Pagină:Tree-of-hope-1934.djvu/13: Diferență între versiuni

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(Neverificat: Pagină nouă: Fesrvary 15, 1934 law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ, even we have believed in Jesus Christ, that we might be justified by the faith of Christ, and not by the works of the l...)
 
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Fesrvary 15, 1934
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legii, ci prin credința în Isus Cristos, chiar și noi am crezut în Isus Cristos, ca să fim declarați drepți prin credința în Cristos, și nu prin lucrările legii: căci prin lucrările legi nimeni nu va fi îndreptățit”. (Gal. 2:16) Celor care au avut credință în Dumnezeu și în promisiunile lui și care au încercat să păzească legea, pentru ei legea le-a servit drept învățător pentru a-i conduce și a-i proteja la venirea lui Cristos. (Gal. 3:24) Prin urmare, ei au fost un popor foarte favorizat de Dumnezeu.}}
law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ, even we have
 
believed in Jesus Christ, that we might be justified
 
by the faith of Christ, and not by the works of the
 
law: for by the works of the Iaw shall no flesh be
 
justified.’”? (Gal. 2:16) Those who did have faith in
 
God and in his promises, and who tricd to keep the
 
law, to them the law served as a schoolmaster to lead
 
them and saferuard them unto the coming of Christ.
 
(Gal. 3:24) They were therefore a people greatly
 
favored of God.
 
The law covenant had a mediator. And why! Be-  
 
cause the people of Israel were not competent to enter
 
into a covenant with God. They were sinners by rea-
 
son of inheritance from Adam’s sin. Moses was ap-  
 
pointed the mediator between God and Israel in the
 
covenant. (Gal. 3:19) Was not Moscs also born a
 
sinner; and, if so, how could he be a mediator? Moses
 
was born a sinner; but by reason of his faith in God
 
and obedience to his commands, thereby proving his
 
faith, he was justified by faith and therefore aeeepted
 
by Jchovah as a competent one to enter into a covenant
 
as mediator for Isracl. (Heb. 11: 23-28; Ex. 3:5)
 
Concerning Moses Jchovah said: ‘‘My servant Moses
 
... is faithful in all mine house.’’ (Num. 12: 7,8)
 
‘Remember ye the law of Moses my servant, which
 
She WATCHTOWER. 61
 
I commanded unto him in Horeb for all Israel, with
 
the statutes and judgments.’”’ (Mal. 4:4) ‘This [Mo-
 
ses] is he that was in the church in the wilderness
 
with the angel which spake to him in the mount Sina,
 
. . . who received the lively oracles to give unto us,’’
 
Acts 7: 38.
 
Moses as mediator of the law covenant foreshadowed
 
Christ the Mediator of the new and better covenant.
 
*‘Por the law was given by Moses, but grace and truth
 
eame by Jesus Christ.’’—John 1: 17.
 
At the slaying of the passover lamb Moses repre-
 
sented Jesus alone and exclusive of his body members,
 
the church. In the new covenant Jesus alone was and
 
is all-sufficient for the office of Mediator, to which
 
he was appointed at the slaying of the antitypical
 
Lamb. It would not be necessary for him to wait until
 
the establishment of the kingdom to make the new
 
covenant. At Mount Sinai, when the Jaw covenant
 
was confirmed, Moses pictured Christ Jesus inaugurat-
 
ing the new covenant at Mount Zion. There the blood
 
of bulls and goats was sprinkled both upon the book
 
of the law and upon the people. The blood of the
 
bullock pictures Christ Jesus, whereas the blood of the
 
goats pictures the church sharing with Jesus as ‘‘able
 
ministers’? of the new covenant,
 
BIRTH OF THE SON OF MAN
 
the moment back over the course of more than
 
nineteen centuries to one of the tenderest and
 
sweetest scenes of human history.
 
Jesus’ birth, then the greatest event in the world’s
 
histery, was about to be enacted. Two thousand years
 
had passed since God had made the promise to the
 
patriareh Abraham of the coming of the mighty One
 
through whom all the families of the earth should be
 
blessed. During that time Jehovah was executing his
 
preconceived purpose, renewing his promise to the
 
patriarchs Isaac and Jacob and their offspring to
 
keep it fresh in the minds of the faithful, and shaping
 
the course of those who should participate in this
 
great transaction. And now, as the day drew near,
 
the stage was being set.
 
The place selected was Bethlehem, situated on an
 
elevation south of Jerusalem. It was once the home
 
of King David’s ereat-grandfather Boaz, whose fields
 
the beautiful Moabitish woman Ruth had gleancd and
 
whom Boaz redcemed and afterward took as his wife.
 
Here Jehovah had used Boaz as a type or prophetie
 
picture of Christ Jesus, and Ruth as a type of the
 
remnant of today, thus foreshadowing things to come.
 
Later Bethlehem was the home of Jesse and of David
 
his son. The name David implies ‘‘beloved one’’;
 
and it was here in this little city that he was anointed
 
to be king over Israel, from the time of which event he
 
ET us turn from the anxietics and turmoil of
 
typified Jesus, the mighty Son of God. Jehovah had
 
selected this as the birthplace of Jesus; hence lire
 
the birth must take place. Many hundreds of years
 
before Jehovah’s prophet had given utterance to these
 
words: ‘‘But thou, Beth-lchem Ephratah, though thou
 
be little among the thousands of Judah, yet out of
 
thee shall he come forth unto me that is to be ruler
 
in Isracl; whose goings forth have been from of old,
 
from everlasting.’’
 
Away to the north in Galilee stood the humble and
 
despised city of Nazareth. It was the home of Joseph
 
the carpenter, a meck, little-known, yet honest man.
 
He was espoused to Mary. We should expect that
 
Jchovah would time everything exactly; and so he
 
did. Authority over the land of Palestine had depart-
 
ed from the tribe of Judah; the Romans were in con-
 
trol of Palestine, and the time for the birth of the
 
mighty One was due, Exercising his perfect wisdom
 
and power, Jehovah was overruling all things to the
 
accomplishment of his purpose. Augustus Cesar, then
 
the emperor and ruler over all Palestine, issued a
 
deeree that all the people should be taxed. Everyone
 
must go to the city of his nativity, there to be num-
 
bered and taxed. Joseph the carpenter, although a
 
resident of Nazareth, was of the house of David, and
 
hence must go to the city of David to be numbered
 
and taxed. Naturally his espoused virgin would ae-
 
company him to that city. She likewise was of the
 

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legii, ci prin credința în Isus Cristos, chiar și noi am crezut în Isus Cristos, ca să fim declarați drepți prin credința în Cristos, și nu prin lucrările legii: căci prin lucrările legi nimeni nu va fi îndreptățit”. (Gal. 2:16) Celor care au avut credință în Dumnezeu și în promisiunile lui și care au încercat să păzească legea, pentru ei legea le-a servit drept învățător pentru a-i conduce și a-i proteja la venirea lui Cristos. (Gal. 3:24) Prin urmare, ei au fost un popor foarte favorizat de Dumnezeu.}}