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Most of you have heard my speculation —something that to me is not a completed thought, but that I am pretty sure has merit— that the New Jerusalem of Rev 21 is not just "dressed/adorned as a bride" but in fact is adorned as the bride that she is—the Bride of Christ.
I memorized this passage when I was just a small child. It became kind of rote, to me, and easily glossed over to mean only a promise, easily used in Gospel presentations and discussions, and since then, I see it working into my speculation nicely, with verse 6's outrageous play on words. Today a couple of things about it flicked a neuron:
It is interesting that Christ here says, first, "many mansions", (plural). The Greek uses the plural. Then he says, "I go and prepare a place for you", (singular). The Greek there uses a different word, denoting a slightly different meaning. Strongs says, concerning the first, "monai: Lodging, dwelling-place, room, abode, mansion. From meno; a staying, i.e. a residence". For the second, "topon: Apparently a primary word; a spot, i.e. Location; figuratively, condition, opportunity; specially, a scabbard."
The sense I get from the Greek is that the place that Christ has gone to prepare is a specific place, purposely intended to be filled, as a scabbard is the place intended for the sword. "...my father's house", I believe to be that spot in which the many dwellings are, in an, "already but not yet", kind of use. It has been many years since I considered the "Father's house" to be a mansion full of millions of generic rooms in which people are put as they arrive. Rather, to me, this kind of affirms the notion that we ARE that place, called The Bride.
Rev 21 says, (3) 'And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “Look! God’s dwelling place is now among the people, and he will dwell with them." ' To me, this is a delicious riddle. I think WE are his father's house, in which his father dwells, and we are each those many dwelling places in it —it is US that he has gone to prepare. Sanctification. Maturing, growing in knowledge of him.
In John 14:2-6 there are several dynamics going on. One of them is that, as language goes, Jesus has not changed the subject in answering Thomas (vs 5) with verse 6. In the same way that when people ask the wrong question, he answers their questions with something they had not considered, so he answers Thomas, here. He already told them that they know the way, and they know where he is going. Indeed they did know him, and they knew the Father as well. Yet he lays information on them that they hadn't yet considered in those terms, "I am the way, the truth and the life." You might say that they knew this, but it hadn't clicked. Then he says, relating back to verse 2, "No man cometh to the Father but by me", which is a saying full rich in meaning and implications.
I really am looking forward to that 'smack-my-forehead-with-the-palm-of-my-hand' moment of seeing him as he is. "OH! Well, of course! It was right there in front of me the whole time!"
We are being built for him.
I memorized this passage when I was just a small child. It became kind of rote, to me, and easily glossed over to mean only a promise, easily used in Gospel presentations and discussions, and since then, I see it working into my speculation nicely, with verse 6's outrageous play on words. Today a couple of things about it flicked a neuron:
John 14:2-6
Authorized (King James) Version
2 In my Father’s house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you. 3 And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again, and receive you unto myself; that where I am, there ye may be also. 4 And whither I go ye know, and the way ye know.
5 Thomas saith unto him, Lord, we know not whither thou goest; and how can we know the way? 6 Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.
It is interesting that Christ here says, first, "many mansions", (plural). The Greek uses the plural. Then he says, "I go and prepare a place for you", (singular). The Greek there uses a different word, denoting a slightly different meaning. Strongs says, concerning the first, "monai: Lodging, dwelling-place, room, abode, mansion. From meno; a staying, i.e. a residence". For the second, "topon: Apparently a primary word; a spot, i.e. Location; figuratively, condition, opportunity; specially, a scabbard."
The sense I get from the Greek is that the place that Christ has gone to prepare is a specific place, purposely intended to be filled, as a scabbard is the place intended for the sword. "...my father's house", I believe to be that spot in which the many dwellings are, in an, "already but not yet", kind of use. It has been many years since I considered the "Father's house" to be a mansion full of millions of generic rooms in which people are put as they arrive. Rather, to me, this kind of affirms the notion that we ARE that place, called The Bride.
Rev 21 says, (3) 'And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “Look! God’s dwelling place is now among the people, and he will dwell with them." ' To me, this is a delicious riddle. I think WE are his father's house, in which his father dwells, and we are each those many dwelling places in it —it is US that he has gone to prepare. Sanctification. Maturing, growing in knowledge of him.
In John 14:2-6 there are several dynamics going on. One of them is that, as language goes, Jesus has not changed the subject in answering Thomas (vs 5) with verse 6. In the same way that when people ask the wrong question, he answers their questions with something they had not considered, so he answers Thomas, here. He already told them that they know the way, and they know where he is going. Indeed they did know him, and they knew the Father as well. Yet he lays information on them that they hadn't yet considered in those terms, "I am the way, the truth and the life." You might say that they knew this, but it hadn't clicked. Then he says, relating back to verse 2, "No man cometh to the Father but by me", which is a saying full rich in meaning and implications.
I really am looking forward to that 'smack-my-forehead-with-the-palm-of-my-hand' moment of seeing him as he is. "OH! Well, of course! It was right there in front of me the whole time!"


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