Angel Armies: good or bad?

by winnower 3 Replies latest watchtower beliefs

  • winnower
    winnower

    Who is the "God-of -the- Angel-Armies" mentioned here? (last verse)

    Is this the "god of the fallen angels"?

    Who is leader of the fallen angels? Would the leader be their god?

    Does the "god of angel armies" have a name?

    The Landscape Will Be a Moonscape

    1-3 Danger ahead! God's about to ravish the earth and leave it in ruins,
    Rip everything out by the roots
    and send everyone scurrying:
    priests and laypeople alike,
    owners and workers alike,
    celebrities and nobodies alike,
    buyers and sellers alike,
    bankers and beggars alike,
    the haves and have-nots alike.
    The landscape will be a moonscape,
    totally wasted.
    And why? Because God says so.
    He's issued the orders.

    4 The earth turns gaunt and gray,
    the world silent and sad,
    sky and land lifeless, colorless.

    Earth Polluted by Its Very Own People

    5-13 Earth is polluted by its very own people,
    who have broken its laws,
    Disrupted its order,
    violated the sacred and eternal covenant.
    Therefore a curse, like a cancer,
    ravages the earth.
    Its people pay the price of their sacrilege.
    They dwindle away, dying out one by one.
    No more wine, no more vineyards,
    no more songs or singers.
    The laughter of castanets is gone,
    the shouts of celebrants, gone,
    the laughter of fiddles, gone.
    No more parties with toasts of champagne.
    Serious drinkers gag on their drinks.
    The chaotic cities are unlivable. Anarchy reigns.
    Every house is boarded up, condemned.
    People riot in the streets for wine,
    but the good times are gone forever—
    no more joy for this old world.
    The city is dead and deserted,
    bulldozed into piles of rubble.
    That's the way it will be on this earth.
    This is the fate of all nations:
    An olive tree shaken clean of its olives,
    a grapevine picked clean of its grapes.

    14-16 But there are some who will break into glad song.
    Out of the west they'll shout of God's majesty.
    Yes, from the east God's glory will ascend.
    Every island of the sea
    Will broadcast God's fame,
    the fame of the God of Israel.
    From the four winds and the seven seas we hear the singing:
    "All praise to the Righteous One!"

    16-20 But I said, "That's all well and good for somebody,
    but all I can see is doom, doom, and more doom."
    All of them at one another's throats,
    yes, all of them at one another's throats.
    Terror and pits and booby traps
    are everywhere, whoever you are.
    If you run from the terror,
    you'll fall into the pit.
    If you climb out of the pit,
    you'll get caught in the trap.
    Chaos pours out of the skies.
    The foundations of earth are crumbling.
    Earth is smashed to pieces,
    earth is ripped to shreds,
    earth is wobbling out of control,
    Earth staggers like a drunk,
    sways like a shack in a high wind.
    Its piled-up sins are too much for it.
    It collapses and won't get up again.

    21-23 That's when God will call on the carpet
    rebel powers in the skies and
    Rebel kings on earth.
    They'll be rounded up like prisoners in a jail,
    Corralled and locked up in a jail,
    and then sentenced and put to hard labor.
    Shamefaced moon will cower, humiliated,
    red-faced sun will skulk, disgraced,
    Because God-of-the-Angel-Armies will take over,
    ruling from Mount Zion and Jerusalem,
    Splendid and glorious
    before all his leaders.

    Isaiah 24

  • hillbilly
    hillbilly

    What video game are you playing?

    Hill

  • winnower
    winnower

    It's not a video game. This is from the Bible: Isaiah 24. The translation I used is the Message Bible. For other translations of this chapter, I recommend www.biblegateway.com.

    The Bible is a living work. Sometimes it's like "Back to the Future" when you can read an episode in the Old Testament which is describing our future ahead. This is one such chapter. Here is a commentary:


    Isaiah 24:1 "The prophet transports himself in spirit to the end of all things. He describes the destruction of the world. He sees, however, that this destruction will be gradually accomplished. He here depicts the first scene: the destruction of all that exists on the surface of the earth... as even now occurs [in limited areas] as a consequence of wars... Jehovah empties, devastates, depopulates the surface of the earth..." (Johan P. Lange, A Commentary). "The writer feels that he is living in the last days, and in the universal wretchedness and confusions of the age he seems to discern the 'beginning of sorrows.' His thoughts glide almost imperceptibly from the one point of view to the other, now describing the distress and depression which exist, and now the more terrible visitation which is imminent" (The Cambridge Bible).

    Isaiah 24:22 The Hebrew word used here may mean visit in mercy as well as visit in punishment, but the context does not seem to indicate the possibility of mercy in this case.

    This Jehovah god is NOT our Creator.

  • Farkel
    Farkel

    :Angel Armies: good or bad?

    I guess that depends upon which side you are on!

    Farkel

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