adisciplinedlearner
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The one Shepherd's one fold consists of Jewish Christians and Gentile Christians who lose their ethnic distinction in Him.
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The one Shepherd's one fold consists of Jewish Christians and Gentile Christians who lose their ethnic distinction in Him.
Many sheep, many shepherds, many assemblies, One Great Shepherd who is the head of all shepherds, each one being the head of their respective assembly.Jesus knew in advance that there were among the Gentiles people who would become hearers, believers, and followers or sheep, so He referred to them as sheep in advance (Jn. 10:16). He did not say they were already hearers, believers, or followers, or already sheep
One fold and one Shepherd (Jn. 10:16).
Acts 14:23 And when they had ordained them elders in every church, and had prayed with fasting, they commended them to the Lord, on whom they believed.Jesus said, "There shall be ONE fold and ONE Shepherd." He did not say, "There shall be MORE THAN ONE fold and MORE THAN ONE Shepherd." I believe what He said.
Jesus said, "There shall be ONE fold and ONE Shepherd." He did not say, "There shall be MORE THAN ONE fold and MORE THAN ONE Shepherd." I believe what He said.
Brother Mark,
All of the Christians in Ephesus were the one church of God and body of Christ as it was manifested in that city. These Christians fellowshipped with one another. Grievous wolves were able to enter into their midst in an effort to lead them into sin and error.
The Christians in the city of Ephesus were the one flock of God in that locale.
Yes, all the Christians in Ephesus were the church and body of Christ in that locale. Except geographically, these Christians were not separated from all other Christians in the world.
The word church (ekklesia) always means assembly and can never have a larger, universal meaning.A family and a kingdom normally are localized entities, but the New Testament gives these terms newer, larger meanings. It does the same with the word church.
The word does not and did not have any larger meaning than the simple meaning of "assembly." That is a fact that many want to ignore.Who says it cannot have a larger meaning? Word meaning is based upon word usage. The word "ekklesia" is used many times in the New Testament to refer to an entity larger than a local one. It may be true that this word had no larger meaning before New Testament times, but it took on a larger meaning during the days of Christ and His apostles. So did the words family and kingdom.