Jesus was killed by the Romans who
used a hammer, wood, and nails.
In 1 Peter 5:8, St. Peter says that the
devil is a roaring lion and wants to eat us.
In John 6:53-58, Jesus says that in order
to be saved we have to eat His flesh and drink His blood.
At the tower of Babel,
God confused the language so that people could not communicate with each other
any more. The tower to heaven that Nimrod was trying to build was abandoned.
(Genesis 11:7- 8). The people all scattered across the world.
At Pentecost, the languages were unconfused
by God, so that people of different tongues could all understand each other.
Peter converted 3000 with this technique.(Acts 2:6, 41)
After Adam and Eve ate the forbidden
fruit, “their eyes were opened’ to the fact that they were naked (Genesis 3:7)
On the way to Emmaus, after
they ate the blessed bread, the followers of Jesus' “eyes were opened” and they
recognized Jesus (Luke 24:30-31).
In Leviticus 21:10, it was forbidden for
the High Priest to tear his garment.
In Matthew 26:65, Caiaphas, the High Priest
for that year, tore his robes in protest of Jesus proclaiming himself to be the
Son of God. In John 19:24, the Roman soldiers did not tear Jesus' robe
(Jesus is the eternal High Priest). In Matthew 27:51, God tore the curtain of
the temple in two following the crucifixion.
Moses and the Israelites came up out
of the water of the Red Sea and went into the
desert (Exodus 15), where they were tested by God regarding their faith.
They failed the test. Deuteronomy 6 and 8 talk about this sojourn and
testing.
Jesus came up out of the waters of the Jordan following
his Baptism (Matthew 3) and went out into the desert to be tested by satan
(Matthew 4). Jesus passed the test by quoting scripture from Deuteronomy
6 and 8 (6:13, 6:16, and 8:3).
Moses changed the water of the Nile into blood (Exodus 7:20).
Jesus changed the purification water into
wine (John 2:6-9), and then changed wine into His blood (Matthew
26:27-28).
Jacob fooled his blind father Isaac into
getting Esau’s blessing, by wearing hairy skins (Esau was the hairy brother)
(Genesis 27).
In return, Jacob’s future father-in-law fooled Jacob into
marrying his ugly daughter Leah, by hiding her face with veils (Genesis 29).
Melchizidek, the King of Salem (King
of Peace) offered bread and wine to God as worship (Genesis 14:18).
Jesus, the King of Kings, at the Last
Supper, offered consecrated bread and consecrated wine to God as worship (Mark
14:22-24).
In Ezekiel 9, God marked all of the
believers in Jerusalem
with a Tau, the last letter of the old Hebrew Alphabet (the last letter now is
Omega), on their foreheads, in order to save them from destruction. A Tau is
represented as T, or an incomplete cross. During Baptism, we are marked with
the sign of the cross on our foreheads to save us from the destruction of Satan.
Jesus Christ was born in the town of Bethlehem, which means
“House of Bread”. His mother put him in a feeding trough (a manger) for a crib
(Luke 2).
Jesus Christ later claimed to be the “Bread
of Life” (John 6:48), and said that we had to “eat his body” to have life (John
6:53). At the Last Supper, Jesus consecrated a piece of bread and said – “This
is my Body” (Mark 14:22).
In the desert, God provided bread
from Heaven (manna) to feed the Israelites (Exodus 16).
In the book of John 6 , Jesus Christ
said that He was the bread of life, and if we eat this bread, we shall live
forever (John 6:48-50).
In the Old Testament, the Ark of the
Covenant contained 3 items – The Word of God (the 10 Commandments), manna
(bread from heaven), and the rod of Aaron, which came back to life and
re-sprouted (Hebrews 9:4).
In the New Testament, the
Blessed Virgin Mary’s womb contained Jesus Christ, the Word made flesh, who is
The Bread of Life, and who is a ruler with an iron rod that came back to life
after being crucified ( Luke 1:31, John 6:48, Revelation 12:5).
In Psalm 22:1, David says “My God, my God,
why have you forsaken me?” Psalm 22:16 says that "They have pierced my
hands and my feet". Psalm 22:18 also talks about casting lots for his
clothes.
In the New Testament, Jesus Christ repeats
"My God, my God, why have you forsaken me", after they pierce His
hands and His feet. (Matthew 27:46) And the Roman soldiers cast lots for the
clothes of Jesus (Matthew 27:35).
In the Book of Wisdom, chapter 2, the
plotters say that they want to torture and kill the one who claims to be the
son of God, because if he really is the son of God, then God will save him.”
In the New Testament, the murders of
Jesus do torture and kill him for claiming to be the son of God, and utter
these words – “If you are the son of God, then come down from that cross
(Matthew 27:42).
In Genesis 3, Eve, an
immaculately created virgin, says yes to Lucifer and allows Adam to bring
sin into the world. Eve came forth from Adam.
In the New Testament, Mary, an
immaculately created virgin, says yes to Gabriel, which allows Jesus to
bring salvation to the world (Luke 1). Jesus came forth from Mary.
The book of Genesis starts out with
the three words, “In the beginning”. It then goes through a series of next days
to describe the creation of the world from nothing as well as the creation of
new life. It talks about “the light” and the dark. On the seventh day, God
rests.
The book of the Gospel of John also starts
out with the three words, “In the beginning”. It then goes through a series of
next days (John 1:29, 35, 43) to describe “the light of the world”, Jesus
Christ, who leads us out of darkness and gives new life to the world. On the
seventh day (the third day after the fourth day, John 2:1) there is a wedding
feast, with Jesus
creating wine from water.
In Exodus 12, the Jews celebrate the first
Passover by killing a spotless lamb, and then they smear its blood over their
door with a hyssop branch. They also had to eat bitter herbs. This saved their
first born from the angel of death.
In John 19, Jesus Himself is sacrificed as
the new spotless Passover lamb (Pilate said "I find no guilt in him (John
18:38)) and His blood now saves us from death. In John 10:7, Jesus says that he
is the door for His sheep. The Roman soldier used a hyssop branch to give him
bitter vinegar to drink.
In Luke 2:42-46, the 12 year old Jesus is
nowhere to be found. After 3 days, Mary and Joseph find Jesus in the temple,
preaching to the elders.
After the crucifixion, Jesus was dead for
three days and nowhere to be found. Peter says that he was preaching to the
spirits in prison (1 Peter 3:18-19).
In James 2:26, the bible says that
faith without works is dead.
In Matthew 25:31-46, at the final
judgment, Jesus tells us all now exactly what those works are.
.
Joseph, in the Old Testament, was
forced to go to Egypt
in Genesis 37:28 (his brothers sold him as a slave). God's purpose
in this was so that Joseph, later on, would befriend the King (Pharaoh) and
save Israel.
Joseph received messages in dreams, and could interpret them. Joseph's
father was named Jacob.
Joseph, Mary’s betrothed, in Matthew 2:14,
was forced to go to Egypt
(to avoid Herod). God's purpose in this was so that Joseph would save the
King (Jesus) as well as Israel.
In Matthew 2:13, Joseph receives his message to go to Egypt in a
dream. Joseph's father was named Jacob.
.
In Matthew 26: 65, the high priest tore his
robes in protest of Jesus proclaiming Himself to be the son of God.
In Matthew 27:51, following the murder of
Jesus, God tore the curtain of the temple in two, from top to bottom.
In John 18:18ff, Peter denied Jesus 3 times
beside a charcoal fire.
In John 21:9ff, Jesus asks Peter 3 times,
beside a charcoal fire, if he loves him....
.
In Genesis 3:18
-19, God tells Adam in the garden that the ground shall bring
thorns and thistles to him, and that by the sweat of
his face he shall eat bread from the ground.
In 1 Corinthians
15:45, St. Paul
says that Jesus is the new Adam, bringing life into the world instead of
death. At the crucifixion, Jesus, the
Bread of Life (John 6), wears a crown of thorns after sweating
blood in a garden.
In Exodus 24:18, Moses went up the mountain
and entered the cloud of God.
In Matthew 17:5, a cloud on the mountain
enveloped Jesus.
In Exodus 31:18ff, Moses went up the
mountain and brought down the Word of God.
In Matthew 5:1ff, Jesus, the Word of God
made Flesh, went up on the mountain and preached the Word of
God (the Sermon on the mount).
In Exodus 34, Moses face shone so bright
that everyone was afraid to look at him.
In Matthew 17, Jesus' face shone like the
sun. The long dead Moses then appeared to him.
Moses wandered in the desert for
40 years (Numbers 32:13) after coming up out of the water of the Red Sea.
Jesus wandered in the desert for 40 days
(Mark 1:13) after coming up out of the water of the Jordan
River.
Eve became the mother of the living at the
foot of the tree of knowledge of good and evil (Genesis 3:20).
Mary
became our mother at the foot of the cross (John 19:26-27)..........
NOTE** The cross was called a tree
in Acts 5:30. In the passage above, the apostle John was
standing in for the Church.
In Genesis 2:23, Adam names his mate
"Woman".
In the New Testament, Jesus always referred
to Mary as "Woman".
(NOTE** Just as Jesus is the new Adam (1
Corinthians 15:45), Mary is the new Eve).
In Luke 1:42, Elizabeth says to Mary - "Blessed is the
fruit of your womb."
In Matthew 12:33, Jesus says that a tree is
known by its fruit.
In Luke 1:27, we learn that Mary is
betrothed (not married) to Joseph.
In 1 Corinthians 7:36-38, Paul says that it
is better to stay betrothed and not get married (have carnal relations).
In Genesis 2:7, God breathed on Adam
to bring him to life.
In John 20:22-23, Jesus breathed on
the apostles to give them the gift of bringing spiritual life to others through
confession.
In Genesis 22, Isaac carried
wood up a hill that was to be used for his sacrificial death. His
father Abraham was stopped from killing Isaac by God. Abraham says that
God Himself would provide the sacrificial lamb.
In Matthew 27, Jesus carried wood up
a hill (Golgotha) for his own sacrificial
death. Jesus is the Lamb of God who was sacrificed in our place.
In Matthew 27:26, Pontius Pilate released
Barabbas, whose name means "Son of the Father" (bar Abbas).
Jesus, the real Son of THE Father, was put
to death in his place.
In 2 Maccabees 6: 4-5, it says: "For
the temple was filled with debauchery and reveling by the Gentiles,
who dallied with harlots and had intercourse with women within the sacred
precincts, and besides brought in things for sacrifice that were unfit.
The altar was covered with abominable offerings which were forbidden by the
laws. "
In 1 Corinthians 6:19ff, Paul says that our
bodies are a temple to the Holy Spirit, and we are to shun
immorality and to glorify God in our bodies.
In Genesis 28:12, Jacob (Israel) says
that he had a dream where angels were descending to earth and ascending to heaven
on a ladder.
In John 1:51, Jesus says "Truly,
truly, I say to you, you will see heaven opened, and the angels of God
ascending and descending upon the Son of man."
In John 15:4, Jesus says, " Abide in
me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless
it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in me.
In John 6:56, Jesus tells us how to do
that- "He who eats my flesh and drinks my blood abides in me, and I in
him.
In Genesis 9:22ff, Ham saw his father's
(Noah's) nakedness. Noah awoke and was very upset at Ham, and placed a
curse on Canaan, Ham's son.
In Leviticus 20:11, the Bible says that to
uncover your father's nakedness means that you have slept with your father's
wife (your own mother).
In Genesis 37, Joseph is stripped of his
garment by his own brothers and then sold into slavery for 20 pieces of silver.
Jesus was also sold by his own apostle
(Judas) for 30 pieces of silver, and then stripped of his garment at the cross.
In Exodus 1:22, Pharoah orders that every
son that is born to the Hebrews shall be drowned in the Nile.
In Exodus 12:29, God strikes down Pharoah's
own son and the other first born Egyptians. In Exodus 14, Pharoah's male
soldiers were all drowned in the Red Sea.
The second book of Maccabees, chapter 7,
talks about a mother and her 7 sons being tortured and killed, one by one, by
the evil king who had defiled the temple and wanted his captives to eat
pork. They refused to transgress the law, and paid the ultimate price.
Hebrews 11:35 refers to this incident -
"Women received their dead by resurrection. Some were tortured, refusing
to accept release, that they might rise again to a better life."
In Exodus 32, Moses and the Levites slay
3,000 of their own people who worshipped the golden calf.
At Pentecost in Acts 2, Peter and the
apostles converted 3,000 people.
In John 12:24, Jesus said that unless
a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains
alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit.
In the Old Testament, the Feast of
Pentecost was a harvest festival of the first fruits (Exodus 23:16) that
took place 50 days (7 weeks) after Passover . Jesus died
during Passover, and 50 days later, on Pentecost, 3000 new souls were brought
to Jesus by the power of the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:41).
In Isaiah 60:6, Isaiah predicts that those
from Sheba will bring gold and frankincense to the King, whom they will
praise.
In Matthew 2:11, the
three Wisemen bring gold (symbolizing royalty), frankincense (incense is used
for worship), and myrhh (used for burial) and worship Jesus.
In 1 Kings 1:37-38, King Solomon, the son
of King David, rides a mule while the people rejoice and proclaim him to be
their new
King.
In John 12:13-14 and Matthew 21:7-9,
Jesus rides into Jerusalem on an ass, while the people proclaim him to be the
son of David and the King of Israel.
At the Passover in Exodus 12:5 the Jews had
to eat an unblemished male lamb to be saved.
In John 18:38, Pilate says of Jesus -
"I find no guilt in Him". Jesus, the Lamb of God (John 1:29) then
says in John 6:53 that we have to eat His flesh to have life in us (a reference
to the reality of the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist)
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