Test For Delusion - Christianity Etc (8) - Nairaland
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| Re: Test For Delusion by sonmvayina(m): 7:17pm On Jan 29 |
tctrills:and it never occurred to you that the me is the prophet Zachariah? who wrote those things as he got them from God ![]() that is what baffles me.... if I write a book, and you see "me" there, won't you know i am referring to myself, the author of the book? if I was referring to someone else, I will use him or her...isn't it? why are you not understanding?? |
| Re: Test For Delusion by sonmvayina(m): 7:40pm On Jan 29 |
tctrills:you can't take verse 11 and interpret it independently, it is part of a story. you have to read it like like your reading a novel. forget the verses. it is a continuous narrative.....verse 11 is saying that on that day, nations will join Israel/ Judah and Jerusalem. YHWH will be God over all, and God will live amongst them. and when these things happen people will know that it was God that sent Zachariah to be a prophet. ....the Lord of host sent me(Zachariah) unto thee...it is Zachariah's prophecy. He is the one God sent..... it's not rocket science n |
| Re: Test For Delusion by sonmvayina(m): 8:00pm On Jan 29 |
tctrills:In Jewish tradition, Zechariah 2:1-11 (often 2:5-15 in Hebrew text) is a vision of future redemption, focusing on the expansion, protection, and divine habitation of Jerusalem. Key themes include the rebuilding of the Temple, the gathering of exiles, and the ultimate recognition of God’s sovereignty by many nations. Visions of Restoration: The chapter contains a vision of a man measuring Jerusalem, symbolizing its future vast, un-walled, and secure growth, as it will be too full of people to be restricted by city walls. Divine Protection: God promises to be a "wall of fire" around Jerusalem and the glory within it, promising security that transcends physical fortification. Return from Exile: The Jewish people are called to escape from Babylon and the "land of the north," representing a call for the diaspora to return to Zion, as they were scattered by the "four winds". Universal Recognition: The passage looks forward to a Messianic era when "many nations" will join themselves to the Lord, acknowledging Him as God and becoming part of His people, indicating a universal aspect of this future time. The "Apple of His Eye": A key protective verse highlights that anyone harming Israel touches the "apple of His eye". Contextual Usage: These verses are frequently cited in discussions regarding the rebuilding of the Second Temple, the ultimate redemption, and the future glory of Jerusalem. They are often interpreted as messages of comfort and hope for a restored, secure, and spiritually centered Jewish nation to which the rest of the world will look. |
| Re: Test For Delusion by sonmvayina(m): 8:02pm On Jan 29 |
j tctrills:what is your argument?? |
| Re: Test For Delusion by tctrills: 10:23pm On Jan 29 |
sonmvayina:So now you want us to pretend that you somehow know grammar more than Grok. Already from the AI results, it's not remotely possible for it to be Zachariah speaking. The question here is, would you ever agree that you are wrong even if the AI shows you are? Again, I will agree that I don't understand simple English. So in my very next post, I am going to ask AI If i makes any grammatical sense for it to be Zachariah speaking. Yes, everyone knows that Zachriah got his revelation from God, so what is your point? And you are right, He was referring, or better quoting God, the source of the message, when he said For thus saith the Lord of hosts; After the glory hath he sent me unto the nations which spoiled you: for he that toucheth you toucheth the apple of his eye. So what's your point? We both agree that God is the source of the message, and whoever was speaking was directly quoting God's words. All AI versions made that abundantly clear. Now you are confusing yourself with this "me" logic. Here is why 1. There is no record of Zachariah sent or going to any nation. In fact, no record that the enemies of the Jews had access to his text. So clearly, it was not Zachariah who was the "me" that was sent. 2. The "me" said the following in verse 11. many nations shall be joined to the Lord in that day, and shall be my people: and I will dwell in the midst of thee, and thou shalt know that the Lord of hosts hath sent me unto thee. So, according to you, these people will become the people of Zachariah, and he will dwell with them. Again, never happened. |
| Re: Test For Delusion by tctrills: 11:03pm On Jan 29*. Modified: 2:47am On Jan 30 |
sonmvayina:Again, I am sending you The Prompt and results from AI. To see how much contextual and grammatical sense it makes if it were Zachariah, an angel, or Jesus Christ speaking. Let's enjoy this together. I will also snap and attach a table from CHATGPT. My prompt Again, be completely independent of, and do not refer to the works of other scholars or theologians. Just look at the context and grammar. Use only the bible as refrence and guide. Do not be biased towards any theology. Going back to Zechariah 2:8–11 which is more likely from the text. 1. That these were the very words of Zachariah. 2. That this was the words of an angel. 3. These are the words of Jesus Christ. These are the specific texts you should be addressing After the glory hath he sent me unto the nations which spoiled you: for he that toucheth you toucheth the apple of his eye. 9 For, behold, I will shake mine hand upon them, and they shall be a spoil to their servants: and ye shall know that the Lord of hosts hath sent me. 10 Sing and rejoice, O daughter of Zion: for, lo, I come, and I will dwell in the midst of thee, saith the Lord. 11 And many nations shall be joined to the Lord in that day, and shall be my people: and I will dwell in the midst of thee, and thou shalt know that the Lord of hosts hath sent me unto thee. Give reasons why it could or could not for all the above. The Chatgpt result Understood. I’ll do exactly what you asked: No scholars No theology systems Bible-only Context + grammar only Evaluate the three specific options Give reasons for and against each I will not decide for you—only show what the text itself allows or resists. The Text Under Examination (Zechariah 2:8–11) Key repeated statements: “He hath sent me” “I will dwell in the midst of thee” “Saith the LORD” “Ye shall know that the LORD of hosts hath sent me” The question is who can grammatically and contextually say all of this at once. OPTION 1 “These were the very words of Zechariah” ✅ Reasons it could be Zechariah Prophets sometimes speak in the first person for God Example: “Thus saith the LORD… I will…” (common prophetic pattern) Zechariah is a prophet receiving visions and delivering messages. Zechariah is present in the vision context (Zech 1–2). ❌ Reasons it is unlikely to be Zechariah Zechariah is never described as being “sent to the nations” The text says: “After the glory hath He sent me unto the nations which spoiled you” Zechariah’s mission is to Judah, not to the nations. Zechariah does not perform divine actions The speaker says: “I will shake mine hand upon them” In Scripture, shaking nations in judgment is consistently God’s action, not a prophet’s. The speaker promises: “I will dwell in the midst of thee” Nowhere does Scripture say a prophet personally dwells among the people as the divine presence. The speaker distinguishes himself from “the LORD of hosts” “Ye shall know that the LORD of hosts hath sent me” Zechariah never speaks this way about himself elsewhere. 🔎 Conclusion for Option 1 Grammatically possible, but contextually strained and inconsistent with Zechariah’s role elsewhere in the book. OPTION 2 “These were the words of an angel” ✅ Reasons it could be an angel Angels are explicitly active in Zechariah Zech 1–2 repeatedly mentions: “the angel that talked with me” interpreting angels sent messengers Angels are sent beings “The LORD of hosts hath sent me” fits angelic language. Angels sometimes speak on God’s behalf They may say “I” while delivering divine speech. ❌ Reasons it is unlikely to be an angel Angels do not say “I will dwell in the midst of thee” Scripture consistently distinguishes: Angels = messengers God = the One who dwells among His people The speaker says: “They shall be MY people” Angels do not claim covenant ownership. Nations join to the LORD, not to the speaker Yet the speaker still says: “I will dwell in the midst of thee” This implies identity with the LORD’s presence, not a subordinate servant. The repetition is intentional: “The LORD of hosts hath sent me” appears twice The speaker insists on being sent, yet acts as LORD 🔎 Conclusion for Option 2 An angel fits the “sent” language, but fails to fit the covenant and indwelling language. OPTION 3 “These are the words of Jesus Christ” ⚠️ Important note: I am not asserting theology here—only evaluating whether the text itself allows or resists this identity. ✅ Reasons it could be Jesus Christ (text-only) The speaker is distinct from YHWH yet speaks as YHWH “YHWH of hosts hath sent me” “I will dwell in the midst of thee” This duality is not explained, only stated. The speaker is sent “He hath sent me” Scripture elsewhere shows that being sent does not imply inferiority, only mission. The speaker performs divine actions Judgment of nations Covenant ownership (“My people”) Divine indwelling The speaker says: “I come” This implies arrival, not merely speaking from heaven. The pattern is internally consistent: Sent by YHWH Speaks as YHWH Dwells among the people ❌ Reasons the text does not explicitly identify Jesus The name “Jesus” does not appear The text itself does not label the figure. The passage does not explain how this identity works It states facts, not mechanisms. Identification depends on connections outside Zechariah The text alone allows, but does not define. 🔎 Conclusion for Option 3 The text allows this reading grammatically and contextually, but does not name the figure, leaving identification open. Final Comparison Table Option Fits Grammar Fits Context Explains All Statements Zechariah ⚠️ Partial ❌ Weak ❌ No Angel ⚠️ Partial ⚠️ Partial ❌ No Jesus Christ ✅ Strong ✅ Strong ⚠️ Implied, not named Final Neutral Conclusion From context and grammar alone: The speaker is not comfortably Zechariah The speaker exceeds the normal role of an angel The speaker is: Sent by YHWH Speaks as YHWH Dwells among the people Claims covenant ownership The text intentionally presents a sent speaker who shares divine identity without explanation. That is not theology. That is what the text actually does. | Option | Fits Grammar | Fits Context | Explains All Statements | | ------------ | ------------ | ------------ | ----------------------- | | Zechariah | ⚠️ Partial | ❌ Weak | ❌ No | | Angel | ⚠️ Partial | ⚠️ Partial | ❌ No | | Jesus Christ | ✅ Strong | ✅ Strong | ⚠️ Implied, not named | From Gemini To determine who the "me" in this text is based strictly on the grammar and the internal logic of the Bible, we have to look at the actions claimed by the speaker and the titles used. Here is an analysis of your three options using only the biblical text as a guide. 1. Are these the words of Zechariah (The Prophet)? Why it could be: In many prophetic books, the prophet speaks in the first person ("He sent me" . Zechariah is clearly the human author recording the vision.Why it likely is not: * The Power of the Hand: In verse 9, the speaker says, "I will shake mine hand upon them... and they shall be a spoil." In the Old Testament, the "shaking of the hand" to judge nations is an action attributed to the Divine (see Isaiah 11:15 or Isaiah 19:16). A human prophet warns of judgment but rarely claims the personal power to execute it. The Possession of People: In verse 11, the speaker says the nations "shall be my people." Throughout the Bible, the "nations" or "the people" are exclusively called the people of YHWH (God). A human prophet never refers to the redeemed nations as his own personal possession. 2. Are these the words of an Angel? Why it could be: Zechariah 1 and 2 feature an "Interpreting Angel" and the "Angel of the LORD." Verse 11 says, "thou shalt know that the Lord of hosts hath sent me unto thee." This fits the definition of a "Messenger" (the literal meaning of the Hebrew Malak/Angel). Why it likely is not: The Indwelling: The speaker says in verse 10, "I come, and I will dwell in the midst of thee." While angels visit, the Bible consistently describes the "dwelling in the midst" of Zion as the unique presence of God (the Shekinah). The Worship/Joining: Verse 11 says nations will be joined to the LORD and then immediately says they will be "my people." If an angel is the speaker, he is equating "joining the LORD" with "becoming the angel's people," which would be a violation of the biblical principle that worship and belonging are for God alone. 3. Are these the words of Jesus Christ? Why it could be: * The Sent-Sender Paradox: The text presents a speaker who is sent by the LORD of Hosts (verse 9, 11) but who also speaks as the LORD (verse 10, 11). This matches the biblical description of the "Word" or "Son" who is distinct from the Father (the Sender) but is identical in nature (the One who dwells and owns the people). The Transformation of Nations: Verse 11 speaks of "many nations" being joined to the LORD. This is a central theme in the New Testament regarding Christ’s mission to the Gentiles. Why it could be challenged (using only the text): The name "Jesus Christ" does not appear in the text. From a strictly Old Testament perspective, the speaker is the "Angel of the LORD" or the "Presence of God." While Christian theology identifies this figure as the pre-incarnate Christ, the text itself identifies the speaker simply as a "Sent One" who carries the full authority and name of YHWH. Grammatical Verdict: The "Sent LORD" If we follow the grammar of the Bible as our only guide, the most likely conclusion is a mix of Divine and Messenger identities. The Speaker is YHWH: In verse 10, the speaker says, "I will dwell... saith the LORD (YHWH)." The Speaker is Sent by YHWH: In verse 11, the same speaker says, "The LORD (YHWH) of hosts hath sent me." The result: The text demands a speaker who is functionally a messenger (sent) but essentially God (dwells in the midst, owns the people, judges the nations). Within the context of the whole Bible, this role is uniquely filled by the figure known as the "Angel of the LORD" or the "Word," whom the New Testament identifies as Jesus Christ. To determine which identity best fits the text of Zechariah 2:8–11 based strictly on the biblical record and grammatical structure, we can compare how each option handles the specific claims made by the speaker. The primary tension in the text is the "Sent-Sender" paradox: the speaker is sent by the Lord of Hosts, yet the speaker is the Lord who dwells and owns the people. I attached the table from Gemini below From Grok Summary from the text alone (no outside influence) Option 1 (Zechariah) is the weakest fit. The grammar keeps separating the speaker from the LORD who sent him, and nothing in the chapter assigns these divine actions or “sent to the nations” role to the prophet himself. Option 2 (angel) is strong on “sent me” and fits the visionary/angelic context very well, but weakens when the speaker claims covenant ownership (“my people”) and personal indwelling (“I will dwell in the midst of thee”)—language the text normally reserves for YHWH alone. Option 3 (Jesus Christ) is the strongest overall fit when judged purely by what the sentences actually do: The speaker is explicitly sent by YHWH of hosts. Yet the speaker speaks and acts as YHWH (judgment, indwelling, making people “my people”). The text never resolves the identity—it simply presents a sent figure who shares the divine presence and actions. The passage intentionally creates a sent-yet-divine speaker without giving a name or explanation. That is what the grammar and context produce on their own. The text allows Option 3 most comfortably, resists Option 1 most strongly, and leaves Option 2 in the middle. Now, just for fun, I ask AI to also point out if the context and Grammar shows it was the Lord of hosts speaking. Here is the result. To determine if the Lord of Hosts (the Sender) is the one speaking throughout the entire passage, we must examine the internal logic of the verses. In the Hebrew text, "Lord of Hosts" (YHWH Tzevaot) usually refers to God in His capacity as the Commander of Heavenly Armies. Based strictly on the text provided, here is the assessment: Analysis of "The Lord of Hosts" as the Speaker Fits Grammar (Partial): The passage begins with "For thus saith the Lord of Hosts," which usually indicates everything following is His direct word. However, the grammar immediately creates a problem: the speaker says, "He [the Lord of Hosts] hath sent me." If the Lord of Hosts is the speaker, He is speaking about Himself in the third person as the one who sent Himself. Fits Context (Strong): The context is the sovereign protection of Israel. The authority to "shake the hand" over nations and to "dwell in the midst" of Zion is the exclusive prerogative of the Lord of Hosts in the Old Testament. Explains All Statements (Weak): This is the main hurdle. If the Lord of Hosts is the only figure present, the phrase "and ye shall know that the Lord of hosts hath sent me" (repeated in verses 9 and 11) becomes nonsensical. It would mean the Lord of Hosts is sent by the Lord of Hosts to prove that the Lord of Hosts sent Him. Why the "Lord of Hosts" Score is Lower The text explicitly describes a relationship between two entities who both share the same divine authority: The Sender: Identified as "The Lord of Hosts." The Sent One: Identified as "Me," who also claims the title "The Lord" (Jehovah) in verse 10. If you conclude the Lord of Hosts is the speaker, you must explain why He refers to Himself as a messenger sent by Himself. While God can speak of Himself in the third person, the phrase "thou shalt know that the Lord of hosts hath sent me unto thee" specifically uses the language of commissioning—one person sending another to fulfill a task. Summary The text is most "unbiased" when it is allowed to remain in its natural state: The Lord of Hosts is speaking through a Messenger who is also called the Lord. While the "Lord of Hosts" is the ultimate source of the words, the grammar shows He is describing a specific "Sent One" (the "Me" who will be the one physically dwelling in the midst of the people. This is why the Jesus Christ option (or the "Pre-incarnate Word" scores higher: it is the only option that accounts for there being two who are called "Lord" in the same scene—one sending and one being sent.Would you like to see other passages where the "Lord of Hosts" and the "Angel of the Lord" appear in the same verse as distinct persons? | Reading | Grammar | Context | Internal Consistency | | ---------------------------- | ------- | ------- | -------------------- | | LORD alone, undifferentiated | ⚠️ | ⚠️ | ❌ | | Angel | ⚠️ | ❌ | ❌ | | Prophet | ⚠️ | ❌ | ❌ | | LORD who is sent by LORD | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
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| Re: Test For Delusion by TenQ: 1:24am On Jan 30 |
MaxInDHouse:The evidence that abound in your organisation is well known and unbecoming for anyone who claims to be remotely connected to Christ. Do you want me to give you evidences of countless P.E.D.O. lust existing within your esteemed members? |
| Re: Test For Delusion by MaxInDHouse(m): 6:45am On Jan 30 |
TenQ:LOVE covers a multitude of sin {1Peter 4:8} after a public reproof a sinner is to be helped {2Corinthians 2:5-8} if he shows a repentant attitude so it's LOVE as Jesus commanded us that's working. John 13:34-35 Meanwhile there is no single religion out there that's free from such accusations. What else do you have to say?🙂 |
| Re: Test For Delusion by TenQ: 6:50am On Jan 30 |
MaxInDHouse:Haaa! Paedophilic lust covers a multitude of sin!? |
| Re: Test For Delusion by MaxInDHouse(m): 7:42am On Jan 30*. Modified: 8:05am On Jan 30 |
TenQ:Did Jesus say there won't be sinners among his sheep? Go, then, and learn what this means: ‘I want mercy, and not sacrifice.’ For I came to call, not righteous people, but sinners.” Matthew 9:13 I know that is why you refused to come up with the name of any known group but Jesus never condemn anyone due to sin rather what he condemned and told us to shun is UNREPENTANT wrongdoer! Matthew 18:15-17 So can you confidently mention the name of your church now🙂 |
| Re: Test For Delusion by TenQ: 8:26am On Jan 30 |
MaxInDHouse:It's okay that Jesus couldn't install the fruit of the Holy Spirit in you. It's no wonder that we see the counterfeit fruit which is the works of the flesh Gal 5:19-21: "Now the works of the flesh are manifest, which are these; Adultery, fornication, uncleanness, lasciviousness, Idolatry, witchcraft, hatred, variance, jealousies, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies, Contentions, murders, drunkenness, revelings, and such like: of the which I tell you before, as I have also told you in time past, that they which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God." Do you want us to continue flogging this or you choose to focus on topics and issues avoided ? Help Bookmark and Truthseeker10 by answering the questions 1. Can anyone see God? 2. Can God be in Heaven and on Earth concurrently? 3. Who was speaking in Heb1:8 to the Son? |
| Re: Test For Delusion by MaxInDHouse(m): 9:03am On Jan 30 |
Did Jesus say there won't be any sinner among his disciples? YES or NO?🙂 TenQ: |
| Re: Test For Delusion by TenQ: 10:30am On Jan 30 |
MaxInDHouse:Are you trying to justify ur P*****p fphil lick tendencies? There some sins even unbelievers scarcely commit: it is a shame when anyone affiliated with Jesus is found in them 1Cor 5:1: "It is reported commonly that there is fornication among you, and such fornication as is not so much as named among the Gentiles, that one should have his father's wife." |
| Re: Test For Delusion by MaxInDHouse(m): 10:50am On Jan 30 |
TenQ:The sin reported @ 1Corinthans 5:1 was committed by a Christian or pagan? After he was punished {1Corinthans 5:11-13} did they welcome him back into the fold as a repentant sinner? 2Corinthians 2:5-11 This is why i keep referring to your Jesus as "IT" because there is no Jesus of your kind in the Bible. The real Jesus said he came to call sinners not the righteous {Matthew 9:13} so there is no way we will not have them in our midst but after we have shunned the wrongdoer for being unrepentant {Matthew 18:15-17} we must console him if he later shows a repentant attitude. What Paul is saying there is clear we are to scold wrongdoers in our midst not kill them o!😂 |
| Re: Test For Delusion by TenQ: 11:12am On Jan 30 |
MaxInDHouse:Should this kind of sin be mentioned as normal in the church? 1. Can anyone see God? 2. Can God be in Heaven and on Earth concurrently? 3. Who was speaking in Heb1:8 to the Son? |
| Re: Test For Delusion by Truthseeker10: 12:24pm On Jan 30 |
TenQ:🤣🤣🤣Baba don run |
| Re: Test For Delusion by MaxInDHouse(m): 12:36pm On Jan 30 |
TenQ:Highlighted is what Pharisees were saying against our Master Lord and King Christ Jesus {Luke 7:34} but he said such ones needs to be attended to! Matthew 9:12 Please is your own Jesus a real person or an imaginary character? Because you are not quoting the Bible Jesus but creating another one that isn't found in the Bible!😀 |
| Re: Test For Delusion by TenQ: 2:19pm On Jan 30 |
MaxInDHouse:This has nothing to do my my last post to you. As reference, check below TenQ: |
| Re: Test For Delusion by MaxInDHouse(m): 2:22pm On Jan 30 |
TenQ:You started by saying your Jesus is XYZ but can't stick to what the Bible Jesus teaches in thoughts, words and actions!😀 |
| Re: Test For Delusion by Fenrir(m): 3:27pm On Jan 30*. Modified: 3:50pm On Jan 30 |
TenQ:Funny how you accuse people of not reading something then they take apart the entire religious argument "false scientific claims" and you go quiet, i smell hypocrisy aka bullshit. |
| Re: Test For Delusion by Fenrir(m): 3:59pm On Jan 30 |
Boomark:The real test for delusion....... The more you actually think about Christianity, the more ridiculous it becomes. God “loves” you, but if you don’t love him back in the exact correct way, he burns you in hell forever. Out of love, obviously. He creates you with sin already built in, even though he hates sin. So he puts the thing he hates inside you, then blames you for having it. But remember, he loves you. He just hates what he deliberately put in you. Then comes the solution. He creates a son who is also himself, with a pre planned mission to be killed, by rules he made, to forgive humans for breaking rules he knew they would break. He sacrifices himself to himself. Then undoes the sacrifice three days later. Which somehow still counts as the ultimate sacrifice. Except it wasn’t even three days. Friday evening to Sunday morning isn’t three days, but don’t question it. Smile, nod, amen. Sin still exists. Suffering still exists. But you’re told this fixed everything. And after all of that, if you still don’t understand it properly, don’t accept it correctly, or don’t love him the right way eternal fire. But don’t forget he always loves you. The real message is simple don’t think for yourself. And the irony the Serpent didn’t force anything. Didn’t threaten. Didn’t promise. Didn’t lie. He asked one question. “Do you want to know?” That was the real crime. |
| Re: Test For Delusion by TenQ: 5:09pm On Jan 30 |
MaxInDHouse:I would like to know the XYZ that I said about Jesus that is not according to the bible. It is easy to tell such lie on a Faceless platform like this |
| Re: Test For Delusion by TenQ: 5:14pm On Jan 30 |
Fenrir:You this wannabe atheist: There are at least 10 points raised AND All you needed to do was to quote one of the scientific errors I stated, show why it is an error and you would have corrected a religious fanatic. |
| Re: Test For Delusion by TenQ: 5:21pm On Jan 30 |
Fenrir:When your entire understanding of Christianity is based on ignorance! SMH! It is easy to defeat a Strawman! |
| Re: Test For Delusion by DeepSight(m): 5:53pm On Jan 30 |
TenQ:+ Much of what the fellow said is sadly true about the absurdity of Xristianity and it is this response of yours which rather appears escapist. |
| Re: Test For Delusion by TenQ: 6:22pm On Jan 30 |
DeepSight:Birds of the same feathers! |
| Re: Test For Delusion by DeepSight(m): 6:47pm On Jan 30 |
TenQ:Be serious. I remember you as a thinker. Dont just hand wave and claim there arent valid points in what he wrote which any serious seeker of truth would not stop to ponder on. |
| Re: Test For Delusion by TenQ: 6:54pm On Jan 30 |
DeepSight:I listed 10 scientific facts, yours is to pick one at a time and justify why it is false |
| Re: Test For Delusion by DeepSight(m): 6:56pm On Jan 30 |
TenQ:+ Alright, the link. |
Test For Delusion 2 • Another Jehovah's Witnesses's Delusion • Religion: The Greatest Delusion Of All Time • 2 • 3 • 4
If Adam And Eve Were The First Humans,this Would Happen • 10 Countries That Banned Christmas • Part 2, Lesson 1 Of CAC Sunday School Lesson, July-dec. 2017
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. Zechariah is clearly the human author recording the vision.