Odë:hgöd
Well Known Member
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I have been puzzled for years wondering how the Devil will manage to persuade
the people of Gog and Magog to stage the rebellion depicted by Rev 20:7-9. I
mean; by then Messiah's administration has given them a world of peace, health,
and prosperity like no one has ever seen before; how is that the rebels are so
willing to bite the hand that feeds them?
Children born to kingdom parents will begin their lives sans the fallen nature thanks
to the fallen nature's source shackled and imprisoned in the abyss. (Rev 20:1-3) In
other words, those children will be born as all of us should've been born in the first
place, viz: they will be born with the original human nature; the nature that Adam
had when he was created.
Well; Adam's original nature was a very good nature (Gen 1:31) but it wasn't an
ideal nature. We know that's true because the Serpent found a way to persuade
Adam to do something contrary to the man's better judgment while he was in a
state of innocence rather than a state of corruption.
Prior to his incarceration in the abyss, the Devil has had many thousands of years
of hands-on experience honing his skills. The people of Gog and Magog, though in a
state of innocence, shouldn't be any more difficult for the Devil to persuade than
was Adam.
_
I have been puzzled for years wondering how the Devil will manage to persuade
the people of Gog and Magog to stage the rebellion depicted by Rev 20:7-9. I
mean; by then Messiah's administration has given them a world of peace, health,
and prosperity like no one has ever seen before; how is that the rebels are so
willing to bite the hand that feeds them?
Children born to kingdom parents will begin their lives sans the fallen nature thanks
to the fallen nature's source shackled and imprisoned in the abyss. (Rev 20:1-3) In
other words, those children will be born as all of us should've been born in the first
place, viz: they will be born with the original human nature; the nature that Adam
had when he was created.
Well; Adam's original nature was a very good nature (Gen 1:31) but it wasn't an
ideal nature. We know that's true because the Serpent found a way to persuade
Adam to do something contrary to the man's better judgment while he was in a
state of innocence rather than a state of corruption.
Prior to his incarceration in the abyss, the Devil has had many thousands of years
of hands-on experience honing his skills. The people of Gog and Magog, though in a
state of innocence, shouldn't be any more difficult for the Devil to persuade than
was Adam.
_