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Joh 1:35 Again the next day after. In John, the account is given of the visit of the priests and Levites, sent by the Sanhedrin to John. "The next day" after this, John sees Jesus and points him out as the Lamb of God, giving a discourse of which, in Joh 1:19-34, we have a synopsis. On the "next day" after this, the third day after the deputation of the Sanhedrin, and the second after the return of Jesus from the wilderness, John stood, and two of his disciples. One of these two, we learn from Joh 1:40, was Andrew; the other, we have reason to believe, was John, the apostle.
Why does it seem like after Jesus's baptism, the next day he met 2 of his disciples?... and
where do you get that it implies or infers that
He had already been to the wilderness... why didn't he (or should I say John the Baptist mention the temptations)... or can we say that being taken up "in the spirit" put you in the
"Eternal Now" and that 40 literal days did not pass?...
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Joh 1:35 Again the next day after. In John, the account is given of the visit of the priests and Levites, sent by the Sanhedrin to John. "The next day" after this, John sees Jesus and points him out as the Lamb of God, giving a discourse of which, in Joh 1:19-34, we have a synopsis. On the "next day" after this, the third day after the deputation of the Sanhedrin, and the second after the return of Jesus from the wilderness, John stood, and two of his disciples. One of these two, we learn from Joh 1:40, was Andrew; the other, we have reason to believe, was John, the apostle.
Why does it seem like after Jesus's baptism, the next day he met 2 of his disciples?... and
where do you get that it implies or infers that
He had already been to the wilderness... why didn't he (or should I say John the Baptist mention the temptations)... or can we say that being taken up "in the spirit" put you in the
"Eternal Now" and that 40 literal days did not pass?...
Thanks and God Bless,
Thomas
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