Well, well. You think I do not accept the words we are given from God. I think you do not understand them.
"The New Testament Scriptures state, in most unambiguous language, that ‘the seed of Abraham’, to whom ‘all the promises of God’ belong, are those who believe the gospel of Jesus Christ (Gal. 3:7, 29; 2 Cor. 1:20).
"For God’s invariable order of procedure, in the working out of His eternal purposes, is “first – that which is natural, and afterward that which is spiritual” (1 Cor. 15:46).
"If, therefore, an Old Testament prophecy of blessing, intended for the true Israel (that ‘holy nation’ spoken of in 1 Pet. 2:9), be interpreted as applying to ‘Israel after the flesh,’ the interpretation is not ‘literal’ (i.e., according to the letter) except in the sense in which ‘the letter kills, but the spirit gives life’ (2 Cor. 3:6);
"for obviously in this case, interpreting the prophecy in relation to that typified by ‘Ishmael’ destroys it completely. And it is specially to be noted that, in the passage from which this Scripture is quoted, Paul is explaining the great differences between the Old Covenant (which was of the letter) and the New Covenant (of the Spirit);
"and, moreover, he is comparing the ministry of Moses, which had to do with things that are seen (an earthly sanctuary and its vessels of service, animal sacrifices, etc.), with the ministry of himself and others whom God had made ‘able ministers of the New Covenant; not of the letter, but of the spirit.’
"Also it should be noted that the apostle there speaks of the Old Covenant (under which promises were made to the natural Israel) as ‘that which is done away’; whereas the New Covenant is ‘that which remains,’ that is, abides eternally (2 Cor 3:11).
"From this Scripture alone it is evident (and the same truth is set forth at greater length in Gal. 4:21-31 and Hebrews chapters 8 – 10), that all future promises of glory and blessing for Israel and Zion must belong to the true Israel and the heavenly Zion.
"And, in this very passage, we are admonished to ‘look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen’ (2Cor 4:18); which admonition, however, is habitually disregarded in the interpretation of prophecies relating to these very subjects.
"Evidently then our difficulty in understanding certain prophecies is due to our lack of faith and our spiritual dullness. For, in respect to the things which are not seen, faith takes the place of sight; for faith has to do solely with things not visible to the natural eye; and the same is true for hope, for ‘hope that is seen is not hope’ (Rom. 8:24).
"Thus it is written that, ‘faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen’; and ‘through faith we understand’ (Hebrews 11:1,3).
"Hence, to understand the prophecies it is necessary, and vitally necessary,
1.) that we believe the revelations of the New Testament;
2.) that we accept as ‘literally’ true that there is now, at this present time, a realm of spiritual realities, into which our risen Lord is actually entered, and we also, in Him;
3.) that ‘the substance of things hoped for’ is there, not here;
and specially that God’s purposes concerning
4.) His Eternal City,
5.) Temple
6.) and People are being fulfilled at this very time, in that spiritual realm, though the natural eye cannot see what is going on there.
"I can testify from experience that, by the simple process of believing what is written in the New Testament concerning the actual present existence, among the things not seen,
"of the true Zion,
"of the city of the living God the heavenly Jerusalem,
"of the holy nation which is a royal priesthood,
"and of other spiritual realities,
"the main difficulty in the understanding of the Old Testament prophecies which speak of a glorified state of the things named above, vanishes away."