This is How He was…But This is How He Will Be later…
(with addendum)
When He was on earth He did 365,000 miracles in 3 ½ years, drank a bitter cup, and died on a specific hour of the clock. This is how it was for Him on the day they blinded Him, made Him sick with sin, made him miserable, stripped Him naked and took all His possessions away, including His life. On that day, He was Wretched, Miserable, Poor, Blind, and Naked for all of us.
When He returns we will see Him as He is, not as He was, for we will see Him as ever-living first born and King for a Forever; as opposed to King for a Day. He will also perform a Holderness Number of miracles in one resurrection morning alone for thousands of millions in order to change them from earth manure to glory, giving them enough spirituality to think and know all the Goods of their God. Evil will finally be on its way out of the universe, never to raise its head a second time.
We will see Him as He is…
1 John 3:2
“Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that, when he shall appear, we shall be like him; for we shall see him as he is.”
On the day they blinded Him…
Revelation 3:17
“Because thou sayest, I am rich, and increased with goods, and have need of nothing; and knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked:”
Giving them enough spirituality…
1 Corinthians 13:12
“Now we see but a dim reflection as in a mirror; then we shall see face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I am fully known.”
* Holderness Number. See link below and paragraph 5 of the article…
https://katachriston.wordpress.com/2011/10/05/the-largest-number-representing-something-empirical/
Addendum: The Acts of Jesus
The number 365,000 is just a number that shows the order of magnitude we are talking about when comparing the acts of Jesus with the acts of medical personnel today. Imagine, if we will, being a surgeon and doing withered arm repair surgery. We may do such and such number of surgeries a week, totaling such and such number of restorations; restoring a patient to some percentage of ‘gain of function’. Our surgical operations would take x number of hours, and result in—on the spot—a beginning 12 percent of return of function at best.
Now imagine such a mobile, surgical hospital with a patient load of 5,000 people on a grassy waiting room; and each patient sitting in their pains which vary in complexity from blindness (yes, this is a ‘pain’, a severe crippling one also) to systemic palsy—And the number of surgicals scheduled for the day being all-of-them. Each visit, say, lasts 30 seconds and involves greeting the patient, collecting their tears, and honoring their request: the surgical itself lasting but a moment of touch or even the speak of a word in the case of demonic possession. Total time of this shift: 1.7 days; the nurses recording the paperwork are, of course, angels.
Sid Schwab: surgeon, newspaper Columnist, Vietnam Vet, author (1977–present)
I can’t think of any surgeon, nor in my career have I ever seen or been one, who works an 8-hour shift. Most don’t work shifts. Of those that do, more likely than not they’re 12 hours. Or 24. And those would be akin to surgical hospitalists. The typical surgeon works as many hours a day as needed to do the work. Not including coming in frequently at night.
Nor do surgeons do nothing but operate. They have office hours. They make rounds. They do charting. They eat.
Some have designated blocks of hours at their disposal in an operating room. In some situations, they may be eight-hour blocks. Or less. Some operations, singly, take eight hours. Some take twenty minutes.
Jesus’s hours varied, as we know from scripture, but His results were extraordinary and these results steal the show in most or all of the recordings in the books of the ‘the Acts of Jesus’. But not often do the statistics regarding the cases get detailed press. As a medical person, I find these acts far above any earthly caliber that I am aware; I find them wonderful and inspiring, and each ‘100 percent restoration’ stamp leaves me astonied for over an hour after review. Hence, I have given a number that would hopefully represent the sum of these Gospel stats, and which may by way of specificity guide us toward thoughts we may use to meditate with the next time we put our reading finger to the Acts of Jesus.
When He was on earth He did 365,000 miracles in 3 ½ years, drank a bitter cup, and died on a specific hour of the clock. This is how it was for Him on the day they blinded Him, made Him sick with sin, made him miserable, stripped Him naked and took all His possessions away, including His life. On that day, He was Wretched, Miserable, Poor, Blind, and Naked for all of us.
When He returns we will see Him as He is, not as He was, for we will see Him as ever-living first born and King for a Forever; as opposed to King for a Day. He will also perform a Holderness Number of miracles in one resurrection morning alone for thousands of millions in order to change them from earth manure to glory, giving them enough spirituality to think and know all the Goods of their God. Evil will finally be on its way out of the universe, never to raise its head a second time.
We will see Him as He is…
1 John 3:2
“Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that, when he shall appear, we shall be like him; for we shall see him as he is.”
On the day they blinded Him…
Revelation 3:17
“Because thou sayest, I am rich, and increased with goods, and have need of nothing; and knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked:”
Giving them enough spirituality…
1 Corinthians 13:12
“Now we see but a dim reflection as in a mirror; then we shall see face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I am fully known.”
* Holderness Number. See link below and paragraph 5 of the article…
https://katachriston.wordpress.com/2011/10/05/the-largest-number-representing-something-empirical/
Addendum: The Acts of Jesus
The number 365,000 is just a number that shows the order of magnitude we are talking about when comparing the acts of Jesus with the acts of medical personnel today. Imagine, if we will, being a surgeon and doing withered arm repair surgery. We may do such and such number of surgeries a week, totaling such and such number of restorations; restoring a patient to some percentage of ‘gain of function’. Our surgical operations would take x number of hours, and result in—on the spot—a beginning 12 percent of return of function at best.
Now imagine such a mobile, surgical hospital with a patient load of 5,000 people on a grassy waiting room; and each patient sitting in their pains which vary in complexity from blindness (yes, this is a ‘pain’, a severe crippling one also) to systemic palsy—And the number of surgicals scheduled for the day being all-of-them. Each visit, say, lasts 30 seconds and involves greeting the patient, collecting their tears, and honoring their request: the surgical itself lasting but a moment of touch or even the speak of a word in the case of demonic possession. Total time of this shift: 1.7 days; the nurses recording the paperwork are, of course, angels.
Sid Schwab: surgeon, newspaper Columnist, Vietnam Vet, author (1977–present)
I can’t think of any surgeon, nor in my career have I ever seen or been one, who works an 8-hour shift. Most don’t work shifts. Of those that do, more likely than not they’re 12 hours. Or 24. And those would be akin to surgical hospitalists. The typical surgeon works as many hours a day as needed to do the work. Not including coming in frequently at night.
Nor do surgeons do nothing but operate. They have office hours. They make rounds. They do charting. They eat.
Some have designated blocks of hours at their disposal in an operating room. In some situations, they may be eight-hour blocks. Or less. Some operations, singly, take eight hours. Some take twenty minutes.
Jesus’s hours varied, as we know from scripture, but His results were extraordinary and these results steal the show in most or all of the recordings in the books of the ‘the Acts of Jesus’. But not often do the statistics regarding the cases get detailed press. As a medical person, I find these acts far above any earthly caliber that I am aware; I find them wonderful and inspiring, and each ‘100 percent restoration’ stamp leaves me astonied for over an hour after review. Hence, I have given a number that would hopefully represent the sum of these Gospel stats, and which may by way of specificity guide us toward thoughts we may use to meditate with the next time we put our reading finger to the Acts of Jesus.