John 6: 38-40, 45.

 

Excerpt:It is this miraculous-power-and-truth display which the Christian Church has, unwittingly, long awaited. Let us clarify and secure the unambiguous definition of God’s glory. Before the gospel commission of Jesus, there is a simple historic fact that now demands recertification. All have forgotten that before Calvary, there was no earthly concept of Christ or Jesus. Then as proven in 53.4, Christ Pled to Father to transfer to the disciples the very glory that He, Father first endowed to Christ: Such shows Father’s and Christ’s grand generosity. That Christmas gift was not only intended for Peter, James, John, Matthew, et al —instead here is what you need to know— It applied expressly to the elevated disciples today, after 2000 years of maturation. It was glory intended for us: We who would believe on Him, Christ, by a unique transfer transaction: by the Word of the Lord that was, in time, to be conveyed to us from the original 11. In verity then, we sing the Battle hymn, mine eyes shall see the glory of the coming of the Lord; this in the day we learn  the cradle of Calvary’s conducting clergy which conveyed that cantata thereby,  to answer the question, “what defines His glory,” we must deny all other reference libraries of theology and directly search the Testimony of Jesus for our answer: I do not say that any other doctrinal thesis of added value must be discounted; instead, they must be substantiated or retrofitted into the Testimony of Jesus-example of this ethic to follow. Afterall, Christ promised to recycle those same gifts today. He said, in, “ John 6: 38 For I came down from heaven, not to do mine own will, but the will of him that sent me. 39 And this is the Father’s will which hath sent me, that of all which he hath given me I should lose nothing, but should raise it up again at the last day. 40 And this is the will of him that sent me, that every one which seeth the Son, and believeth on him, may have everlasting life: and I will raise him up at the last day … and they shall be all taught of God.” —John 6: 38-40, 4.5. Christ, came down from heaven —not to do His but— Father’s will. All clergy resist this point. So to affirm it, I cite Paul’s Heb-seven claim that Christ —I didn’t say Jesus but Christ— he says that He was without beginning of days. Thus, before Adam’s creation, Christ had autonomous power or His own glory: The need for ancillary power from Father was to satisfy the mission to rescue sinful man. Therefore, Father Christmas-gifted to Christ more glory: power over human disease, over storms, over hunger, over death, etc. Only by the display of those gifts did Christ gain celebrity status. That which has not been a link of logic is that before Adam’s fall, no need existed for that glory: Sin created in man the urgency to escape death…