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This Too Shall Pass (The Best Is Yet To Come) - Ron Edmondson
In his day Nebuchadnezzar was a king. He was a well-known King that brought havoc to the Israelites. He was a greatly feared and powerful leader. At his word nations and people’s could be destroyed (except where God intervened of course). As greatly as he struck people in fear and awe in his day, I am not too afraid of Nebuchadnezzar today. The fact is he is dead. No more. Gone. Out of sight. As big and bad as he was then, he is no longer a threat today.
Ron Edmondson,
Divine Violence
The manuscript for my book Divine Violence and the Character of God has been accepted for publication. The book will be published probably next January. The research, the writing, and the editing o…
Claude F. Mariottini,
That taxing question (Matthew 22:17-22)
No, Jesus wasn’t promoting two kingdoms with divided loyalties.
Allen Browne,
The one they pierced (Zechariah 12:10-14)
“They will look on me, the one they have pierced.” What does this mean in its OT context? How does it relate to the Messiah?
Allen Browne,
Nebuchadnezzar: King of the Neo-Babylonian Empire
Nebuchadnezzar II, the Neo-Babylonian Empire’s second king, was the most famous king of the Chaldeans, a people whom Jeremiah called “an ancient nation” (Jer. 5:15). As king, Nebuchadnezzar brought…
Claude F. Mariottini,
Nebuchadnezzar: King of the Neo-Babylonian Empire
Nebuchadnezzar II, the Neo-Babylonian Empire’s second king, was the most famous king of the Chaldeans, a people whom Jeremiah called “an ancient nation” (Jer. 5:15). As king, Nebuchadnezzar brought…
Claude F. Mariottini,

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