We want to continue our studies
in understanding Bible prophecy this morning, and we're looking
at the normal literal method of interpretation, which is very
fundamental, and we want to deal with this in some detail. And so why do we interpret the
prophecies literally? Just to break this down for teaching,
we give eight reasons in the textbook. And that is, first
of all, the apostles interpreted prophecy literally, as we've
already noted. And we looked at these two key
passages. just as examples in Acts 3, 18-21
and Romans 11, 25-27, and these are very clear. Peter preached
that there is a literal, there was a literal fulfillment of
Christ's first coming to suffer for man's sins, so there will
be a literal fulfillment of the prophecies pertaining to Israel's
conversion and kingdom and Christ's second coming. And in the meantime,
the heavens will receive Christ until he returns. Very clear
that Peter interpreted these prophecies literally and for
the future. And then in Romans 11, 25 through
27, Paul did the same thing. These are simple and clear. You
stand on the simple and clear things. Heretics like to go to
the more obscure things that are not quite as easy to understand,
and let's build our doctrine right there and overthrow all
the clear things. That's backwards. It's backwards. And verbally, that's what they
do. Even Augustine, in his day, 5th century, when he died, Even
though he was the father of all millennialism, he admitted that
there are many in his day still that believed in the literal
fulfillment of Revelation 20. And so, the apostles interpreted
prophecy literally. That should be enough. We can
stop right there. Church at Antioch continued to
interpret prophecy literally, long after the allegorical method
was coming on the scene. Antioch being a very special
church. We don't go to Alexandria, Egypt. We don't know about any good
churches that ever were established in Alexandria, Egypt. We don't
know that, but we know that a very important church was established
at Antioch, and it continued to hold to sound doctrine for
a long time. Second, God gave the scriptures
to reveal truth, not to hide it. That's God's objective with
the Bible, revelation. And we see that in Deuteronomy
29, 29, that, very important verse, Deuteronomy 29, 29, that the secret things belong
unto the Lord our God, but those things which are revealed belong
unto us. for us and to our children forever,
for our children, that we may do all the words of the law.
So God gave this to reveal. It's a revelation that we might
know these things and teach them to our children. They can be
taught to a child. And the objective being that
we obey God. That's a major objective, be
saved and obey God. Number three, Bible prophecies
have always been fulfilled literally. That's fundamental. Israel's
entire history, one of my favorite prophecies is Deuteronomy chapter
28. And Moses, just before he died
and just before Joshua led Israel into the promised land, Moses
gave this great prophecy which described Israel's entire history
all the way till today. in Deuteronomy 28 and how that
Israel, if God said, if you sin against me, if you turn to the
idols, this is what I'm going to do. You're going to be scattered
to the end of the earth. A foreign nation is going to
destroy your cities and you're going to be scattered to the
ends of the earth. And there you're going to be in fear and
in doubt and in big trouble. Yeah, well, that's the last 2,500
years of Israel's history. But that prophecy was written
3,500 years ago, but literally fulfilled always. The nation's
pertaining to the, I'm sorry, the prophecies pertaining to
the nations fulfilled literally. By the way, I said I'm bad at
mathematics, obviously I am, because 10 to the third power
is 1,000. Well, there you go. But it's not what that man said
it was. That's for sure. Tyre. Oh, what a magnificent
prophecy. This is an example of the great
prophecies about the nations, pagan nations. And the prophecy
in Tyre, Ezekiel 26, 3 through 16 and other passages, but amazing
detail. Nebuchadnezzar would besiege
and sack Tyre. That happened in 573 BC, and Nebuchadnezzar conquered
Tyre after a 13-year siege. That's just the beginning of
the prophecy. Many nations would participate
in destroying Tyre, Ezekiel 26-3, and that happened as Tyre was
sacked by the Assyrians, and the Babylonians, and the Greeks,
and the Syrians, and the Romans. and finding the Muslims, poor
old Tyre. But Tyre's walls and towers would
be destroyed, Ezekiel 26, 4. Now the thing was, there were
two parts to the old city of Tyre, and that one part was on
the coast, and the other part was over on the island, short
distance from the coast, separated by part of the ocean. And that
first tire on the coast was what was first destroyed. Walls and
towers were destroyed. That was done by Nebuchadnezzar
first, and then Alexander the Great came along. And Alexander
the Great came along, and so the tyrants went over to their
island fortress and thundered a nose at Alexander. That was
dumb. That was real dumb, and turned
out to be dumb. Alexander just said, I want to
come over and worship at Hercules. They should have let him. You
let Alexander do what he wants to do. As we look back in history,
we can understand these things pretty well. The Tyrians didn't
have a good grasp of this yet. So they thought, no, so how am
I going to get over there and destroy that island? And so Alexander
said, we're going to build a road. We're going to build a road across
the ocean to that city, and we're going to take that city. That's exactly what they did.
And to build that causeway out across the ocean, they scraped. Ezekiel said the city would be
flat like the top of a rock, even the dust would be scraped.
And that's exactly what Alexander did with his men and his slaves. Slaves come in handy. And they
just literally, all the material from the destroyed city on the
coast was put into the ocean to make this causeway in 332
BC. How did Ezekiel know that was
going to happen? And then Tyre became a place
for the spreading of nets. And that's exactly what happened.
Alexander built his bridge. And he conquered that magnificent
city on the island, and he crucified hundreds and hundreds of those
people that had thumbed their nose at him. And so that's exactly
what happened, and Ezekiel described it, and Ezekiel said that Tyre's
going to be a place for the spreading of nets, Ezekiel 26, 5, and 14. And that's what became of it,
and that's pretty much what it is today. But it didn't happen
just overnight. The time element in the prophecies
can be hundreds of years and whatever. And unbelievers come
along and say, well, that didn't just happen. It didn't become
a fishing village right away. No, it didn't, but it did become
a fishing village. And even today, they spread the
nets there. And that's what Ezekiel said. It was the great mart of
the nations, but it eventually became a lowly fishing village.
Tyre was spoiled to the nations, Ezekiel 26, 12. And that's what
it was. Tyre never regained her position
as head of the great commercial empire. And she was a vassal
of whatever power happened to come along and dominate the region.
And so amazing prophecies, literally the scraping of the dust, the
building of that causeway, But the prophecies of Christ's first
coming literally fulfilled every one of them. Psalm 22 is magnificent. There are hundreds of prophecies
of Christ's first coming, but Psalm 22 just describes Christ's
crucifixion. Psalm 22, verse 1, the words
Jesus spoke on the cross. Now, how did David know that?
thousand years before Jesus. My God, my God, why are, where
is it here? Psalm 22, my God, my God, why
hast thou forsaken me? Why art thou so far from helping
me and from the words of my roaring? It's the words that Jesus spoke
on the cross. By the way, Psalm 22 has nothing
to do with David. David never experienced any of
this. The modernists try to figure out, you know, when did this
happen to David? It didn't. It's prophecy. It's
Christ, his son, the Holy Spirit speaking through David. Psalm
22, 6 through 8, 12 through 13, the people reviling Jesus, reviling
him. I'm a worm. And no man, a reproach
of men, and despised of the people. All they that see me laugh me
to scorn. They shoot out the lip, they
shake the head, saying, He trusted on the Lord that he would deliver
him. Let him deliver him, seeing he delighted in him." They're
mocking and scorning, reviling. It's exactly what they did. That's
exactly the words that spoke. We give the references here from
the Gospels. Psalm 22, 11, there was none
to help him. Right, Peter took his sword up
and then, but Peter went away and denied Christ. None of them,
nobody stood with him. It's all alone. As the prophet
said, be not far from me for troubles near for there is none
to help. And then verses 14 through 16,
they crucified him. They pierced my hands and my
feet. pierced my hands and my feet,
crucifixion. That was not practiced yet in
David's time, but he saw it a thousand years into the future. He saw
it in Psalm 22, 14 and 15, Christ's thirst from blood lost. Tremendous
thirst, I'm poured out like water and all my bones are out of joint. My heart is like wax, it is melted
in the midst of my bowels. My strength is dried up like
a potsherd, piece of broken pottery. My tongue cleaveth to my jaws. Thou hast brought me into the
dust of death." Description of his physical torments on the
cross and experiences. They did not break any of his
bones, verse 17. I may tell all my bones, I may
count all my bones. They didn't break any bones.
And that's the fulfillment of the Passover. They broke no bones
of the lamb, no bones. And they stared at him, chapter
17, verse 17, chapter 22, verse 17. They look and stare upon
me. Don't you like it when somebody
stares at you? They stared at Him, the Son of God on the cross. And then verse 18, they gambled
for His garments. And this is fulfilled in two
different passages in the New Testament and the Gospels describe
the fulfillment. And it's so precise. Verse 18
says, they part my garments, plural, among them, and cast
lots upon my vesture," singular, which is exactly what happened,
exactly what happened. And so they parted my garments
among them. That was fulfilled by the Roman
soldiers. And they, John 19, 23, then the soldiers,
then the soldiers, when they had crucified Jesus, took his
garments, plural, and made four parts, and to each soldier a
part, they gambled for that, and also, but the prophecy doesn't
stop there, and neither did the fulfillment, and also his coat,
his robe. Now, the coat, we're told about
it, details, was without seam, woven from the top throughout.
They said, therefore, among themselves, Let's not rend it, but cast lots
for it, whose it shall be, that the scripture might be fulfilled,
which said, They parted my raiment among them, and for my vesture
did they cast lots. These things, therefore, the
soldiers did." Now, those Roman soldiers didn't know anything,
probably, about Bible prophecy, but they fulfilled it precisely. just amazing, irrefutable evidence
that the Bible is the infallible Word of God. But the point is
that we're making here is that these prophecies that have been
fulfilled were always fulfilled literally. Fourth, the Lord Jesus
said the major prophetic events are yet future. Jesus. And in Matthew 24, it's very
clear here. He gives the major events of
the day of the Lord are the great tribulation. And he tells us
exactly when those, the hand of Christ, the signs in the heavens,
these things, exactly when there'll be persecution of Israel, exactly
when they'll be fulfilled. Matthew 24, 15 through 29. It's
irrefutable. You can get confused about prophecy
if you want to, but you don't have to be led astray. I was just talking to a young
lady in the break and was asking about a man that I knew that
got saved in one of the Australian churches some years ago, and
I asked about him. Well, he got
confused about prophecy and he's off the rails, Charlie. And yeah, scattered the sheep,
no good fruit there. That should tell you something.
The Lord Jesus said the major prophetic events are yet for
the future. And so he begins in, well, the
question he's answering is in Matthew 24, three, tell us when
shall these things be and what shall be the sign of thy coming
and of the end of the world? end of the world. And so that's
what he's answering. And he describes the beginning
of the beginning. Where is it there? Anyway, the beginning of sorrows
in the first few verses after that, he begins to give the major
events, the coming of the Antichrist, verse 15, the abomination of
desolation spoken of by Daniel, the prophet, and how that he's
going to go into the third temple, declare himself as God, require
the world to worship him? That's antichrist? Well, what
is antichrist? Is it something that's happening
throughout the church age? Is it some kind of government
or something? I was talking to some elders
of a Baptist church one time in England, I said, what about
Antichrist? Is it a man? He said, we're not
sure about that. Well, you need to be sure about
that. You need to nail that thing down
because it's sure in the Bible. He's standing, sounds like a
man, standing in the temple. That would be a man. That wouldn't
be a government or something. It's a man. Now, what man is
it? And when is it going to happen?
Has it already happened? No? Very clear. And so the Great
Tribulation, verse 21, this is so perfectly clear. The Great
Tribulation, and so terrible that, except those days, verse
22, should be shortened, there shall no flesh be saved, but
for the elect's sake, and we do believe in the elect, those
days shall be shortened. You can be a zero Calvinist and
believe in the elect. But when is this going to happen,
all these things, these major events that are described in
many prophecies that Jesus is summarizing here in a magnificent
way? Well, verse 29 nails it, nails
the timing. Immediately after the tribulation
of those days, and that includes the coming of the Antichrist
and that whole package of things, shall the sun be darkened immediately
after the tribulation of those days. So what? Christ will come. The sun will
be darkened, the moon shall not give her light, the stars shall
fall from heaven, the powers of the heavens shall be shaken.
Then shall appear the sign of the Son of Man in heaven, and
then shall all the tribes of the earth mourn, and they shall
see the Son of Man coming in the clouds of heaven with power
and great glory. And he shall send his angels
with the great sound of a trumpet, and they shall gather together
his elect from the four winds, one end of the heaven to the
other. It's not the rapture, obviously. And so, immediately
after the Antichrist, the Great Tribulation, the trouble that
is so great that if Jesus doesn't shorten it, no one will survive
on earth, which is Revelation 6-18, describes all those things
in much greater detail, many prophecies, when is it going
to happen? immediately before Jesus comes back. So this thing
is very clear. It's very clear, the timing of
it and what it is and the literalness of it. Very clear, is it not? Yes. So Jesus said the major
prophetic events are yet future, will happen just before He comes. Fifth, Christ rebuked the disciples
for not believing the prophecies by their literal interpretation.
And we've already read that in Luke 24, 25 through 27. All fools
and slow of heart to believe the prophets and interpret them
literally. Six, the stage is set today for
the literal fulfillment of the prophecies. Yeah, everything's
ready. The machinery for a one world
government, one world religion, as described in Revelation 13
and 17, is being set up before our very eyes. Everything toward
a globalism. and the tearing down of national
boundaries and national identities and all of that. It's all fulfillment.
It's all the preparation, setting the stage for the man of sin,
the technology to control the world's commerce so that you
cannot buy or sell without the mark, the technology. It's there. It exists, the technology. to see the witnesses in the street
of Jerusalem preaching, and then they're being killed by the Antichrist
in Revelation chapter 7, and their bodies lying on the street
for three and a half days. You ought to watch that on Facebook. Yeah, you're not if you say,
but that's the world, or whatever. TikTok will have that. No, the
whole world will see those things and will rejoice and have a big
global party and send gifts to one another, the technology for
these things in our lifetime, and most importantly, Israel
back in the land. Israel back in the land and Israel
setting the stage for all of these things. That's why Israel's
back in the land in a spiritually blind condition. Ezekiel 36,
spiritually blind condition. And so I trust that you've come
as a student. Some of you haven't, some of
you haven't. I thought all of you were serious students, but
I'm seeing that that's not exactly true. But I don't want to get
off of that now. So the states of Israel, they
want peace. They're just almost at any cost.
They're just so tired of wars. So tired of wars. And the man
of peace, but not Jesus, the false man of peace, he's coming.
Stages said, the temple, they want to build that temple, they're
ready to build that temple, but they can't. And you go to the
Temple Institute where they're making preparations for these
things and training the priest. And the priest recently, they
were training how to sing in the temple. They're not very
good singers, by the way, because it's on YouTube, you can find
it. They're preparing, practicing the Passover sacrifice. They have the altar built and
all these things are ready to go. They think they could just
put that temple up and prepare it in a very short time. That's
what they say and what they want to do. But you go to the Temple
Institute, as we did one time, and ask the lady there, How is
this going to happen? Muslims wouldn't like this. And we don't know. We don't know, but we know it's
going to happen. Yes, so do we. But we understand
much more about it than the Antichrist. They think they're looking for
Christ. According to rabbinical Judaism, Talmud, whoever will
come and build the temple is the Christ. And so that's what
they're looking for. But we know it's Antichrist.
The stage is set. How could you not see that? Seventh,
the practical necessity demands the literal interpretation of
prophecy. Practical necessity, as we've already mentioned. If
the prophecy does not mean exactly what it says, there's no way
to know for sure what it means, as we've given examples of already.
But J. Vernon McGee. And he was a New
Evangelical, but I liked the fellow a lot. I listened to him
that first year I was saved on the radio a lot, and his whole
whole new way of teaching the Bible, it was helpful to me.
And I was sad to learn he was a New Evangelical, but I still
liked the old guy. But he had an experience in seminary
that's fascinating in this regard, which he describes here. I went
to a seminary that was all millennial. where they attempted to fit the
rest of Revelation into a historical or amillennial viewpoint. It
became ridiculous and even comical at times. For example, when we
reached the place where Scripture says that Satan was put into
the bottomless pit, we were taught that... I asked the professor,
how do you explain the satanic activity that is taking place
today? He replied, Satan is chained,
but he has a long chain. It's like when you take a cow
and put it in a vacant lot and tether her out on a long rope
and let her graze. That was his explanation. And
my comment was, doctor, I think Satan's got a pretty long chain
on it then because he's able to graze all over the world today.
Yeah. The practical necessity Number
eight, the prophecy as an apologetic demands a literal interpretation.
As an apologetic, when we've already looked at this, and Isaiah
particularly, God says to the pagan nations and pagan gods
and the whole pagan world, show me the future. Tell me what's
going to happen. And the fact that the Bible does
exactly that proves that it is the infallible Word of God. We
looked at Psalm 22, and it's important to understand and have
a good grasp of these things and be able to use them in evangelism. If you can find someone that's
willing to listen, then show them these things. They don't
believe them, but this can turn them into a believer. It's what
the Spirit of God uses. So the apologetic, Let me show
you Psalm 22, which was written a thousand years before Jesus.
Let's look at these details here. And so we go into the normal
literal interpretation of prophecy a little bit. What about the figurative language,
which we're going to deal with separately, but we'll deal with
it separately. So the normal literal interpretation
of prophecy Now, context. Context is probably the single
most important rule of Bible interpretation. The Bible is
a self-interpreting book if we interpret the words according
to the context. And even the individual words
always have to be defined by their context. And so you have
to know the main theme of the particular book that you're studying,
and then what's going on in that individual chapter, section.
Each of the four Gospels, for example, has a different purpose,
and knowing that purpose helps you interpret anything within
that particular Gospel. The four Gospels, Matthew presents
Jesus as Messiah of the Jews, Christ In Greek, Messiah, in
Hebrew, Mark presents Jesus as God's servant, particularly.
Luke presents Jesus as the perfect man. John presents Jesus as the
eternal Son of God. Those are the major themes of
these Gospels. And Matthew, for example, Jesus
is presenting himself as the Messiah of the Jews. Behold,
the kingdom of heaven is at hand. John the Baptist and Jesus both
announced, and He's offering Himself in that kingdom
that was prophesied in the Old Testament to Israel. He came unto His own, and His
own received Him not. But it helps us interpret these
things that He preached in Matthew. Matthew, the other Gospels have
parts of the Sermon on the Mount. They were probably preached in
different places, these same things, in different ways. But
the Sermon on the Mount in its fullest extent is given in Matthew
5-7, and Jesus was on the north shore of the Sea of Galilee,
and he gave this great prophecy, this great sermon, And it wasn't
delivered to churches. Church didn't exist yet. And
it was only in Matthew 16 that Jesus first mentioned the church
after he's already been rejected by the Jews. And they were saying
that he was of the devil. That's a pretty strong rejection.
But no, it's not the church. He's talking to Israel. He's still talking about the
kingdom God is a kingdom that's described in the Old Testament,
a literal coming kingdom. And he talks about, for example,
the danger of hellfire. Hellfire, and there's no such
danger to the born-again child of God. to be in danger of hellfire. But there will be such a danger
in the millennium. If you sin and you break God's
law, you can be in danger of being cast into hellfire from
the millennium. Not as a born-again person from
a New Testament church. Got to look at the context or
you can become terribly confused. Terribly confused. Second, Jesus
speaks of bringing one's gift to the altar in Matthew 5, 21
through 26. Kind of skipped over the reference,
but in Matthew 5, 21 through 26 is what we're looking at at
the heart of the Sermon on the Mount. What do these things mean? Well, they mean exactly what
they say, but we have to understand the context. See, verse 21 says,
You've heard that it was said by them of old time, thou shalt
not kill. And whosoever shall kill shall
be in danger of the judgment. But I say unto you that whosoever
is angry with his brother without a cause shall be in danger of
the judgment. And whosoever shall say to his
brother, Rekha, shall be in danger of the council. Council, what
council? And whosoever shall say, thou
fool, shall be in danger of hell fire. Yeah, literally. Literal councils,
literal system of judgment, rod of iron. Verse 23, Therefore
thou bring thy gift to the altar. What altar? What altar? Well,
you come to know a literal altar in the temple. There remembers
that thy brother hath aught against thee. Leave there thy gift before
the altar, and go thy way. First be reconciled to thy brother,
and then come and offer thy gift." Literal altar in the temple.
Personal relationships in the kingdom, especially in regard
to Israel. Agree with thy adversary quickly,
verse 25, whilst thou art in the way with him, lest at any
time the adversary deliver thee to the judge. and the judge deliver
thee to the officer, and thou be cast into prison." Where's
your prison? It's a big building. I didn't
see the prison yet. You don't have a prison, thank
the Lord. So, see, the Roman Catholic Church
was all confused about this stuff, willfully, and they had prisons.
And no, it's talking about the millennial kingdom, literal kingdom,
and when it comes and what the kind of things that will be lost
there, literally. And there's application to the
church, application to the Christian life, lots of applications. These
things are literally looking to the millennial kingdom. And
we know that by understanding the context and making sure we
interpret things literally and then trying to figure out what
this is actually mean. So the context. That's why it's
so important to read and reread the passages and study them very
carefully. Reread the passages, study them
carefully. If you don't understand the Bible
verse, stop and read the whole chapter until you understand
the context, and then interpret the verse within that context. False teachers do exactly the
opposite. They twist things out of the
context, so then they can make those things say whatever they
please. There's a cult in Nepal that go very aggressive in house-to-house
things. And when they get into a house
and they just almost force their way in, and then they try to
have a Bible study, and these are people who's never seen a
Bible, mostly, and they won't let the people look at any other
thing before or after. They literally won't allow that,
which is a good recipe for spiritual disaster. That's the way false
teachers misused the Bible. Now we go, we interpret it literally,
we interpret it according to context, and then we interpret
comparing Scripture with Scripture, Scripture with Scripture, the
Bible as a whole. It all fits together. It was
in God's mind before it was written as a whole thing. God knew every detail of it before
it was given to the holy prophets. It was given piece by piece,
but God had the whole thing in mind. And every one of the 66
books has its central and important place in the canon, the whole. And then each part of each book
has its important place, the order everything was designed.
Of course, at first, there were no chapters or verse divisions,
but those were added later, and they're very helpful. But comparing Scripture with Scripture,
we're talking about the unity of the Bible, interpreting according
to the whole tenor of Scripture, it's been called. And that'll
refute Calvinism real quickly. Can man say no to God? How can you miss that one in
the Bible? But the whole tenor, there might be a passage that
might could talk about sovereign election, but if you stand back and you look at the whole tenor,
it just falls totally apart. This requires a good cross-reference
Bible. The man that led me to Christ
bought me a King James Bible, but it had no notes, no nothing. Really, we need a good cross-reference
Bible, at the very least, cross-references. And the Tyndale of the early
1500s, it was the first English Bible with cross-references.
John Brown's self-interpreting Bible of 18th century, 1700s. It was a serious study Bible. Study Bible. Had extensive marginal
references. George Washington purchased a
copy of that. Don't know how he used it, but
it was in his library and made a subscription to it. The Self-Interpreting
Bible. George had one of those. The
most helpful study book for comparing Scripture with Scripture is Treasury
of scripture knowledge. I saw it in your library. The
treasury of scripture knowledge. It is worth more than its weight
in gold. I use it every day. Scripture
with scripture. What's that verse mean? Well,
let's start looking at other verses. And start there. Let's look at the context, let's
define the words, but now let's start comparing Scripture with
Scripture and see what the rest of the Scripture adds to this
verse. It's just fundamental. And there's nothing more effectual
for that kind of study than the treasure of Scripture knowledge,
which I have in my computer program, Olive Tree, I use. But you can
get the book, which is what we recommend for young people. Don't
mess around with computers. and study with the books. I used
the books for decades before the first personal computer came
along. And I wrote the Encyclopedia of the Bible Christianity, the
first edition, before computers, B.C. I did. That'll be the last Bible dictionary
ever written, B.C. But you can be very effectual
in your Bible study with good books and and not as distracted,
tempted to be distracted with things on the computer. Isaiah 16, 1 says, Send ye the
Lamb to the ruler of the land, from Sela to the wilderness,
unto the mount of the daughter of Zion. Well, what in the world
does that mean? Well, it's explained in 2 Kings
3, 4. There, where do you find that? Well, treasure scripturalism. The king of Moab paid tribute
to Israel in lambs. And the prophet is advising Moab
to do this again and therefore submit to Israel again so that
you won't be judged by God, Moab. And in verses three and four
of Isaiah 16, the prophet continues this thought by beseeching Moab
to rescue the Israelites instead of hating them. Good, good counsel there for
Moab. But that's the interpretation.
Send you the land of the ruler of the land from Salem. What
in the world does that mean? And to the wilderness and the
mount, the mount of the daughter Zion. Submit to Israel, Moab. Isaiah 28, 11. Says, for with
stammering lips and another tongue will I speak to this people.
What's it mean? Simple. Perfectly explained in
1 Corinthians 14, 21. Only simple because it's been
explained for us. Tongues. The tongues of Pentecost,
the first little part of the church age, the tongue speaking. Another tongue. So it's not just bubbly, bub,
bub, bubbly, bub, bub. That was one, Bubbly Bub Bub,
that I heard in a Pentecostal converse. And no, it's not some
kind of gibberish. It's a tongue. It's a language. Those two parts of that verse,
one part explains the other part. And it compares Scripture with
Scripture. Things just get very simple. The interpretation becomes clear.
Bible interpreting it itself, Isaiah 53, five, with his stripes
we are healed. Now that's misused by Pentecostals
a lot to prove that physical healing is guaranteed in the
atonement. Guaranteed. But 1 Peter 2, 24
explains it. This is interpreted, is interpreted
by Peter. 224, and it has to do with spiritual
healing. First and foremost, who his own
self bear our sins in his own body on the tree that we being
dead to sins, dead to sin, spiritual healing should live unto righteousness
by whose stripes we are healed. He has healed spiritually and
eternally the forgiveness of sins. And so comparing Scripture
with Scripture. We'll give a more extensive study
on this in Understanding the Bible for Yourself. Now, interpreting
figurative language. We want to stop here, and then
we will continue these studies with interpreting figurative
language.