Sunday, March 29, 2026

Update for those curious

Crossposting from Youtube:


I *might* be able to get into an experimental treatment program beginning in the summer (around June). I used to work in medical/hospital accounts for a few years, so been using my contacts to try to find the best private treatment one can get (unless I have to, I will not go down the public route—lengthy waiting lists, hit-and-miss treatment—downsides of a socialized medicine system).


However, it will be expensive—really, really expensive. A similar program in the USA would last 6-9 months and would cost $10-14k per month. At this moment, I do not mind lost earnings from being a researcher/occasional accountant and bookkeeper. I just want to ensure I get better/healthier.
If you can (1) share the gofundme and (2) ask LDS youtube and other media channels/blogs/x pages to also share the link and (3) if you are wealthy, like one generous donor, maybe also consider such.

Of course, prayers are always welcome.


I know some prefer using paypal and/or venmo:



Thanks, and happy Sunday!

Joseph A. Fitzmyer on 1 Corinthians 6:17

  

17. But whoever is joined to the Lord becomes one spirit (with him). Lit. “is one spirit” (hen pneuma), in contrast to “one body” or “one flesh” of v. 16. One would have expected Paul to say “becomes one body” with the Lord, but instead he shifts because of his often-used contrast of “flesh” and “spirit.” The union of Christians with the Lord is real, but on a different level; it has nothing to do with “flesh,” for it is of a spiritual nature, being an intimate union with the risen Lord. As such, it precludes all free and casual use of the body (or flesh) in sexual intercourse. “Being joined to the Lord” means that a Christian cannot be “joined to a prostitute,” even in a casual act. The quotation of Gen 2:24, which per se refers to the union of man and women in the marital act, now suggests that the spiritual union of the Christian with “the Lord” has a marital connotation (recall 6:13e: the body is “meant for the Lord”). Whoever thus joins himself to the Lord transcends human bodily existence and acquires a new identity, as one becomes “one spirit” with Christ (see Baldanza, “L’Uso”). (Joseph A. Fitzmyer, First Corinthians: A New Translation with Introduction and Commentary [AYB 32; New Haven; London: Yale University Press, 2008], 268)

 

Saturday, March 28, 2026

Jennifer Garcia Bashaw and Aaron Higashi on Micah 3:12 and Jeremiah 26:16-18

  

Micah Is Saved by Jeremiah

 

Deuteronomy 18:14-22 describes what a prophet is supposed to be able to do: The criteria for distinguishing between a false prophet and an authentic one is the prophet’s ability to accurately predict the future. In other words, if what a prophet says will happen comes true, then they’re legit.

 

There are some practical problems with this criteria. The main one is that if a prophet foretells doom, then having to wait until after the doom arrives (or doesn’t) to know whether or not they’re legitimate is a bit of a bummer. In practical terms, a prophet’s legitimacy becomes something that future generations, not the prophet’s contemporaries, get to decide. The book of Micah offers an important biblical example of this.

 

Writing in the latter part of the eighth century BCE, when the Neo-Assyrian Empire is coming to destroy Jerusalem, Micah prophecies that the city will be destroyed, saying, “Zion will be plowed like a field, Jerusalem will become a heap of rubble, the temple hill a mound overgrown with thickets” (3:12). He is foretelling that Jerusalem will be destroyed, just like the capital of northern Israel, Samaria, was destroyed a short time before.

 

It turns out, though, that Jerusalem is not destroyed in Micah’s lifetime or any time in the next century. Anyone living in Micah’s time would have believed him to be a false prophet according to the criteria set down in Deuteronomy 18.

 

But the story has an interesting twist. More than a hundred years later, at the beginning of the sixth century BCE, the prophet Jeremiah found himself about to be executed for prophesying the destruction Jerusalem at the hands of the Babylonians—a message that was considered by King Zedekiah’s officials to be treasonous. However, Jeremiah 26:16-18 says that the prophet’s execution is halted when some gathered elders recall that Micah prophesied the same thing.

 

In this way, a later generation retroactively legitimized Micah’s prophetic career by finding a new way to interpret his words. Micah had been speaking about the crisis of the Neo-Assyrian empire, but Jeremiah’s audience found it more helpful to apply his words to the Babylonian crisis of a different period. And lo and behold, the Babylonians do in fact destroy Jerusalem in Jeremiah’s lifetime. (Jennifer Garcia Bashaw and Aaron Higashi, Serving Up Scripture: How to Interpret the Bible for Yourself and Others [Minneapolis: Broadleaf Books, 2026], 144-45)

 

Further Reading:


Resources on Joseph Smith's Prophecies

R. C. H. Lenski on 1 Corinthians 6:17

  

What a difference when one joins himself to the Lord! He becomes one spirit with the Lord. For while our union with Christ involves also our bodies as a part of our person it is really a union of the spirit and only as such includes our bodies. Christ and the Christian become “one spirit,” he in us, and we in him in a wondrous mystical union. This is the very highest plane that by what is highest in our being, namely the spirit, lifts us into a union that is completely spiritual, blessed, and heavenly. This is the unio mystica which is so abundantly attested in the Scriptures. With no absorption of our spirit into Christ, with no mingling or fusion of the two, with no loss of the identity of either, our spirit is joined to Christ’s so that one thought, one desire, one will animate and control both, namely his thought, desire, and will. This mystical union is adumbrated in the marital union of husband and wife, Eph. 5:28–33, yet only adumbrated, for no human relation is capable of doing more. (R. C. H. Lenski, The Interpretation of St. Paul’s First and Second Epistle to the Corinthians [Minneapolis, Minn.: Augsburg Publishing House, 1963], 265-66)

 

Friday, March 27, 2026

"Live-reacting" to the most deceptive Roman Catholic Apologist on the Topic of "Mormonism"

 

"Live-reacting" to the most deceptive Roman Catholic Apologist on the Topic of "Mormonism"








Philip W. Comfort on 1 Corinthians 6:17

  

1 Corinthians 6:17

 

The expression ο δε κολλωμενος τω κυριω ἕν πνευμα εστιν (“but the one joining himself to the Lord is one spirit”) is generally understood to indicate spiritual union between the believer and Christ. As two bodies join to become one in sexual union, two spirits join to become one in spiritual union. It is a union of the divine Spirit with the human spirit; as such “spirit” should not be capitalized—for it is not just the divine Spirit. The scribes of 𝔓11 and 𝔓46 showed this interpretation by not writing πνευμα as a nomen sacrum (a divine title = the Spirit); rather, they wrote out the word in plene. (Philip W. Comfort, New Testament Text and Translation Commentary: Commentary on the Variant Readings of the Ancient New Testament Manuscripts and How They Relate to the Major English Translations [Carol Stream, Ill.: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., 2008], 495-96)

 

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