Luke 6: 27-28
Excerpt:…For He does indeed give what seems to be an opposite command. He said: “ Luke 6: 27 … Love your enemies, do good to them which hate you, 28 Bless them that curse you, and pray for them which despitefully use you.” —Luke 6: 27-28. The legal loophole comes by the embrace of every word that proceedeth from the mouth of God. He gave more commandments. Luke 24: 44 (shown on your screen) gives our coherent accord. It geniusly retrofits David’s petitions under the umbrella of the Testimony of Jesus. We must not pray for the fall of the wicked because David already so prayed for their demise. He said, “break thou the arm of the wicked and evil man, seek out his wickedness till thou find none…”. Thereby, the faithful need not pray for their fall; yet, we now do rejoice. Suturing (souchering) the point even more, we open Father’s corresponding command in Matt 6: 7 (also shown on your screen); He forbade vain and repetitive prayers. With our advanced-educated faith we please Him by abiding in His assurance that He will fulfill David’s prayers, those already asked by David, so that we offer up no secondary duplicate appeal since such would be a vain-repetition violation. Our rejoice then becomess our sufficiency, our faithful compliance without guilt. As Paul so stated, such deep machinations show that…