Others not of this fold, thoughts?

by TheJigsUp 9 Replies latest jw friends

  • TheJigsUp
    TheJigsUp

    I read this again just the other day in a post here i believe. Where Jesus said he has 'others not of this fold'

    the context it was quoted in i found curious and it reminded me of thoughts i had regarding the words when i read them 'for myself'

    i'm merely curious as to others understanding of these words.

    So what are you're thoughts on what may have been being spoken about?

  • leavingwt
    leavingwt

    Gentiles

  • Awen
    Awen

    Agreed, Gentiles.

    Jesus was first and foremost sent to the "lost sheep of Israel" but then he said he had "other sheep which were not of this fold, who would hear his voice" which pretty much started with the conversion of the Roman Centurion Cornelius by the Apostle Peter. Eventually they would become "one flock" with "one Shepherd".

  • yesidid
    yesidid

    Gentiles

    Absolutely

  • White Dove
    White Dove

    Jesus said these too I shall gather. The "too" means these that are just like the ones he already had were to be added to the sheepfold. That would be one flock, not two. One shepard for one flock. Gentiles were added later with one of the keys of the Kingdom that Peter had.

  • AGuest
    AGuest
    Jesus was first and foremost sent to the "lost sheep of Israel" but then he said he had "other sheep which were not of this fold, who would hear his voice" which pretty much started with the conversion of the Roman Centurion Cornelius by the Apostle Peter. Eventually they would become "one flock" with "one Shepherd".

    I would like to expound on and clarify this understanding, dear Awen, if I may (as always, peace to you!). It is true that my Lord was sent to the lost sheep of Israel; however, Cornelius was one such sheep. The "little flock" were the Jews, which does not include the 10-tribe kingdom of Israel. Those... the "Samaritans"... were ALSO lost sheep of Israel. Along with non-Israelite nations, they make up "the nations" or "gentiles" (which is simply one who is not a Jew, and although from Israel, one from, say, the tribe of Simeon, is not a Jew. Jews hail from Judah and Benjamin).

    The failure to understand just who "Israel" is (at least 10 tribes in ADDITION to the "Jews") is one of the reason many don't understand who the 144,000 seen by John are. It is why folks talk of "Israel" being exiled into Babylon... which is true, to a point. Since Jews (Judah and Benjamin) ARE Israel (the 2-tribe kingdom of Judah, with its capital city at Jerusalem, and Rehoboam as its king after Solomon), it's okay to say this; however, it sends the erroneous message that ALL of Israel (all 12 tribes) were exiled to Babylon, which isn't true. The 10-tribe kingdom of Israel (with its capital city at Bethel and Jeroboam as its king after Solomon) was exiled into Samaria by the Assyrians. Thus, the SAMARITANS... are ALSO the lost sheep of Israel.*

    Which is why my Lord:

    (1) not only spoke to the Samaritan woman at Jacob's well, but did not tell her (as he did the woman from Phoenecia), that it wasn't "right" to give HER the food of the little children - Israel. Because she WAS Israel, too, which is why she referenced the worship of their mutual forefathers when she said, "OUR forefathers used to worship in the mountain." She meant his and HER mutual forefathers... from Abraham to David (David transferred worship to Jerusalem when he took the Ark [of the Covenant] there)...

    (2) told his disciples that they would be witnesses of him "in all Judea AND Samaria, and to the distant parts of the earth"... and

    (3) the first person Peter was sent to was not a Jew, but a Samaritan: Cornelius. Cornelius lived in Caesarea, which is a city in Samaria.

    Also, Cornelius wasn't a Roman Centurion; he was a member of the "Italian" band (which wasn't the Roman Army itself). Although Rome had conquered the Italian peninsula and required all of the cities conquered to send Rome taxes (and troops), some of the city-states were given certain rights. For instance, some were allowed full Roman citizenship (especially those nearest to Rome). Others were allowed certain Roman rights. Some, however, were allowed complete autonomy... although required to act as an ally, if and when needed. They maintained their own armies and it is in this light that Cornelius was an ITALIAN centurion, and not a ROMAN centurion. And it does make a difference as they were not the same thing.

    For Cornelius to have been a ROMAN centurion would have made him worse than a tax collector as it was the Roman Army that was instrumental in putting my Lord to death. He, too, would have been used to put Israelites, Jews, and christians to death. Yet, he did not have the "status" that Saul of Tarsus, a Jew, did, such that that one was called to "suffer" for my Lord's name, as opposed to be called due to his prayers being heard, like Cornelius. Cornelius was not a Roman praying to the God of Israel - he was an Israelite (as was the Ethiopian eunuch) praying to the God of Israel. Where one is from (Samaria, Ethiopia, Galatia, etc.) does not exclude one from being an Israelite, any more than, say, being from American (vs. Israel) does.

    So, as to the OP's question (peace to you, as well!) as to who my Lord was speaking of: he was speaking of gentiles... which includes Israel who were/are NOT Jews (i.e., the 10-tribe kingdom (of Israel))... and those of non-Israelite nations.

    I hope this helps and, again, I wish you all peace!

    Servant to the Household of God, Israel, and those who go with... and a slave of Christ,

    SA

  • brotherdan
    brotherdan

    I hate to repeat what everyone else was saying here...but!

    Yes, Jesus was speaking of the Gentiles. He was saying that eventually he would bring non-Jews in to become his Brothers. And alas, this is what happend when Peter had his vision and went to convert Cornelius begining at Acts 10.

  • TheLoveDoctor
    TheLoveDoctor

    i think Jesus was talking possibly of the unconscious, witch had the potential of being almost any that could be awakened to their spiritual need not identified with the world of form and possessions, ego, etcetera. Where as his apostles and disciples were or well on there way to being awakened to what really matters, and to the source of life that they are and we are truly part of. The spirituality Jesus taught was much deeper than our world religions explain. Although many of their teachings are signpost leading to the truth. My thoughts but i don't claim to be right or wrong

  • just n from bethel
    just n from bethel

    nope - you're all wrong. It was the mormons...and possibly - black jews for jesus.

  • brotherdan
    brotherdan

    Actually....maybe it WAS the mormons. Or could it be bible students? They weren't of the original fold...

    I could make a strong argument that punk rock was the true faith...

Share this

Google+
Pinterest
Reddit