from

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the literal meaning and I think to be

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honest you have to do that so for

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example we can read The story of the can

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I say the word exterpation? I think I

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can. You just did. Can we we can read

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the story of the exterpation of the

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Canaanites from the land as being really

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a story about the need to cast out sin

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to cast out temptation because of course

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the Canaanites are a temptation to the

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people of Israel. And you see this in

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later books of the Bible precisely

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because they don't exterpate the

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Canaanites as they were supposed to.

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They keep falling into the sin of

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idolatry following the gods and

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goddesses of the people around about

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them. And this represents the fact that

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if we don't avoid the near occasion of

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sin, we will fall into sin. So you can

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read it in in that light, I think. Does

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that mean though is there a risk um in

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in that way of seeing things that we see

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Jesus and the God of the New Testament

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as that's really God and the Old

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Testament is is not quite God or hasn't

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got it quite right and we're gradually

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getting there when we get to Jesus?

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>> Uh yes. Uh I don't think I don't think

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so. I I don't think we can see God as

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gradually getting there. I think we can

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see humanity as gradually getting there.

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God of course doesn't change. Um, when I

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instruct people in the faith, I I always

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begin with what we like to call day deo

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uno of the one God, the the fundamental

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doctrine of God. And I say to God is

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amongst other things by definition

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unchangeable,

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incapable of change, incapable of

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suffering,

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etc. And I say, you always have to

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remember that this is true when you then

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start to read about God in the

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scriptures. The God that the scriptures

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reveals to us must be God and therefore

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he must be unchangeable. So when it

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seems as though God is changing in some

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way, we'll come back to the question of

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whether it even seems like that. But

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let's allow for a moment that it does.

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If it seems as though God is changing in

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some way, softening perhaps you might

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say, getting nicer, um that can't really

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be true. And therefore it must be that

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humanity is changing that in fact it is

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our relationship to him which is

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changing and therefore he seems

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different to us but not because he's

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different in himself.

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The idea that the god of the old

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testament is a fundamentally different

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god from the god of the new testament is

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one of the earliest heresies in the

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church. The heresy of marian and it is a

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fundamental and dangerous error. an

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error which is is liable if we're not

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careful to lead actually to

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anti-semitism which itself is a heresy.

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So now the question is does God seem to

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be changing?

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I think undoubtedly there are passages

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in the Old Testament where God's

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violence

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is emphasized. God is called the Lord of

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hosts which means the Lord of armies,

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right? He is a military god. Um he

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commands jihad and ethnic cleansing in

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in the land. Uh he commands that um

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teenagers be stoned to death if they

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misbehave. Um and all sorts of you know

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the the killing of witches and all sorts

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of things as well as obviously animal

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sacrifice. Then in the New Testament

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you've got well Jesus he seems nice. But

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actually, it's not that simple because

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Jesus doesn't always seem as nice as you

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might think. Where, for example, do we

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learn about hell?

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Nowhere in the Old Testament do we find

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hell. You find shale, but that's not

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hell. It's kind of a shady land of

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greyness, but it's certainly not the the

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perpetual fire of anguish. It's not

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weeping and nashing of teeth. If you

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want weeping and nashing of teeth, you

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get it from Jesus. If you want absolute

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foaming at the mouth condemnation of

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sin, you get it from Jesus Christ. And

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similarly in the Old Testament, there

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are some wonderful passages about the

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love of God. Um I'm thinking about

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passages in in the prophet Hosea, for

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example, um in some of the Psalms. um

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the idea of how Israel is is is a

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beloved child of God and also Israel is

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in other passages God's beloved bride.

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How much and how tenderly he loves her.

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And of course, it is in the Old

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Testament that we get the two great

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commandments of love. Love the Lord your

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