- Mar 14, 2020
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In another thread a brother brought up the subject of Enoch and Elijah who had never died but, were taken up to heaven: and because of this these two men are the prime candidates for the two witnesses. While it wasn't directly related to the topic of the actual thread we were in I stopped to think:
Did we assume and read Enoch and Elijah into the text of the two witnesses in Revelation because the apostle said, 'It is appointed for men once to die, and after that the judgment'?
After pondering it for a bit I couldn't help but conclude that the word once wasn't saying that men only die "one time" and then are judged: for if this were the case then what do we make of the young girl whom Jesus raised from the dead in view of only her parents? And what do we make of Lazarus? They lived twice and died twice; this would also be the case when Elijah and Elisha rose people from the dead: these stories easily defeat that doctrine. When looking at the Greek text we read that hapas "once, once for all" and not enas "one" was used by the apostle in his letter to the Hebrews. This then would mean that at the end of all things or "once and for all" men will die and then the Final Judgment awaits us.
What's more I also found that a third person had also never died:
1) Enoch
2) Elijah
3) Ezra
This longer ending from 2 Esdras 14:48 can only be found in the New Revised Standard Version - Catholic Interconfessional (NRSV-CI) among all of the English translations I have read of Scripture which includes the apocryphal books. The sources for this longer ending can be found in the Syriac, Arabic, Ethiopic, and the 1 Armenian translations of the aforesaid passage. And the year 5000 AM mentioned by Ezra in this longer ending indicates that Ezra would've been contemporaries with Ezekiel and Daniel; and, what's more this is the same year in which Daniel received the 70 Week Prophecy from the archangel Gabriel in Daniel 9 and, 11:1 is a continuation from the same time period all the way to the close of chapter 12. This is also in the 53rd Year of the Babylonian captivity of the Jews as Cyrus the Great would come into power in the year 5017 AM meaning that Darius the Mede ruled for 17 Years dying at 79 Years old.
Did we assume and read Enoch and Elijah into the text of the two witnesses in Revelation because the apostle said, 'It is appointed for men once to die, and after that the judgment'?
After pondering it for a bit I couldn't help but conclude that the word once wasn't saying that men only die "one time" and then are judged: for if this were the case then what do we make of the young girl whom Jesus raised from the dead in view of only her parents? And what do we make of Lazarus? They lived twice and died twice; this would also be the case when Elijah and Elisha rose people from the dead: these stories easily defeat that doctrine. When looking at the Greek text we read that hapas "once, once for all" and not enas "one" was used by the apostle in his letter to the Hebrews. This then would mean that at the end of all things or "once and for all" men will die and then the Final Judgment awaits us.
What's more I also found that a third person had also never died:
1) Enoch
2) Elijah
3) Ezra
This longer ending from 2 Esdras 14:48 can only be found in the New Revised Standard Version - Catholic Interconfessional (NRSV-CI) among all of the English translations I have read of Scripture which includes the apocryphal books. The sources for this longer ending can be found in the Syriac, Arabic, Ethiopic, and the 1 Armenian translations of the aforesaid passage. And the year 5000 AM mentioned by Ezra in this longer ending indicates that Ezra would've been contemporaries with Ezekiel and Daniel; and, what's more this is the same year in which Daniel received the 70 Week Prophecy from the archangel Gabriel in Daniel 9 and, 11:1 is a continuation from the same time period all the way to the close of chapter 12. This is also in the 53rd Year of the Babylonian captivity of the Jews as Cyrus the Great would come into power in the year 5017 AM meaning that Darius the Mede ruled for 17 Years dying at 79 Years old.
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