Wineskins.org.The.Unity.of.the.Spirit
         The
          Jesus Pattern: The Way Which They Call A Sect:  Refuted
          by: Mat Dabbs, Patrick Mead, Jay Guin, Mark Powell, John
        Mark Hicks: OF is a preposition: the Spirit OF God is His
        BREATH.
        
        Jesus Christ as HOLY SPIRIT breathed on Paul to denounce and
        REJECT what He called the Scribes and Pharisees: rhetoricians
        for hire, singers or instrument players.  Religious
        Craftsmen called Parasites: speakers, singers or instrument
        players will be or ARE CAST ALIVE INTO THE LAKE OF FIRE. This
        was in a Prophetic PATTERN in Isaiah 30.
        
        This unity is that you MUST take the MARK OF THE BEAST.
        
        -Panourg-os (properisp.), on,
        A. ready to do
            anything, wicked, knavish,
          II.  in a less positively bad sense, 
cunning, clever,
            smart, “
p. kai deinos” 
D. 1.3, cf.
          
Pl.Tht.177a,
          
Arist.EN1144a28;
          “
p. te kai sophos” 
Pl.R.409c;
          “
kompsos kai p.” 
Plu.
              2.28a: Sup., 
Plb.5.75.2.
          Adv. “
-gōs, p. kai hupokritikōs legein ta epē” Ath.9.407a.
        
 
        
          -“
p. kai deinos” 
egein
            clever at speaking, 
forcible, vehement, style
            in oratory,
            “
d.
              hupo
              panourgias”
            
            
            
-Plat.
                Rep. 409c But that 
cunning fellow quick
            to suspect evil, and who has himself done many 
unjust
              acts and who 
thinks himself a 
smart
              trickster, [
panourgos te kai sophos] 
                    when he associates
            with 
his like does appear to be clever, 
                      being on his
            guard and 
fixing his eyes on the 
patterns within
              himself. 
                    But when the time
            comes for him to mingle with the 
good and his elders, 
            
              Plat. Rep. 3.409d
            then on the contrary he 
 appears stupid. He
            is unseasonably 
[kairon] distrustful
            [apistōn] and 
                    he 
cannot
              recognize a 
 sound character 
                      because he
              has no such pattern in himself. 
            But since he more often meets with the bad than the good, 
                    he seems to himself
            and to 
others to be 
rather wise than
            foolish.” “That is quite true,” he said.
            “Well then,” said I, “such a one 
must not be our ideal of
            the good and 
wise judge but the former. 
                    For while badness
            could never come to know 
both virtue and itself,
            native virtue through education 
            
Plat.
                Rep. 3.409e will at last acquire the 
science
            both of 
itself and 
badness.
1
            This one, then, as I think, is the man who proves to be wise
            and not the bad man.
2”
            “And I concur,
            
 1 Cf. George Eliot, Adam
                  Bede, chap. xiv.: “It is our habit to say that
                while the lower nature can never understand the
                higher, the higher nature commands a complete view of
                the lower. But I think the higher nature has to learn
                  this comprehension by a good deal of hard experience.”
              2
                  Cf. Theaetetus 176 D “It is far best not to
                  concede to the unjust that they are clever
                  knaves, for they glory in the taunt.” Cf. Unity of
                    Plato's Thought, n. 21.
            
           
        
         Sophos , 
ē, 
on, 
A. skilled in
            any handicraft or 
art, clever, 
harmatēlatas s. 
Pi.P.5.115,
          cf. 
N.7.17;
          “
kubernētēs” 
A.Supp.770;
          “
mantis” 
Id.Th.382;
          “
oiōnothetas” 
S.OT484
          (lyr.); of a sculptor, 
E.Fr.372;
          even of hedgers and ditchers, 
Margites
              Fr.2; but in this sense mostly of poets
          and musicians, 
Pi.O.1.9,
          
P.1.42,
          
3.113; 
en kithara s. 
E.IT1238
          
          etc.; also 
en oiōnois, kithara, 
E. IT662,
          
1238 (lyr.);
          
        
 
         
        God gave the gifted leaders in Ephesians 4 to specificially
        prevent these deceivers so that the church, ekklesia or School
        of the Word could be held.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        The Seven Ones in Ephesians 4 Denies the Trinity, outlaws
        all performance rhetoric or music and includes the definition of
        the Church, ekklesia or in Paul's use, the synagogue which is a
        school (only) of the Word (only) Gifted founders were eye and
        ear witnesses to deliver Jesus Christ's message from God the
        Father.  That is defined as the sole resource or "that
        which is written for the edification or education of the
        disciples: a disciple is not a ceremonial worshiper but a
        student.
        
         Paul
says
          there are sven "things" but he did not say THAT'S ALL: If
          anyone believes that and continues to collect a wage for
          teaching anything elde then he is a crimimal.  Ephesians 3 defines the role of
          the assembly as singular: to make known the manifold wisdom of
          
          God. No one can contribute anything "beyond the sacred pages."
          In Ephesians 4 Paul will say that Christ has protected His
          School of the Word by gifted teachers. This is the only way to
          mark false teachers and "synagogues of Satan."
          
          While the "scholars" missed
            the prophets, they missed THE Spirit OF Christ prophesying the reign of Christ both
                inclusively and exclusively.  For instance, the sacrificial system is the pattern
                    for those imposing theatrical and musical
                    performance defined to "makethe lambs dumb before the
                      slaughter."  
        
        
          Jer 23:16 Thus saith the Lord of
              hosts, 
                      Hearken not
              unto the words of the prophets that prophesy
                unto you; 
                      they make you vain:
              
                
                  they speak a vision of their own
                heart, 
                
                  and not
                out of the mouth of the Lord.
          
            Thus saith the Lord,
              After this manner will I mar
                the pride of Judah, 
                      and the great pride of Jerusalem.
              Jer 13:9
                      This evil people, which refuse to
                hear my words,
            ........which walk in the imagination
              of their heart, [twisted]
            ........and walk after other gods, to serve
              them,
            ........and to worship them, shall even be as this
              girdle, which is good for nothing. Jer 13:10
           
          > For I spake NOT unto your
                  fathers, nor commanded them
                      in the day that I
              brought them out of the land of Egypt,
                  
            concerning burnt offerings or
                  sacrifices: Jeremiah 7:22
            > But this
thing
                commanded I them, saying,
                  
            Obey my
                  voice, and I will be your God, and ye shall be my
              people:
                  
            and walk ye in all
              the ways that I have commanded you,
                  
            that it may be
              well unto you. Jeremiah 7:23
          
          > But they HEARKENED NOT, nor inclined their ear,
                  
            but walked in the
            counsels and in the imagination of their
                  evil heart,
                  
            and went backward,
              and not forward. Jeremiah 7:24
            
          Jer 23:17 They say still unto
              them that despise me, 
                      The Lord hath said,
              Ye shall have peace; 
                      and they say unto
              every one that walketh 
                      after the
                imagination of his own heart, 
                      No evil shall come
              upon you. 
          
          Despise tthe Word of God: 
          Blasphēmo , āre, ak
            profanely of sacred things, “eis theous” Pl.R.381e;
          offer rash prayer I. 
            v.a., = blasphēmeō (eccl. Lat.), to
            revile, reproach, Vulg. 1 Par. 20, 7;
          God and divine things, to blaspheme: “Christum,” Prud.
              Apoth. 415: “nomen Domini,” Tert.
              adv. Jud. 13 fin.; Vulg. Lev. 24, 11;
          id. Matt. 9. 3;
          26, 65.
          2.  speak ill or to the prejudice of
          one, slander, “peri tēs emēs diatribēs”
          
          H5006 nâ’ats naw-ats' A primitive root; to scorn; or
          (Ecclesiastes 12:5 ) by interchange for H5132 , to bloom:—abhor,
          (give occasion to) blaspheme, contemn, despise, flourish, X
          great, provoke.
          
          
          
          Ecclesiastes 12:4And the doors shall be shut in the streets,
          when the sound of the grinding is low, and he
          shall rise up at the voice of the bird, and all the daughters
            of music shall be brought low; 
          Ecclesiastes 12:5Also when they shall be afraid of that which
          is high, and fears shall be in the way, and the almond tree
          shall flourish, and the grasshopper shall be a burden, and
          desire shall fail: because man goeth to his long home, and the
          mourners go about the streets:
        
         Christ the Rock defined the qahal, synagogue
                      or Church of Christ in the wilderness. This was:
                      
                      INCLUSIVE of Rest,
                          Reading and Rehearsing the Word of God. Exodus
                          18 defines the small groups ordained to teach
                          The Book of the Covenant before the people
                          fell into musical idolatry at Mount Sinai.
                            
                            EXCLUSIVE
                              of vocal
                                or instrumental rejoicing including
                                high-sounding rhetoric.
                          
          Jesus as the Mesiah speaking Spirit without meter, approved the Synagogue
                where the pattern was to stand up to read and then sit
                down decently and in order.
          
          PAUL AND PETER EXCLUDE THE PREVAILING PAGAN RITUALS BEFORE
          THEY DEFINE THE CHURCH.
        
        Eph. 4:1 I therefore, the prisoner of
            the Lord, beseech you that ye walk worthy of the vocation
            wherewith ye are called, 
        2564. kaleo, kal-eh´-o; akin to the base
          of 2753; to “call” (properly, aloud, but used in a variety of
          applications, directly or otherwise): — bid, call (forth),
          (whose, whose sur-)name (was (called)).
          2753. keleuo, kel-yoo´-o; from a primary ke÷llw kello (to urge
          on); “hail”; to incite by word, i.e. order: — bid,
          (at, give) command(-ment).
        Eph. 4:2 With all  lowliness
            and  meekness, with longsuffering, 
              forbearing one another in love; 
            
            There is no upper Case "S"pirit in the
              text.  It is not the Holy Spirit.  The context
              is not a complex godhead but the spirit or mind which
              unites all of the members of a congregation toward one
              goal. Paul defines the "synagogue" in Romans 15 to exclude
              the pagan sects identified by their diet in the
              marketplace.  He excludes all that does not edify
              which here means to educate "with that which is written
              for our learning."
            
            Eph. 4:3 Endeavouring to keep the unity of the spirit
            in the bond of peace. 
          
          The Church of Christ is the Body of
            Christ, therefore, the "spirit" is the spirit OF unity
            within that body.  Body and spirit are alalogs of the
            human bod.  If a human body has two "spirits" or minds
            driving it it cannot accomplish the sole purpose from
            Ephesians three which is to make known the manifest wisdom
            of God to the "principalities and powers."  This is
            similar to Job's being God's human agent to withstand the
            influence of Satan. Paul's purpose is not to make a legal
            list of seven essentials but to both exclude the world and
            the wise so that the body can be edified or educated
            to withstand the very onslaught which drives most of
            christianism.
          
          Eph. 4:4 There is one body, and one spirit, 
                 
            even as ye are called in one hope of your
            calling; 
        
        One of the essentials of "unity" narrowly defined by Barton W.
        Stone is a rejection of any speculation on the various views of
        the "trinity."  There is only ONE GOD and He is not
        composed of three family members internal or external.
         Paul made it clear that there are only TWO "actors." The One
          God made Himself fully known is Jesus of Nazareth and it
        is Jesus as the Chrit with Whom we have to do in all that we do.
        
        Eph. 4:5 One Lord, one faith,
            one baptism, 
        Acts 10:37 That word, I say, ye know, which was
          published throughout all Judaea, 
                  and began from Galilee,
          after the baptism which John preached; 
          Acts 10:38 How God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with
            the Holy Ghost and with power: 
                  who went about doing
          good, and healing all that were oppressed of the devil; 
                  for God was with him. 
          
          John 14:10 Believest thou not that I am IN the Father,
          
                  and the Father IN
          me? 
                  the words that I speak
          unto you I speak not of myself: 
                  but the Father that dwelleth
in
            me, he doeth the works.
          John 14:11 Believe me that I am in the Father, and the
          Father in me: 
                  or else believe me for
          the very works’ sake. 
            
          1Cor. 1:3 Grace be unto you, and peace, 
                  from God our Father,
          
                  and from the Lord
            Jesus Christ.  
          
          1Cor. 8:5 For though there be that are called gods, whether in
          heaven or in earth, 
                  (as there be gods many,
          and lords many,) 
          1Cor. 8:6 But to us 
                  there is but ONE
            GOD, the Father, of whom are all things, and we in him;
          
                  and ONE LORD
          Jesus Christ, by whom are all things, and we by him
          
          Gal. 1:1 Paul, an apostle, (not of men, neither by man, 
                  but by Jesus Christ,
          
                  and God the Father,
          
                  who raised him from the
          dead;) 
          Gal. 1:3 Grace be to you and peace
                  from God the Father,
          
                  and from our Lord
            Jesus Christ,
        
        And there is only One invisible, incomprehensible Deity and no
        man knows the Father unless the Son makes Him known. Therefore,
        there can be no unity when people dismiss the Words of Christ as
        Spirit and Life and impose their own opinion. The 7 Ones
        EXCLUDES diversities;
        
        Eph. 4:6 One God and Father
            of all, who is above all, and through all,
            and in you all. 
              
            This is the One GOD
                and One LORD in the address of all of the Epistles.
                 The Holy Spirit whose name is Jesus Christ the
                Righteous because it is the Spirit OF Christ does not
                appear as a person. Therefore, based on all clasically
                trinitarians and the inventors of the term none of them
                would be in "unity" with anyone who taught that
                 God (singular term) is really three equal centers
                of consciousness with their own emotions and plans.
                 You would be lucky if they burned you with wet
                wood so you smothered before you fried.
             
        Eph. 4:7 But unto every one of us is
            given grace according to the measure
              of the gift of Christ. 
        Titus 2:11 For the grace of God that
          bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men, 
          Titus 2:12 Teaching us that, 
                  denying
          ungodliness and worldly lusts, 
                  we should live soberly,
          righteously, and godly, 
                  in this present world; 
          kosm-ikos , ē, on, (kosmos IV)  s.v. Orpheus: Astrol., k. kentra skhēma  
              
            
              Orpheus , eōs, o(, Dor. Orphēs  Orphēn  
                A. Orpheus,
                  Pi.P.4.177,
                  
Pl.R.364e,
                  etc.:—Adj. 
Orpheios , 
a, 
on, 
E.Alc. 969(lyr.),
                  
Pl.Lg.829e;
                  or 
Orphikos , 
ē, 
on, 
Hdt.2.81
                  ; “
en tois O. epesi kaloumenois” 
Arist.de An.410b28.\
                
 
              
              
                Epos , older wepos SIG9 (v. infr.),
                  etc., eos,
                    to (Skt.
                  A. vácas
                    'word', 'hymn', cf. 
eipon):
                    
1. song or 
lay accompanied by music,
                    8.91,
17.519.
                    
                    
IV.  in pl., 
epic poetry, Opposite. 
melē (
lyric
                    poetry), 
iambeia, dithuramboi, etc., “
rhaptōn epeōn aoidoi” 
Pi.N.2.2
                    ; “
ta Kupria epea” 
Hdt.2.117,
                    cf. 
Th.1.3,
                    
X.Mem.1.4.3,
                    
Pl.R.379a,
                    etc. ; “
epea te poiein pros luran t' aeidein” 
Theoc.Ep.21.6
                    ; “
nikēsas epos” 
IG3.1020 ; 
poētēs epōn 
                   
                
              
             
            Skhēma 2. appearance,
              Opposite. the reality,
              ouden allo plēn . . s. a mere outside, E.Fr.25, cf. 360.27, Pl.R.365c;
              show, pretence, “ēn de touto . . s. politikon tou logou” Th.8.89;
              ; 
              “skhēmasi kai khrōmasi mimeisthai”
              esp. outside show, pomp, to tēs arkhēs s. Pl.Lg.685c;
              X.Smp.7.5;
              en . . mousikē [hēs to kitharizein kai to adein kai to embainein orthōs;]  kai skhēmata . . kai melē enesti figures and
              tunes, Pl.Lg.655a
              10.  = to aidoion LXXIs.3.17.
          
          Epithu_m-ia lust of the EYE, lust
                of the EAR says Barnes of Amos
              
          Titus 2:13 Looking for that blessed hope, 
                  and the glorious
          appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus
          Christ; 
          Titus 2:14 Who gave himself for us, 
                  that he might redeem us
          from all iniquity, 
                  and purify unto
          himself a peculiar people, 
                  zealous of good
            works.
          
        Jesus will not PRAY for the "world" or KOSMOS which is the
        concept brought from Babylon by Pythagoras: His sect was one of
        those SILENCED in Romans 14 if they wanted to attend the open
        synagogue defined in Romans 15 where SELF-pleasure specificially
        outlaws all of what Jesus called the Scribes, Pharisees He
        called Hypocrites: in the Ezekiel 33 version Christ named
        entertaining speakers, singers and instrument players as PROOF
        that the speakers were mercinaries and the audience was looking
        for entertainment--the reason butterflies flock to instrumental
        churches.
        
        Jesus said that God HIDES Himself (very well, thank you) from
        the Wise: the Sophists:
        Luke 10:21 In that hour Jesus rejoiced in spirit,
          and said, 
                  I thank thee, O Father,
          Lord of heaven and earth, 
                  that thou hast hid
          these things from the wise and prudent, 
                  and hast revealed them
          unto babes: even so, Father; for so it seemed good in thy
          sight. 
        
        1Cor. 1:19 For it is written, I will DESTROY
          the wisdom of the WISE, 
                  and will bring to
          nothing the understanding of the prudent. 
          1Cor. 1:20 Where is the wise? where is the scribe? 
                  where is the disputer of
          this world?
                  hath not God made
          foolish the wisdom of this world? 
          1Cor. 1:21 For after that in the wisdom of God 
                  the world by wisdom
            knew not God, 
                  it pleased God by the
          foolishness of PREACHING to save them that
          believe.
          
          1Cor. 3:18 Let no man deceive himself. If any man among you 
                  seemeth to be wise
          in this world, 
                  let him become a fool,
          that he may be wise. 
          1Cor. 3:19 For the wisdom of this world is foolishness
          with God. 
                  For it is written, He
          taketh the wise in their own craftiness. 
          1Cor. 3:20 And again, The Lord knoweth the thoughts of
          the wise, that they are vain. 
          Matthew 28:19 Go ye
              therefore, and teach all nations, 
                      baptizing them in
              the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
              Ghost:
              Matthew 28:20 Teaching them to observe all things
                whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am with
              you alway, even unto the end of the world. Amen. 
          
          Sophis-tęs , ou, ho, master of one's
              craft, adept, expert, of diviners, Hdt.2.49; of poets, meletan sophistais
                prosbalon Pi.I.5(4).28
              , cf. Cratin.2; of musicians, sophistęs . . parapaiôn chelun A.Fr.314, cf. Eup.447, Pl.Com. 140;
              sophistęi Thręiki (sc. Thamyris) E.Rh.924, cf.
              Ath.14.632c: with mod
          II.  from late v B.C., a Sophist, i.e. one
who
              gave lessons in grammar, rhetoric, politics,
            mathematics, for money, such as Prodicus, Gorgias,
            Protagoras, a quibbler, cheat,  a RHETORICIAN
            as the primary meaning of a HYPOCRITE. 
          
          hoi s. tōn hierōn melōn” A sophist,
            serpent, makes MUSICAL MELODY with a congregation AS a harp
            and cannot grasp that IN THE HEART is a place.
          
          WISDOM IS:  sophia , Ion. -iē, h(, prop. A. [select]
              cleverness or skill in handicraft
            and art, as in carpentry, tektonos, hos rha te pasēs eu eidē s. Il.15.412; of
            the Telchines, Pi.O.7.53;
            hē entekhnos s., of Hephaestus and Athena,
            Pl.Prt.32
            1d; of Daedalus
            and Palamedes, X.Mem.4.2.33,
            cf. 1.4.2; in music
            and singing, tekhnē kai s. h.Merc.483,
            cf. 511; in poetry,
          
          WISE: Sophos A. skilled
              in any handicraft or art, clever, harmatēlatas s. Pi.P.5.115,
            cf. N.7.17; “kubernētēs” A.Supp.770;
            “mantis” Id.Th.382;
          
        
        The Mantis were the Mad Women of Corinth: history notes that any
        male who would sing and play in a religious sense was "drunk,
        perverted or just mocking."
        Plato's
                Symposium is the "getting drunk on wine" before
            they sang, or the CROOKED GENERATION.
            
            Aristodemus
            meeting Socrates smartly attired expresses his surprise at
            so unusual a circumstance. Socrates explains that being
            invited to dine with Agathon he feels bound to go “in finery
            to the fine”; and he presses Aristodemus, although
            uninvited, to accompany him. On the road Socrates, immersed
            in thought, lags behind, and Aristodemus arrives at
            Agathon's alone. Not till they are half-way through the meal
            does Socrates appear; and Agathon rallies him on his
              devotion to  sophia. 
          
          The proposal of Pausanias to
              restrict the potations, in view of yesterday's banquet,
              and that of Eryximachus to dismiss the flute-girl and
              amuse themselves by logoi, are unanimously
              agreed to. Then Eryximachus propounds an idea of Phaedrus,
              that Eros is the best possible theme for encomia, and
              suggests that each of the party in turn, commencing with
              Phaedrus, should now deliver an encomium on Eros. This
              suggestion is applauded by Socrates. Of the encomia the
              most noteworthy were the following:—
            
          OF SOPHIA: Sophia is the mother of
              ZOE in Gnosticism or EVE.
          
           THE MEANING OF LEGALISM: All
              religious acts must be performed according to strict
              rules.
          d The varying nomoi concerning Eros
              may be classified thus:—
           (1) In all Greek states except
              Athens the nomos is simple, either (a) approving paederastia,
              as in Elis and Boeotia; or (b) condemning it, as in
              Ionia and states subject to barbarian rule, where it is
              held to foster a dangerous spirit of independence (e.g. Harmodius
              and Aristogiton).
            
          ÎThis was the message of
              Jesus consigning the PIPERS wanting to make sing (Lament)
              and dance (squirm) under the initiation of Dionysus the
              old wineskin God in the temple
            
           (2) At Athens the nomos is complex. (a) Eros is approved,
              and its excesses condoned, when directed towards superior
              youths approaching manhood. (b) It appears to be
              condemned, in so far as parents forbid their boys to hold
              converse with “erastae.” The explanation of this
              ambiguous attitude must be sought in the principle laid
              down above, that the moral quality of an act depends upon
              the conditions of its performance. The Athenian nomos (LEGALISM)
              provides a test for distinguishing between good and bad
              forms of Eros: the test of time shows whether or
              not the right motive (desire for aretē) actuates both the
              lover and his object. This motive alone justifies all
              erotic pursuits and surrenders, even mutual deception:
              hence we conclude that kalon aretēs heneka kharizesthai.
            
          
            This is the message of GRACE only
                  kharizō
                2.  gratify or indulge
              a humour or passion,
              3.  in erotic sense, grant favours
              to a man, Ar.Ec.629
              (anap.), Pl.Smp.182a,
              Phdr.231c,
              256a, X.Mem.3.11.12,
              etc.: hence of Comedy, “oligois kharisasthai” Ar.Eq.517
              (anap.): c. acc. cogn., “kh. thēleian apolausin”
            
          
        
        Eph. 4:8 Wherefore he saith, When HE
            ascended up on high, 
                    he led captivity
            captive, and gave gifts unto men. 
              
            Jesus died, was resurrected and
              was transfigured or changed. He returned to God and God
              gave Him His post-resurrected Spiritual state. 
              He--Jesus Christ--shed forth what happened by the Holy
              Spirit in the upper room.
            
        Acts 2:33 Therefore being by the right hand of God
          exalted, 
                  and having received of
          the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost, 
                  he hath shed forth
            this, which ye now see and hear. 
        
        1Pet. 3:18 For Christ also hath once suffered for
          sins, the just for the unjust, 
                  that he might bring
            us to God, 
                      being
          put to death in the flesh, 
                  but quickened by the
          Spirit: 
          1Pet. 3:19 By which also he went and preached unto the
            spirits in prison; 
          1Pet. 3:20 Which sometime were disobedient, 
                  when once the
          longsuffering of God waited in the days of Noah, 
                  while the ark was a
          preparing, wherein few, that is, eight souls were saved by
            water. 
          1Pet. 3:21 The like figure whereunto even baptism
            doth also now save us 
                  (not the putting away of
          the filth of the flesh,
                  but the answer of a good
          conscience toward God,) 
                  by the resurrection of
          Jesus Christ: 
          1Pet. 3:22 Who is gone into heaven, and is on the right hand
          of God; 
                  angels and
            authorities and powers being made subject unto him.
           
        
        Eph. 4:9 (Now that he ascended,
            
                    what is it but that he
            also descended first into the lower parts of the earth? 
        
        Paul always DEFINES the pagan (new style singing as a
        mark of the beast) before he defines the SOLE purpose of the
        ekklesia or synagogue or school of the Bible which EXCLUDES
        the marketplace preferences (Romans 15) and INCLUDES
        the Scriptures to educate, glorify God and keep the unity.
        
        WHAT?
        
              Eph 4:10 He that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all heavens, 
                    that he might fill
              all things.)
            
            When Jesus as the Christ was
                transfigured or metamorphosed into the spiritual world
                His name when He appeared to Paul was "Jesus of
                Nazareth."  Jesus of Nazareth was MADE both lord
                and Christ and continues to be the earthly intercessor
                or Arm of God.
          
        Heb. 8:4 For if he were on earth, he should not
            be a priest, seeing that there are priests that offer
          gifts according to the law: 
        To
                validate and leave an example--written says
                Peter--Christ gave certain men supernatural help to
                equip the church with the sole teaching authorized for
                the church or assembly: disunity always happens when
                people violate the direct commandment against "doubtful
                disputations" which means private opinions or even words
                according to Christ through Isaiah in chapter 58.
            
            Eph 4:11 And he gave
            some, apostles; and
            some, prophets; and
            some, evangelists; 
                    and some, pastors
              and teachers 
          
        God always reveals through specially chosen men whom He has
        prepared to hear and reveal His will: over and over it was the
        prophets led by the Spirit of Christ who spoke the spiritual
        truth in direct opposition to the Scribes who recorded the
        history of the Civil-Military-Priestly system abandoned to
        worship the starry host.
        
        Jesus Christ continued to guide certain people to set the church
        in order: the method chosen was to identify wrong teachings and
        then correct them.  Peter warns that the MARKS of a false
        teacher is one who does not teach that which is revealed:
        
        For he received from God the Father HONOR and GLORY,
          
                  when
            there came such a voice
            to him from the excellent glory, 
                  This
            is my beloved Son,
            in whom I am well pleased. 2 Pet 1:17 
            
          What was it to prove?
          
          WE have also a MORE SURE word of
              PROPHECY; 
                 
            whereunto YOU do well
            that ye take heed, 
                  as
            unto a light that shineth in a dark place, 
                  until
            the day dawn, 
                  and
            the day star [Christ]
            arise in your hearts: 2 Pet 1:19 
        
        In 1
              Peter 1:11 Peter said that the PROPHETS spoke through the
              Spirit OF CHRIST.
          Therefore, his
              command was that our assemblies give heed to the PROPHETS  through whom God delivered SPIRITUAL
              truth in mortal warfare with the LEGAL animal sacrifices IMPOSED as the curse when God
              ABANDONED the Monarchy to worship the starry host.
          
          Day
Star
              Christ
          Heart
          seat of the understanding, the faculty and seat of the intelligence
          
          Give
heed
              means worship: Paul's ONLY worship word.
          prosecho 
          to apply one's self to, attach
one's
            self to, 
              hold or cleave to a person or a thing
              to be given
          or addicted to
              to devote
          thought and effort to
          
          Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture 
                  is of
            any private interpretation (further
              expounding). 2 Pet 1:20 
          You cannot: Epilusis
              (g1955) ep-il'-oo-sis; from 1956; explanation, i.e.
              application: - interpretation.
            Epiluo
              (g1956) ep-ee-loo'-o; from 1909 and 3089; to solve
                further, i.e. (fig.) to explain,
                decide: - determine, expound. 
          You cannot: Epi-lusis , eôs, hę,
              A. release from, e. phobôn [Fear of Apollo or
                Apollyon] didou A.Th.134 (lyr.): abs., exemption from
                banishment, SIG306.51 (Arc., iv B.C.).
          You cannot: Exęgętęs II. expounder, interpreter, esp. of oracles, dreams, or omens, Hdt.1.78; at Athens, of sacred rites or customs,
              modes of burial, expiation, etc., spiritual director, of Apollo, Pl.R.427c.
            b. at Rome, of the pontifices. Similar: Suristikę (sc. technę), hę, the art
            of piping: used with rhythmice, histrionia.  Magicus, belonging to magic,
            magic, magical.
          superstitiones, vanitates,
            that were invoked by incantations:
          linguae= skilled
            in incantations, cantus, magicae
            resonant ubi Memnone chordae, mysterious
        WHY?
        
        Eph
              4:12 For
          the perfecting of the saints, for
          the work of the ministry, for
          the edifying of the body of Christ:
        
          The Word
              EDIFY means EDUCATE: Romans 15 says you
              speak "that which is written" using one MIND and one MOUTH
              to educate.
            
          Musical
              performance in religion does not perfect, enable
              service, does not edify, does not UNIFY,
              does not give
                knowledge of the Son of God, does not perfect
                and does not make one like Christ: Jesus
              cast the musical minstrels out "like dung."
            
          Musical
              performance is based on failing to understand that Paul
              commanded that we SPEAK that which is written to Teach,
              Comfort, Exhort.  Singing and Melody are the EFFECTS
              on the spirit or heart as the only place "worship" takes
              place.
            
          Singing
              because it is a "commanded act of worship" is rank
              legalism and PREVENTS the sole role of the ekklesia or
              synagogue which is to Teach the Word of Christ.
            
        
        
          
            
                | 
              g3619.Edifying.gif 
                 
                1Corinthians 14:3 But he that prophesieth speaketh
                unto men to edification, and exhortation,
                and comfort.  
                1Corinthians 14:4 He that speaketh in an unknown
                tongue edifieth himself; but he that prophesieth
                  edifieth the church.  
                 
                2Corinthians 10:8 For though I should boast somewhat
                more of our authority, which the Lord hath given us for
                edification, and not for your destruction, I should not
                be ashamed:  
                     | 
            
          
        
        HOW?
            Eph 4:13 Till we all come
            in 
              
   
            A. the unity of THE
              faith, and of 
              
   
          B. the knowledge of the Son of
            God, 
              
   
          C. unto a perfect MAN, 
              
   
          D. unto the measure of the stature
            of the fulness of Christ: 
        
          Stature:
              2244. helikia, hay-lik-ee´-ah; from the same as
              2245; maturity (in years or size):  age,
              stature. [Comrade, not playmate] 
        
        You cannot
            go BEYOND THAT WHICH IS WRITTEN: that is a direct command
            made over and over.  If you go BEYOND that which is
            written with the SOLE PURPOSE 
        
        Eph.
3:8
            Unto me, who am less than the least of all saints, is this grace
            given, 
              
   
that
I
should
            preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of
              Christ; 
            
          
            Matthew 28:19 Go ye
                therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the
                name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
                Ghost:
                Matthew 28:20 Teaching them to observe all things
                  whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am
                with you alway, even unto the end of the world. Amen. 
            
          
           Eph. 3:9
            And to make all men see 
                    what is the fellowship
              of the mystery,
                    which from the
            beginning of the world hath been hid in God, 
                    who created all things
            by Jesus Christ: 
            
            The SEVEN ONES were not what was HIDDEN. The CORE
            GOSPEL was not what was HIDDEN: Paul said of the ONE BAPTISM
            that until you are converted or baptized you CANNOT read BLACK
            text on BROWN paper.
            
            Those who can read only the SEVEN ONES are assuredly
              BLIND as God's predestinated purpose.
            
            WHAT IS THE PURPOSE OF THE GOSPEL OF THE KINGDOM? Is that
            BEYOND the seven ONES? Huh?
            
            Eph. 3:10 To the intent that now unto 
                    the principalities and
            powers in heavenly places 
                    might be known by
              the church the manifold wisdom of God, 
            Eph. 3:11 According to the eternal purpose which he
              purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord: 
            
            PAUL DEFINES THE CHURCH FURTHER DOWN
            
           YES: 2Pet. 1:19 We have also a
            more sure word of prophecy; 
              
   
whereunto
ye
do
            well that ye take heed, 
                    as unto a light
              that shineth in a dark place, 
                      until the day dawn,
              and the day star arise in your hearts: 
          NO:  2Pet. 1:20
            Knowing this first, 
                    that no prophecy
              of the scripture is of any private interpretation.
          
              
                   ."
                
              
           
          NO: 2Cor. 3:14 But their minds
              were blinded: 
                    for until this day
            remaineth 
                    the same vail untaken
            away
                     in the reading of
              the old testament; 
                    which vail is
            done away in Christ. 
            
            2Cor. 3:15 But even unto this day, 
                      when Moses is read,
            the vail is upon their heart. 
            
           YES: 2Cor. 3:16 Nevertheless when it
            shall turn to the Lord,
                    the vail shall be
            taken away. 
          
          Jesus used the example of being CONVERTED
                and BORN AGAIN like a child
                Luke recorded the example of BAPTISM to be SAVED and
                CONVERTED meaning the same thing.
                
                Until you are CONVERTED you will not be able to read
                WHOLE THOUGHT PATTERNS written in BLACK INK on WHITE
                paper. 
             
            -Epi-strephô
            , pf.
             cause to return to the source of Being,
            tinas eis ta enantia kai ta prôta
                  -Proteros
            and prôtos    II. of Time, former, earlier, children
            by the first or a former marriage, 
                   -Prosthhen
            in front, before, formerly, of place and of time;
                                       
            to gennęthen phusei pros to gennęsan
            -Genn-aô
              beget, bring forth, engender, call into existence
              -Phuo
              1 Act.:--bring forth, produce, put forth, 2. beget,
              engender, get understanding,
              -Pros
              in the direction of
            
            -Deut
                XXX WEB. It shall happen, when all these things
            are come on you, the blessing and the curse, which I have
            set before you, and you shall call them to mind among all
            the nations, where Yahweh your God has driven you, 
            
            [2]  and shall RETURN to Yahweh your God, and shall OBEY
his
              voice according to all that I command you this day,
            you and your children, with all your heart, and with all
            your soul; 
            
            [3]  that then Yahweh your God will turn your
            captivity, and have compassion on you, and will return and
            gather you from all the peoples, where Yahweh your God has
            scattered you.
        
        Further and universal proof that the trinity of "three persons"
        is not something you can unite with without being a polytheist
        and effectively denying that Jesus as the Christ of God revealed
        the Fullness of the Godhead.
        2Cor. 3:17 Now the
          Lord
              is that Spirit:
            and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is
            liberty. 
            2Cor. 3:18 But we all, 
                    with open face beholding
as
            in a glass the glory of the Lord, 
                    are changed
            into the same image from glory to glory, 
                    even as by the Spirit of the Lord.
              
        PAUL ALWAYS OUTLAWS THE RITUALS OF THE WORLD BEFORE HE COMMANDS SPEAKING WHICH IS NOT
            MUSICATING.
         Getting drunk with wine
            appears as "getting FLUTED down with wine." This musical
            ritual made you "intoxicated with passion and pride."
          
          Paul said worship IN THE SPIRIT because outside are the dogs or musicians howling for a partner. 
          Ephesians 4 define the same NON-MUSICAL
            "synagoguing" or teaching. 
        Before looking at 4:14 see that
              Jesus defined a parallel
        
          Luke 7:31 And the Lord said, Whereunto then shall I liken
            the MEN of this
            generation? and to what are they like?
          Luke 7:32 They are like unto CHILDREN sitting in the marketplace,
              and calling one to another, and saying, We have piped
              unto you, and ye have not danced; we have mourned
              to you, and ye have not wept.
          
            Threnos (g2355) thray'-nos; from
                the base of 2360; wailing: - lamentation.
                Threskeia  (g2356) thrace-ki'-ah;
                from a der. of 2357; ceremonial observance: - religion, worshipping.
          
          Jesus
consigned
                the children (play=pervert] as pipers, singers
                and dancers to the marketplace where they USED music to
                SEDUCE mostly male prostitutes. 
          Jesus
cast
                the musical minstrels out LIKE DUNG associated with the
                marketplace and the dung heap and NOT in the church.
                 He died to give us REST from "ceremonial
                observance" which creates the "sounds of rusing waters"
                where no SHEEP can feed and no STRAIGHT Shepherd would
                take them.
        
        Now, you know that
                  an elder as the only Pastor-Teacher is to "teach that
                  which is written" to mature "children" into "men" and
                  to PREVENT the NAVIGATING THE WINDS OF CHANGE which
                  always marks the musical perverts STALKING you.
               
        Eph
              4:14 That we henceforth be no
          more
              children, tossed to and
            fro, 
             
   
and
carried
about
            with every wind of doctrine, 
             
   
by
the
sleight
            of men, and cunning craftiness  whereby they
            lie in wait to deceive;
          
        -Fluctuo  fluctus, to
            move in the manner of waves, i. e. to wave,
          rise in waves, undulate, to move to and fro,
          be driven hither and thither
          I. Trop., to be restless, unquiet,
          uncertain, doubtful; to rage, swell; to
            waver, hesitate, vacillate, fluctuate,
             Oratio II.  In
          partic., formal language, artificial discourse,
          -Oratio E. A prayer, an
                address to the Deity (eccl. Lat.): “respice
                ad orationem servi tui,” Vulg.
                  3 Reg. 8, 28: “per
                orationes Dominum rogantes,” id.
                  2 Macc. 10, 16: “pernoctans
                in oratione Dei,” id. Luc.
                  6, 12.—Also absol., prayer,
              the habit or practice of prayer: “perseverantes in oratione,” Vulg. Act. 1, 14: “orationi instate,” id. Col. 4, 2; cf. Gell. 13, 22, 
              
            -cĭto
              .  To put into quick motion,
            to move or drive violently or rapidly,
            to hurl, shake, rouse, excite,
            provoke, incite, stimulate, promote,
          Carried About:
          Greek Panourgia see more below 
          
          Latin:
            -Circumfero to bear something or
          carry around  “lyram
            in
            conviviis,”
          Quint. 1, 10, 19
          
            
              -Lyra
                , ae, f., = 
lura,
                
I. a lute,
                    lyre, a stringed instrument resembling the
                  cithara, fabled to have been invented by 
Mercury
                  and presented to 
Apollo, 
Hyg.
                      Astr. 2, 7: “
curvae
                    lyrae
                    parens,”
                  
Hor. C. 1, 10, 6:
                  “
Threiciam
                    digitis
                    increpuisse
                    lyram,”
                  
Ov. H. 3, 118:
                  “
mox
                    cecinit
                    laudes
                    prosperiore
                    lyrā,”
                  
id. A. A. 3, 50;
                  
Val. Fl. 5, 100.—
 
                II.  Transf.
                
                
                B.  In gen., 
poetic
                    genius: “
Inferior
                    lyra,”
                  
Stat. Th. 10, 445.—
 
                C.  Lyra, 
the
constellation,
                    the Lyre: “
exoriente
                    Lyra,”
                  
Ov. F. 1, 315; cf. 
Hyg. Astr. 3, 6; 
Varr. R. R. 2, 5.
 
               
              
                -Con-vīvĭum , ii, n.
                vivo; lit., 
I. a living together; hence,
                
a meal in company, a social feast, entertainment,
                  banquet
                
                -Quint. 1, 10, 19
                From the importance thus given to music also originated
                the custom of taking a lyre round the company after
                dinner, and when on such an occasion Themistocles
                confessed that he could not play, his education was (to
                quote the words of Cicero) “regarded as imperfect.”
              
 
             
          
          B. 
             Of a narrative or discourse, to publish abroad,
          proclaim, divulge, disseminate among the
            people, report
          C. In the lang. of religion, to lustrate,
          purify any one by carrying around him consecrated objects
          (torches, offerings, etc.)
          D. 
             In rhetoric: “oratio
            deducta
            et
            circumlata,”
          expanded, drawn out into periods, Quint. 4, 1, 60
          Spald.
         
        -Ventus wind 3. Ventis
          verba dare, i. q. not to keep one's word or promise,
          Ov. H. 2, 25
          Ruhnk. 
          B. [Plur.,
          personified as deities, the winds: te, Apollo
          sancte, fer opem; teque, omnipotens Neptune, invoco, fame,
          applause, Turbo 
          p. Cic. Tusc. 4, 34, 73
          (Com. Rel. v. 119 Rib.); Lucr. 5, 1230
          (1228); cf. Ov. H. 17 (18
          
            CHURCH MUST NEVER PERMIT PEOPLE CLAIMING TO NAVIGATE THE
            WINDS
          
          Hermes appears to have been the chief of the Cabiri
              (Roscher, Myth. Lex. 2360); with his
                cult compare the Gallic (Caesar, B. G. vi. 17; Rhys,
                Hibbert Lectures, pp. 5-20 and ch. iv) and German (Tac.
                Germ. 9) worship of Mercurius. The latter, Odin, would
              seem to be like Hermes a wind god, and this may be true also
              of the Thracian deity. It seems improbable that the
              Thracians were content with so small a pantheon.
          Mercury or Hermes is KAIROS: the demon spirit son of Zeus
            
            CHURCH MUST EXCLUDE ALL OF THE CUNNING CRAFTSMEN.
          
          Ephesians 4:11 And he gave some, apostles; and some, prophets;
          and some, evangelists; 
                  and some, pastors and
          teachers; 
          Ephesians 4:12 For the perfecting of the saints, for
          the work of the ministry, 
                  for the edifying [educating]
          of the body of Christ: 
          Ephesians 4:13 Till we all come in the unity of the faith,
          
                  and of the knowledge
            of the Son of God, 
                  unto a perfect
          man, 
                  unto the measure of the
          stature of the fulness of Christ: 
          Ephesians 4:14 That we henceforth be no more children,
          
                  tossed to and fro, and
          carried about with every wind of doctrine,
                  by the sleight of men,
          and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in
          wait to deceive; 
          
          Wind of Doctrine
          Venio
            A.  In gen.: “vides,
            quo
            progrediente
            oratione
            venturum
            me
            puto,”
          Cic. Rep. 1, 40, 62.
          
          B. fin. and the passages there cited: “oratorum
            laus
            ita
            ducta
            ab
            humili
            venit
            ad
            summum,
            ut,
            etc.,”
          “prava
            [crooked] ex
            falsis
            opinionibus
            veniunt,”
          Quint. 5, 10, 34:
          
          
          Latin săpĭo
          
          ops
           voice, whether in speaking, shouting,
          lamenting or in singing, “Kirkēs
            . . aeidousēs
            opi
            kalē”
          Od.10.221,
          cf. 5.61; “aeidon  
          also of cicadae, “opa
            leirioessan
            hieisi”
          Il.3.152;
            Leir-ioeis of the cicadae,
          opa
            leirioessan
          their delicate voice, 3.152; of
          the Muses' voice, Hes.Th.41;
          “Hesperides”
          Q.S.2.418
          Hes.
                Th. 41 So said the ready-voiced daughters of
            great Zeus, and they plucked and gave [30] me a rod, a shoot
            of sturdy laurel, a marvellous thing, and breathed into me a
            divine voice to celebrate things that shall be and things
            that were aforetime; and they bade me sing of the race of
            the blessed gods that are eternally, but ever to sing of
              themselves both first and last. 
            [35] But why all this about oak or stone? Come you, let us
            begin with the Muses who gladden the great
              spirit of their father Zeus in Olympus
            with their songs, telling of things that are and that shall
            be and that were aforetime with consenting voice. Unwearying
            flows the sweet sound [40] from their lips, and the house of
            their father Zeus the loud-thunderer is glad at the
            lily-like voice of the goddesses as it spreads abroad, and
            the peaks of snowy Olympus
            resound, and the homes of the immortals. 
          sophos
          
          Panourgia (g3834) pan-oorg-ee'-ah; from 3835;
            adroitness, i.e. (in a bad sense) trickery or sophistry:
            - (cunning) craftiness, subtilty. 
            
          -Panourg-ęma  A.
            knavish trick, villainy, S.El.1387 (lyr.), LXX Si.1.6
            (v.l.); sophistry, Gal.5.251; cf.
          panourgeuma.
          
          Cunning craftiness has the same meaning as
          SOPHOS:
           1Cor. 3:18 Let no man deceive himself. If any man
            among you 
                    seemeth to be wise
              [sophos] in this world, 
                    let him become a fool,
            that he may be wise. 
            1Cor. 3:19 For the wisdom of this world is
            foolishness with God. 
                    For it is written, 
                    He taketh the wise 
            sophia
                    in their own craftiness.
            pa^nourg-ia
            
            1Cor. 3:20 And again, 
                    The Lord knoweth the thoughts
            of the wise, sophōn 
                      that they are vain.
            matai-os 
            
                
            -Sophia A. cleverness
            or skill in handicraft and art, as in carpentry, tektonos,
              hos
              rha
              te
              pasēs
              eu
              eidē
              s.
            Il.15.412; of
            the Telchines, Pi.O.7.53;
            hē
              entekhnos
              s.,
            of Hephaestus and Athena, Pl.Prt.32
            1d; of Daedalus
            and Palamedes, X.Mem.4.2.33,
            cf. 1.4.2; in music
            and singing, tekhnē
              kai
              s.
            h.Merc.483,
            cf. 511; in poetry,
            Sol.13.52, Pi.O.1.117
            -HH
                  4 483 What skill is this? What song
              for desperate cares? What way of song? For verily
              here are three things to hand all at once from which to
              choose, —mirth, and love, and sweet sleep. [450]
              And though I am a follower of the Olympian Muses
              who love dances and the bright path of song —the
              full-toned chant and ravishing thrill of flutes —yet
              I never cared for any of those feats of skill at young
              men's revels, as I do now for this:
              
              And they say that from the utterance of Zeus you have
              learned both the honors due to the gods, O
              Far-worker, and oracles from Zeus, even all his ordinances.
              Of all these I myself have already learned that you have
              great wealth. Now, you are free to learn whatever
              you please; [475] but since, as it seems, 
                      your heart is so
              strongly set on playing the lyre,  
              [therefore] 
                      chant,
              and play upon it, 
                       and give
              yourself to merriment, 
                      taking this as a gift
              from me, 
                      and do you, my
              friend, 
                         
                  bestow glory on me. 
              Sing well with this clear-voiced companion in your
              hands; for you are skilled in good, well-ordered
                utterance. [480] From now on bring it confidently
              to the rich feast and lovely dance and
              glorious revel, a joy by night and by day. Whoso
              with wit and wisdom enquires of it cunningly, him it
              teaches [485] through its sound all manner of things that
              delight the mind, being easily played with gentle
              familiarities, for it abhors toilsome drudgery;
              but whoso in ignorance enquires of it violently, to him it
              chatters mere vanity and foolishness.
            
            NOTE: singing TO the lyre meant that you struck a note and
            then matched your voice  to that note: that does not
            make music.
            HH
                  4 511 When Hermes had said this, he held out
              the lyre: and Phoebus Apollo took it, and
              readily put his shining whip in Hermes' hand, and ordained
              him keeper of herds. The son of Maia received it joyfully,
              [500] while the glorious son of Leto, the lord far-working
              Apollo, took the lyre upon his left arm and tried
              each string with the key. Awesomely it sounded at
              the touch of the god, while he sang sweetly to
                its note
              
              Afterwards they two, the all-glorious sons of Zeus turned
              the cows back towards the sacred meadow, [505] but
              themselves hastened back to snowy Olympus,
              delighting in the lyre. Then wise Zeus was glad and made
              them both friends. And Hermes loved the son of Leto
              continually, even as he does now, when he had given the
              lyre as token to the Far-shooter, [510] who played it
              skilfully, holding it upon his arm. But for himself Hermes
              found out another cunning art and made himself the pipes
              whose sound is heard afar.
            
            The Wise Sophos A. skilled
in
              any handicraft or art, clever, mostly of poets
            and musicians, Pi.O.1.9,
            P.1.42, 3.113; en
              kithara
              s.
            E.IT1238
            
            Craftiness Panourgia
            
            2Cor. 4:1 Therefore seeing we have this ministry, 
                    as we have received
            mercy, we faint not; 
            2Cor. 4:2 But have renounced the hidden things of
              dishonesty, 
                    not walking in
            craftiness, nor handling the word of God
            deceitfully; 
                    but by manifestation
            of the truth commending ourselves 
                    to every man’s
            conscience in the sight of God. 
            2Cor. 4:3 But if our gospel be hid, it is hid to
            them that are lost: 
           -Panourg-os (properisp.), on, A. ready to do
            anything, wicked, knavish,
          II.  in a less positively bad sense, cunning,
            clever, smart, “p. kai deinos” D. 1.3, cf.
          Pl.Tht.177a,
          Arist.EN1144a28;
          “p. te kai sophos” 
          Pl.R.409c;
          “kompsos kai p.” Plu.
              2.28a: Sup., Plb.5.75.2.
          Adv. “-gōs, p. kai hupokritikōs legein ta epē” 
          Plato, Sophist 239e Well, if
            you like, let us say no more of you and me; but until we
            find someone who can accomplish this, let us confess that
            the sophist has in most rascally fashion
            hidden himself in a place we cannot explore.
            Theaetetus   That seems to be decidedly
              the case.
            Stranger   And so, if we say he has an
              art, as it were, of making appearances,
            
            kataduō
              or kata-dunō
              :
              with a notion of secrecy, insinuate oneself, steal
                into, “kataduetai
                eis
                to
                entos
                tēs
                psukhēs
                ho
                te
                rhuthmos
                kai
                harmonia”
              
              
              psu_kh-ē
              , hē,
              
              in exchange for life, 2. metaph. of things
              dear as life, 
              III. the immaterial and immortal soul, 
              IV. the conscious self or personality
              as centre of emotions, desires, and affections, 3.
              of the emotional self, “hupeirgasmai
                men
                eu
                psukhēn
                erōti”
              
              4. of the moral and intellectual self, the
              mind conscious of innocence
              
              entos ,my senses, under my own control,
              e.
                  tōn
                  logismōn”
                Plu.Alex.32;
                e.
                  humōn
                in your hearts,. tōn
                metrōn
                tetmēmenon
                metallon
              within the bounds of the adjacent property, an encroachment,
              Hyp.Eux.35;
              “tōn
                metrōn
              3. of Time, within, “e.
                ou
                pollou
                khronou”
              Antipho 5.69;
              “e.
                eikosin
                hēmerōn”
              Th.4.39,
              
            
            Plat.
                Soph. 239d he will easily take advantage of our
            poverty of terms to make a counter attack, twisting our
              words to the opposite meaning; when we call him an image-maker,
            he will ask us what we mean by “image,” exactly. So,
            Theaetetus, we must see what reply is to be made to the
            young man's question.
            Theaetetus
              Obviously we shall reply that we mean the images in water
              and in mirrors, and those in paintings, too, and
              sculptures, and all the other things of the same sort. 
          
          Eur.
                Alc. 766 Then taking an ivy-wood drinking-bowl
            in his hands and drinking unmixed wine, offspring of the
            dark grape, until the fire in it enveloped and warmed his
            heart, he garlanded his head with sprays of myrtle [760] and
            howled songs out of tune. 
                    There were two sorts
              of melody one could hear. 
                      He was singing,
            paying no attention to the trouble in
            Admetus' house, 
                    while we servants were
            bewailing our mistress. 
            But we did not show our faces in tears to the stranger, for
            those were Admetus' orders. [765] And now I must feast
              the stranger in our house, some knavish thief or
            brigand, while my mistress has left the house without my
            following or holding out my hand in mourning for her. She
            was like a mother to me and to the other servants,
          Proverbs 21.[11] When the mocker is punished, the
            simple gains wisdom; When the wise is instructed, he
            receives knowledge.
            
            Sophos
            , ē, on, A. skilled in
              any handicraft or art, clever, harmatēlatas s. Pi.P.5.115,
            cf. N.7.17;
            “kubernētēs” A.Supp.770;
            “mantis” Id.Th.382;
            “oiōnothetas” S.OT484
            (lyr.); of a sculptor, E.Fr.372;
            even of hedgers and ditchers, Margites
                Fr.2; but in this sense mostly of
            poets and musicians, Pi.O.1.9,
            P.1.42,
            3.113; en kithara s. E.IT1238
            
            etc.; also en oiōnois, kithara, E. IT662,
            1238
            (lyr.); 
              
            Pind.
                  P. 5 [90] and he established, for the processions
                of Apollo, protector of men, a straight cut, level,
              paved road for the clatter of horses' hooves, where at the
              edge of the marketplace he rests by himself in
              death. He was blessed when he dwelled among men, [95] and
              thereafter a hero worshipped by the people. Apart from
              him, in front of the houses, are the other sacred kings
              who took their allotted places in Hades, and
              somehow below the earth they hear, in their minds, great
              excellence sprinkled with gentle dew [100] by the
              outpourings of victory-songs—prosperity for
              themselves, and a justly earned and shared grace for their
              son Arcesilas. It is fitting for him, in the song of the
              young men, to celebrate Phoebus with his golden
              sword, [105] now that he has received from Pytho
              the graceful victory-song as a compensation for his
              expense. Intelligent men praise him. I will say what has
              been said by others: [110] he nurtures a mind and tongue
              that are beyond his years; in courage he is a long-winged
                eagle among birds; his strength in competition is
              like a bulwark. Among the Muses, he has had wings
              since he was a child in his dear mother's lap
              
              Pind.
                  O. 1 From there glorious song enfolds the
              wisdom of poets,1
              so that they loudly sing [10] the son of Cronus, when they
              arrive at the rich and blessed hearth of Hieron, who
              wields the scepter of law in Sicily
              of many flocks, reaping every excellence at its peak, and
              is glorified [15] by the choicest music, which we
              men often play around his hospitable table. Come, take
                the Dorian lyre down from its peg, if the splendor
              of Pisa
              and of Pherenicus placed your mind under the influence of
              sweetest thoughts, 
              
              Pind.
                  P. 3. I will honor in my mind the fortune that
              attends me from day to day, tending it to the best of my
              ability. [110] But if a god were to give me luxurious
              wealth, I hope that I would find lofty fame in the future.
              We know of Nestor and Lycian Sarpedon, whom men speak of,
              from melodious words which skilled craftsmen join
              together. Through renowned songs excellence [115] gains a
              long life. But few find that easy to accomplish. 
              
                Kithara
                Kitharis
              II.  playing on the cithara, “ouk
                an
                toi
                khraismē
                k.”
              Il.3.54,
              cf. Od.8.248;
              “k.
                kai
                aoidē”
              Il.13.731.
              
              Eur.
                  Ion 881 O you, who cause a voice to sing from
              your seven-stringed lyre, a voice that lets
              lovely-sounding hymns peal forth in the rustic lifeless
              horn, [885] son of Leto, I will blame you before this
              light. You came to me, your hair glittering with gold,
              when I was plucking into the folds of my robe yellow
              flowers [890] to bloom with golden light; grasping my
              white hand in yours, you led me to the bed in the cave,
              hearing me call on my mother, god and consort, [895]
              shamelessly paying homage to Aphrodite. I, the unhappy
              one, bore you a son, whom in fear of my mother I placed in
              that bed of yours, [900] where you joined with me, the
              miserable, the unfortunate one, in unhappy union. Alas!
              and now my son and yours, oh cruel one, is gone, torn
              apart, a feast for birds; [905] but you are singing to the
              lyre, chanting hymns.
              Melpo
                  more
              
            
          
          Hupokritikos
            skilled, having a good delivery, the actors part, pretending
            
          
           
          
            
              [1384] Behold
                  how Ares stalks
                    onward, 1385]
                  breathing bloody
                    vengeance that is
                  hard to oppose. Just now have the hunters of wicked crimes [Panourgema] passed beneath that roof
                  there, the hounds which none may flee. And so not long shall 1390] the
                  vision of my soul hang
                    in suspense.
            
          
          WHY ARES STALKS: Theatrical
                performers creep in using a "womanish" approach
          
            "a gradual and regular advance. pronemesthai is
                lit. ‘to go forward in grazing.’ The midd. occurs only
                here; nor is the act. found in a strictly parallel
                sense, as meaning to encroach on a neighbour's
                  pastures, here: ‘the limit of a woman's
                belief (too lightly won) quickly oversteps the
                border’ (between fact and fiction).
             Campbell suggests that the image
                in “pronemetai”
                is from fire ‘eating its way’ forward,
                and compares Her. 5. 101“ap'
                  oikiēs
                  es
                  oikiēn
                  ion
                  to
                  pur
                  epenemeto
                  to
                  astu”.
          
          HOW CAN WE
                  RECOGNIZE THE STALKERS UPSETTING YOUR COMFORT ZONES?
          
          
            
kuôn Harpies, A.R.2.289; of Hecate, in Mithraic worship, Porph.Abst.4.16; of the Bakchai, Lussas k. E.Ba.977 (lyr.); ; Pan
                is the kuôn of Cybele
            
              
            
            Kunas:
                Kuôn II. as a word of reproach,
                freq. in Hom. of women, to denote shamelessness
                or audacity; applied by Helen to herself rhapsôidos of the Bakchai, Lussas k.
                E.Ba.977   Lussao
                  rave, be mad, erotic. also of offensive
                  persons, compared to yapping dogs
              
            
              Euripides, Bacchae 977 Chorus
                    The meaning of LOOK TO THE HILLS:
                  
              [977] To the hills! to the hills! fleet hounds of madness,
                  where the daughters of
                    Cadmus hold their revels, 
               goad them into wild fury
                  against the man
                    disguised in woman's dress, a frenzied
                    spy upon the Maenads.
              
              Rhapsoidos
              stitching songs together. Reciter of poems, 
              of Aoide
              Used with "hypokrites" 5. = eppsdę, spell, incantation Prob.
from
              rhaptō,
                aoidē;
              Hes.Fr. 265 speaks
              of himself and Homer as en
                nearois
                humnois
                rhapsantes
                aoidēn,
              and Pi.N.2.2
              calls Epic poets rhaptōn
                epeōn
                aoidoi:
            3. of the Cynics,
                areskei toutois kunôn metamphiennusthai
                bion. Catamites.
                  
            Epôidos  A. singing to or over, using songs or charms to
                  heal wounds, epôidoi muthoi  
                b.
              Subst., enchanter, e. kai goęs E.Hipp. 1038
              (but goęs e. Ba.234): c. gen., a charm for or against,
                c. c.
              dat., assisting, profitable,
             2. Pass., sung to music,
                  phônai Plu.2.622d ; fit for singing, poiętikęn
            
            2. epôidos, ho,
              verse or passage returning at intervals, in Alcaics and
              Sapphics,  chorus, burden,
          
          Cunning craftiness is "having
a
              good delivery" the actor's part. Techne craft,
            cunning, soothsayers, sorcerers, system of Rhetoric.
            
          Rev. 18:22
            And the voice of harpers, and musicians, and
            of pipers, and trumpeters, shall be heard no
            more at all in thee; and no craftsman [Techne, of
            whatsoever craft he be, shall be found any more in thee; and
            the sound of a millstone shall be heard no more at all in
            thee; 
           
            
            Sophistes A. master
of
            one's craft, adept, expert, of diviners, Hdt.2.49; of
          poets, “meletan
            sophistais
            prosbalon”
          Pi.I.5(4).28,
          cf. Cratin.2; of musicians, “sophistēs
            . . parapaiōn
            khelun”[harp] 
          
          Hdt.
                2.49 Now then, it seems to me that Melampus son
            of Amytheon was not ignorant of but was familiar with this
            sacrifice. For Melampus was the one who taught the Greeks
            the name of Dionysus and the way of sacrificing to him and
            the phallic procession; he did not exactly unveil the
            subject taking all its details into consideration, for the
            teachers who came after him made a fuller revelation; but it
            was from him that the Greeks learned to bear the phallus
            along in honor of Dionysus, and they got their present
            practice from his teaching. [2]
            I say, then, that Melampus acquired the prophetic art, being
            a discerning man, and that, besides many other things which
            he learned from Egypt,
            he also taught the Greeks things concerning Dionysus,
            altering few of them; for I will not say that what is done
            in Egypt
            in connection with the god and what is done among the Greeks
            originated independently: for they would then be of an
            Hellenic character and not recently introduced. [3] Nor again will I say that the
            Egyptians took either this or any other custom from the
            Greeks. But I believe that Melampus learned the worship of
            Dionysus chiefly from Cadmus of Tyre
            and those who came with Cadmus from Phoenicia
            to the land now called Boeotia.
            
            
            Pind.
                I. 5 If Aegina turns her steps to the clear road
            of god-given deeds, then do not grudge [25] to mix for her
            in song a boast that is fitting recompense for toils. In
            heroic times, too, fine warriors gained fame, and they are
            celebrated with lyres and flutes in full-voiced harmonies
            for time beyond reckoning. Heroes who are honored by the
            grace of Zeus provide a theme for skilled poets.... My swift
            tongue has many arrows, to shout the praises of these
            heroes. And now the city of Aias, Salamis, could testify
            that she was saved by her sailors in Ares' confrontation in
            the destructive storm sent by Zeus,
            
        PAUL ISSUED THE SAME
            WARNING IN ALL OF HIS LETTERS AS DOES PETER
        
        
          2 Tim 3:
              12 Yea, and all that will live godly in Christ
              Jesus shall suffer persecution.
                2 Tim 3: 13 But evil men and seducers
                shall wax worse and worse, 
                          deceiving [wandering stars], and being deceived.
              
          John 17:14 I have given them thy
                  word; and the world hath hated them, 
                        because they are
                not of the world, even as I am not of the world.
                John 17:15 I pray not that thou shouldest take
                them out of the world, 
                        but that thou
                shouldest keep them from the evil.
                John 17:16 They are not of the world, even as I am
                  not of the world.
              
          Colossians 1:13 Who hath delivered us
                from the power of darkness, 
                        and hath
                translated us into the kingdom of his dear Son: 
              
          skotos , o(, more rarely
            skotos , eos, to (v. sub fin.), 5. of
            blindness, “skotou nephos” S.OT 1313
            (lyr.
            b. 
               dizziness, vertigo, Hp.Epid. 5.23;
            “skotoi pro tōn ommatōn” Arist.HA584a3;
            cf. skotodinos, -diniaō. 
            8. 
               pl., skotē shadows in a
            picture, Paus.Gr.Fr.300,
            Suid. s.v. apeskotōmena, Eust.953.51.
            ” N. 7.13 “prophasis
            skoti-a , h(, (skotos)
            
            II.  in
              Architecture, scotia, cavetto, a sunken moulding,
              so called from the dark shadow it casts, Vitr.3.5.2, Hsch.
            
            III.  Skotia , epith. of Aphrodite
            in Egypt, Id.
            Pind.
                  N. 7 For he lives in a city that loves music,
              the city of the Aeacidae with their clashing spears; 
                      [10] and they very
              much want to foster a spirit familiar with contests. 
                      If someone is
              successful in his deeds, 
                      he casts a cause for
              sweet thoughts into the streams of the Muses.
              For those great acts of prowess dwell in deep darkness, if
              they lack songs, 
                      and we know of only
              one way to hold a mirror up to fine deeds: 
              [15] if, by the grace of Mnemosyne with her splendid
              headdress, 
                      one finds a
              recompense for toils in glorious song. 
                      Skillful men know
              the wind that will come on the day after tomorrow, 
                      and they do not
              suffer loss through the love of gain. 
              The rich man and the poor man alike travel together to the
              boundary of death. 
              [20] And I expect that the story of Odysseus came to
                exceed his experiences, through the sweet songs of
              Homer, 
                      since there is a
              certain solemnity in his lies and winged artfulness, 
                      and poetic skill
              deceives, seducing us with stories, 
                      and the heart of the
              mass of men is blind. 
                      For if [25] they had
              been able to see the truth, then mighty Aias, in anger
              over the arms, 
                      would never have
              planted in his chest the smooth sword
          
          SEDUCERS
              
          1114.  goes, go´-ace; goao (to wail);
          properly, a wizard (as muttering spells), i.e. (by
          implication) an imposter:  seducer.
          Goęs , ętos, ho,   A. sorcerer,
              wizard, Phoronis 2, Hdt.2.33,4.105,
            Pl.R.
              380d, Phld.Ir.p.29 W.; g. epôidos Ludias apo chthonos E.Ba.234
            , cf. Hipp.1038;
            prob. f.l. for boęisi Hdt.7.191.
          
          epōd-os Singing to or
            over, using charms to heal wounds, b.  Subst., enchanter
            
              2.  Pass., sung to music, “phōnai” 
          2.juggler, cheat, “deinos g. kai pharmakeus kai sophistēs” Pl.Smp.203d;
          
          sophis-tēs A. master
              of one's craft, adept, expert, of diviners, of poets,
            “meletan sophistais prosbalon”  parapaiōn khelun” (play the lyre)
            with modal words added, “hoi s. tōn hierōn melōn” (Melody in a holy
            place)
            
            Rev. 18:21 And a mighty angel took up a stone like a great
            millstone, and cast it into the sea, saying, Thus with
            violence shall that great city Babylon be thrown down, and
            shall be found no more at all. 
            Rev. 18:22 And the voice of harpers, and musicians,
            and of pipers, and trumpeters, shall be heard no
            more at all in thee; and no craftsman, of whatsoever craft
            he be, shall be found any more in thee; and the sound of a
            millstone shall be heard no more at all in thee; 
            Rev. 18:23 And the light of a candle shall shine no more at
            all in thee; and the voice of the bridegroom and of the
            bride shall be heard no more at all in thee: for thy
            merchants were the great men of the earth; for by thy sorceries
            (Pharmakeia) were all
            nations deceived. 
            Rev. 18:24 And in her was found the blood of prophets, and
            of saints, and of all that were slain upon the earth. 
          
        
        The CORE gospel according to
          the SEVEN ONES specificially OUTLAWS "a good delivery" as the
          mark of a hypocrite: the Scriptures do not NEED this private
          interpretation.  This outlaws CUNNING CRAFTINESS which
          intends to OBLITERTE the gospel of the kingdom--the church.
        
        Thise people are defined as
          SORCERERS who also from the foundation of the world were
          predestinated to be unleashed in the end times.
          
          ONLY BY EXCLUDING ALL OF THE PERFORMING ARTS CAN YOU HOLD
            EKKKLESIA OR SYNAGOGUE
         
          Christ
defined
the
synagogue
              as the Church of Christ in the wilderness: He was
          the ROCK that followed them
          
          This was INCLUSIVE of Rest, Reading and Rehearsing the
          Word of God.
          This was EXCLUSIVE of vocal or instrumental rejoicing.
          Pretty simple if you understand that the common people
          assembled only for instructions. This quarantined them from
          the later sacrificial system which had been abandoned to the
          worship of the starry host.
          
          That was always the directly commanded practice which did not
          change.
          
          WHAT IS THE PURPOSE OF THE CHURCH?
        
        Eph. 3:8
              Unto me, who am less than the least of all saints, is this
              grace given,
                      that I should preach
              among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of
                Christ; 
          Matthew 28:19 Go ye
              therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the
              name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:
              Matthew 28:20 Teaching them to observe all things
                whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am with
              you alway, even unto the end of the world. Amen. 
           No man can know the Mind of God but
              the Lord Jesus Christ and His prophets and apostles.
            
              Eph. 3:9 And to make all men see what is the fellowship of
              the mystery, 
                      which from the
              beginning of the world hath been hid in
              God, 
                      who created all
              things by Jesus Christ: 
          Eph. 3:10 To the intent that now
            unto the principalities and powers in heavenly places
                    might be known by the
            church the manifold wisdom of God, 
          Eph. 3:11 According to the
            eternal purpose which he purposed in Christ Jesus our
              Lord: 
          Eph. 3:12 In whom we have
            boldness and access with confidence by the faith of him. 
        
        NOW YOU KNOW WHY ALL OF THE HUMAN
            PERFORMERS MUST BE SILENCED. 
            
            NOW YOU CAN HOLD THE ASSEMBLY
           
          Eph. 4:15 But
            speaking the truth in love, 
                    may grow up into him
            in all things, which is the head, even Christ: 
         
        HOW DO WE GET ACCESS TO THE TRUTH
          
          The Church is a school (only) of the Word of Christ (only).
           Paul
        
        Eph.
5:17
            Wherefore be ye not unwise, 
                    but understanding
            what the will of the Lord is. 
            
          Matthew 7.21 Not everyone who says to me, 'Lord,
            Lord,' will enter into the Kingdom of Heaven; 
                    but he who does the will
            of my Father who is in heaven. 
           Eph. 5:18
            And be not drunk with wine, wherein is excess; 
            
            Paul specifies Wine connected with the Symposia or the
            marketplace which in Athens was just down the hill from the
            Ekklesia which allowed reading and discussing matters handed
            to it by a higher authority.  He would certainly
            exclude anything which detracted from using one mind and one
            mouth to "speak that which is written for our learning" (Rom
            15).
          
          Methuskō , causal of methuō, make drunk,
              intoxicate, “Dionusos oide to methusai monon”
            Oinos , ho, Wine as well as III.
               name of Dionysus
          Plat.
                Laws 649d Athenian
            And are not these the conditions in which we are of the
            character described,—anger, lust, insolence, ignorance,
            covetousness, and extravagance; and these
            also,—wealth, beauty, strength, and everything which intoxicates
            a man with pleasure and turns his head? [Wine works
            faster and better]
            
            Methuō also adds as metaphor 
            
            
          
           
          Matthew 28:19 Go ye
              therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the
              name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:
              Matthew 28:20 Teaching them to observe all things
                whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am with
              you alway, even unto the end of the world. Amen. 
           
          
            kat-auleô , A. charm by flute-playing, tinos
                Pl.Lg.790e, cf. R.411a; tina Alciphr.2.1: metaph., se .
                . -ęsô phobôi I will flute
                  to you on a ghastly flute,
              E.HF871 (troch.):--Pass., of persons, methuôn kai
                katauloumenos drinking
                  wine to the strains of the flute, Pl.R.561c;
                k. pros chelônidos psophon to be played to on the flute with lyre accompaniment, Posidon.10 J., cf.
                Call.Fr.10.3 P., Phld.Mus.p.49 K. 
            1
                Pet. 4:1 FORASMUCH then as Christ hath suffered for us
                in the flesh, 
                 
                    arm yourselves likewise with the same
                mind:
                 
                    for he that hath suffered in the
                flesh hath ceased from sin;
              1 Pet. 4:2 That he no
                longer should live the rest of his time in the flesh 
                 
                    to the lusts of men, but to the will
                of God.
              1 Pet. 4:3 For the time
                past of our life may suffice us to have wrought the will
                of the Gentiles, when we walked in lasciviousness,
                lusts, excess of wine, revellings, banquetings,
                and abominable idolatries:
                
              Hucksterism is called 
CORRUPTING the Word:
              selling learning at retail, adultery.
              
              
Cyrus was
                  told how to passify people so they can do no
              harm to the CAPTORS:
              
              
Grant, then,
                forgiveness to the Lydians, 
                and to make
sure
                  of their never rebelling against thee, or alarming thee more,
                            send
                and forbid
                  them to keep any weapons of war, 
                           
                command them to wear tunics under their cloaks, and to
                put buskins upon their legs, 
                 
                            and make them bring up their sons to cithern-playing (Kitharizein), 
                           
              singing (psallein), 
                     
                      and shop-keeping (Hucksterism). 
               So wilt
                  thou soon see them become women instead of men,
                  and there will be no more fear of their revolting from
                  thee."
             
          
        
           
                but be filled with the Spirit; [The Word of Christ John 6:63; Col 3:16]
        Eph.
5:19
            Speaking to yourselves in psalms and hymns and
            spiritual songs, 
                    singing and making
            melody in your heart to the Lord; 
            Eph. 5:20 Giving thanks always for all things 
                    unto God and
            the Father 
                    in the name of our Lord
            Jesus Christ;
            
            PAUL EXPLAINS BY SHOWING WHY CHRIST
                GAVE US A HOLY SPIRIT OR A GOOD CONSCIENCE By Saving us
                through baptism. 1. Peter 3:21
            
            Eph. 5:26WEB That he might sanctify [same as A holy spirit Acts 2:38]
                    and cleanse it 
             
   
            with the washing of water 
               
              [INTO] the word, 
            
          Matthew 28:19 Go ye
              therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the
              name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:
              Matthew 28:20 Teaching them to observe all things
                whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am with
              you alway, even unto the end of the world. Amen. 
              
                WEB  In endu denotes
            either rest or motion within or into a place or thing;
           
          Washing of water into:
                Enduô assume the
              person on, enter, enter the contest, 
            
            
              Xen. Cyrop. 8.1.12 If,
                  therefore, those by whom the most numerous and most
                  important affairs of state were to be transacted were
                  not what they ought to be, he thought that his
                  government would be a failure. But if they were all
                  that they ought to be, he believed that everything
                  would succeed. In this conviction, therefore, he took
                  upon himself this charge; and he determined that the
                  same practice of virtue should be his as well. 
                   
                      For he thought that it was not
                  possible for him to incite others 
               
                 
                    to good and noble deeds, if he
                  were not himself such as he ought to be.
            
              Enduo (g1746)
                  en-doo'-o; from 1722 and 1416 (in the sense of sinking
into
a
                      garment); to invest
                      with clothing (lit. or
                  fig.): - array, clothe (with), endue, have (put) on. 
              
                for
                    all of you who were baptized into
                    Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ.
                    Ga.3:27NIV
              
            
          
          Washing of water into: 
             Vulgate In the Word. Il.;
              en
                paidotribou
              the school of the training master.
            
              INCLUDED ABSOLUTELY WITH NO INPUT FROM HUMAN ADDITIONS.
              
              1Cor. 4:15 For though ye have ten thousand instructors
              in Christ, 
               
                  yet have ye not many fathers: 
               
                  for in Christ Jesus I have begotten
              you through the gospel. 
            1Cor. 4:16 Wherefore I
              beseech you, be ye followers of me. 
             1Cor. 4:17 For
              this cause have I sent unto you Timotheus, who is my beloved
                son, 
               
                  and faithful in the Lord, who shall
              bring you into remembrance 
               
                  of my ways which be in Christ,
            
               
                  as I teach every where in every church.
              
              EXCLUDED ABSOLUTELY BY LAW AND COMMON DECENCY
              
            
            Aristoph. Cl. 973 Then again,
              their master would teach them, not sitting cross-legged,
              to learn by rote a song, either “pallada persepolin
              deinan” or “teleporon ti boama” 
raising to a higher
                pitch the harmony which our fathers transmitted to
              us. But if any of them were to play the 
buffoon,
              or to turn any 
quavers, like these difficult turns
              the present artists make after the manner of 
Phrynis,
              he used to be 
thrashed, being beaten with many
              blows, as banishing the Muses. And it behooved the boys,
              while sitting in the school of the Gymnastic-master, to
              cover the thigh, so that they might exhibit nothing
              indecent to those outside; then again, after rising from
              the ground, to sweep the sand together, and to take care
              not to leave an impression of the person for their lovers.
              And no boy used in those days to anoint himself below the
              navel; so that their bodies wore the appearance of
              blooming health. Nor used he to go to his lover, having
              made up his voice in an 
effeminate tone, prostituting
                himself with his eyes.
              
              X.Mem.1.6.13
                       Xen. Mem. 1.6.13
                To this Socrates
                  replied: “Antiphon, it is common opinion among us in
                  regard to beauty and wisdom that there is an
                  honourable and a shameful way of bestowing them. 
                          For to offer
                    one's beauty for money to all comers is called
                  prostitution; 
                          but we think it
                  virtuous to become friendly with 
                                a
                  lover who is known to be a man of honour. 
                 
                       So is
                  it with wisdom. Those who offer it to all comers
                    for money 
                               
                  are known as sophists, prostitutors of wisdom,
                
                        but we think that he
                  who makes a friend of one whom he knows to be gifted 
                       by
                  nature, and teaches him all the good he can, 
                       fulfils
                    the duty of a citizen and a gentleman.
              Plut. Agis 10 of Phrynis:
              Training in luxury, effeminancey and Greed... [
4] “Thou praisest Ecprepes,” said
              Agis, “who, as ephor, cut out with an adze 
two of the
                nine lute-strings of 
Phrynis
              the musician, and likewise the magistrates in the time of
              Timotheus, who did the same thing in their turn, but thou
              blamest me for trying to remove luxury, extravagance, and
              ostentation from Sparta, as if those magistrates also were
              not on the watch to prevent the pompous and superfluous in
              music from making such advances as our lives and manners
              have come to, whose excess and discord has made the city
              dissonant and out of tune with itself.”
 
          
        
         WHAT IS THE
              SOLE PURPOSE?
            
            Eph. 5:27 That he might present it to himself a glorious
              church, 
                    not having spot, or
            wrinkle, or any such thing; 
                    but that it should be
            holy and without blemish
        WHAT IS TRUTH?
        John 17:8 For I have given unto them the words which
thou
gavest
          me; 
                  and they have received
          them, and have known surely that I came out from thee, 
                  and they have believed
          that thou didst send me. 
          John 17:9 I pray for them: I pray not for the world, 
                  but for them which thou
          hast given me; for they are thine. 
          John 17:10 And all mine are thine, and thine are mine; and I
          am glorified in them. 
        John 17:14 I have given them thy word; and the WORLD
          hath hated them, 
                  because they are not of
          the world, even as I am not of the world. 
          John 17:15 I pray not that thou shouldest take them out of the
          world, 
                  but that thou shouldest
          keep them from the evil. 
          John 17:16 They are not of the world, even as I am not of the
          world. 
          John 17:17 Sanctify them through thy truth: thy word is
            truth. 
        WHAT IS THE WORLD?  See details below.
        
        The Kosmos is a word invented by Phythagoras: he
        travelled throughout the area and brought the Babylonian system
        of religion to the Greek-Roman World. These would be one of the
        "food sects" Paul prevented from discussing their diversities in
        church.
        
        Eph. 4:16 From whom the whole
              body fitly joined together and compacted 
                    by that which every
            joint supplieth, 
                    according to the
            effectual working in the measure of every part, 
                    maketh increase of the
            body unto the edifying of itself in love. 
        
        In Romans 15 edifying is defined as the use of "Scripture" or
        "that which is written for our learning."
        
        In Romans 14 Paul outlawed doubtful disputations which means any
        personal opinion or diversity: that then permits what Paul
        called the synagogue to function as a School of Christ in the
        Word which is its sole purpose.
        Rom. 15:1 We then that are
            strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak, 
                    and not to please
            ourselves. 
            Rom. 15:2 Let every one of us please his neighbour for his
            good to edification. 
            Rom. 15:3 For even Christ pleased not himself; but, as it is
            written, 
                    The reproaches of them
            that reproached thee fell on me. 
            Rom. 15:4 For whatsoever things were
written
                aforetime were written for our learning, 
                    that we through
            patience and comfort of the
                scriptures might have hope. 
            Rom. 15:5 Now the God of patience and consolation grant you
            
                    to be likeminded
            one toward another according to Christ Jesus: 
            Rom. 15:6 That ye may with one
                  mind and one
                  mouth glorify God, 
                    even the Father of our
            Lord Jesus Christ. 
            Rom. 15:7 Wherefore receive ye one another, as Christ
            also received us to the glory of God. 
            Rom. 15:8 Now I say that Jesus Christ was a minister
            of the circumcision for the truth of God, 
                       to confirm the promises
            made unto the fathers:
        Eph. 4:17 This I say therefore, and
            testify in the Lord, 
                    that ye henceforth
            walk not as other Gentiles walk, 
                    in the vanity
              of their mind, 
        Vanitas I.  Lit.,
          emptiness, nothingness, nullity, want
of
            reality, popular opinion, Magus, Magice.
          măgus
            , a, um, adj. 1. magus, 
Pythagoricus Ludibrium
            
            
Note Above: Pythagoras
and
the
World
                or Kosmos people God does not speak to and Jesus does
                not pray for.
            
                I. magic, magical (
poet.): “
artes,”
              
Ov. Am. 1, 8, 5:
              “
manus,
                id.
                Med.
                fac.
                36: carmen,”
              
Sen. Herc. Oet. 467.
              
Ludibrium wantonness, A.
                 A laughing-stock, butt, jest, sport:, 
             
           
          Ov. Am. 1.8
            She magick arts and Thessale
              charmes doth know,
              And makes large streams back to their fountaines flow,
              She knows with gras, with thrids on wrong wheeles spun...
            Charms Carmen.
              I. a tune,
                song; poem, verse; an oracular response,
                a prophecy; a form of incantation (cf.: cano,
                cantus, and canto). 
              I.  In gen., a tune, song, air,
              lay, strain, note, sound,
              both vocal and instrumental 
            Behold what gives the Poet but new
              verses?
              And thereof many thousand he rehearses.
              The Poets God arayed in robes of gold,
              Of his gilt Harpe the well tun'd strings doth hold.
              LetHomer yeeld to such as presents bring,
              (Trust me) to give, it is a witty thing.
              Nor, so thou maist obtaine a wealthy prize,
              The vaine name of inferiour slaves despize.
          Magicus I. of or
          belonging to magic, magic, magical,   magici, that
            were invoked by incantations (as Pluto, Hecate see above, Proserpine) “cantus,”
          Juv. 6, 610: “magicae
            resonant
            ubi
            Memnone
            chordae,”
        
        Eph. 4:18 Having the understanding
          darkened, 
                  being alienated
          from the life of God through the ignorance that is in
          them, 
                  because of the
            blindness of their heart: 
          
            Paul told the Jews in Corinth that they had been blinded
            because of refusing to listen to God and going on to engage
            in musical idolatry at Mount Sinai, that they would not be
            able to read BLACK text on BROWN paper until they turned or
            converted to Christ. This has the same purpose of baptism
            which gives A holy spirit or A good conscience or a
            co-perception.
          
        Luke 1:76 And thou, child, shalt be called the prophet
          of the Highest: 
                  for thou shalt go before
          the face of the Lord to prepare his ways; 
          Luke 1:77 To give knowledge of salvation unto his people
            by the remission of their sins, 
          Luke 1:78 Through the tender mercy of our God; 
                  whereby the dayspring
          from on high hath visited us, 
          Luke 1:79 To give light to them that sit in darkness and in
          the shadow of death,
                  to guide our feet into
          the way of peace. 
          
          Only obedience in baptism is said to give remission of sins
          AND the knowledge of salvation.
        Eph. 4:19 Who being past feeling have
            given themselves over unto lasciviousness, 
                    to work all
            uncleanness with greediness. 
        
        
          Despero to
be
hopeless;
to
have
              no hope of, to despair of, to give up
          Operatio A.   A religious performance, service,
            or solemnity, a bringing of offerings:
            operationes denicales, offerings,
          Avaritia
              greedy desire for passions, eager sesire for renown or
              glory.
          Uncleanness
                  like a prosltitute "tricked out."
          Akatharsia (g167) ak-ath-ar-see'-ah; from 169;
              impurity (the quality), phys. or mor.: -
              uncleanness. 
          But fornication, and all uncleanness,
              or covetousness, let it not be once named among you, as
              becometh saints; Ep.5:3 
          Akathartos (g169) ak-ath'-ar-tos; from 1 (as a neg.
              particle) and a presumed der. of 2508 (mean. cleansed);
              impure (cer., mor. lewd] or spec. doemonic]): - foul, unclean. 
          
            Daimôn Perh. from daiô B, to
                divide or distribute destinies.]
            I. a god, goddess, like theos, thea, 
                also deity or divine power (theos denotes a god in
                person), Lat. numen; pros daimona against the divine power; sun daimoni
                    [Apollo]  with it, by its favour, Il.:--so, kata
                daimona, 
            2. one's daemon or genius, one's lot or
                fortune, stugeros daimôn Od.; daimonos aisa kakę id=Od.:
                absol. good or ill fortune, Trag.; esp. of the evil
                genius of a family, Aesch. 
            II. daimones, in Hes., are the souls of men of the golden age,
                forming the link between gods and men:--later, of any departed souls, Lat. manes, lemures, Luc.
            III. in NTest. an evil
                spirit, a demon, devil.
          
          For this ye
              know, that no whoremonger, nor unclean person, nor covetous man, who is an
                idolater, hath any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ
                and of God. Ep.5:5 
        
        
          1 Tim 1:10 For whoremongers,
            ............ for them that defile
                themselves with mankind,
            ............ for menstealers, for liars, for perjured
                persons,
            ............ and if there be any other thing that is contrary to sound doctrine;
            
          1 Tim 1:11 According to the glorious
                gospel of the blessed God,
            ............ which was committed to my trust.
          
            2 Cor 2:17 For we are not as many,
                which corrupt the word of God: but as of sincerity, but as of God, in the sight of God
                speak we in Christ.
            Kapeleuo (g2585) kap-ale-yoo'-o; from kapelos ,
                (a huckster); to retail, i.e. (by impl.) to adulterate (fig.): - corrupt
            kapēl-ikos
              , ē,
              on,
              A. of or for a “kapēlos,
                zugon 
              campfollowers, sutlers of an army, in
                a mercenary spirit, Sophistes, master of
                one's craft, adept, expert, of diviners, Hdt.2.49; of
              poets, “meletan
                sophistais
                prosbalon”
              Pi.I.5(4).28,
              cf. Cratin.2; of
              musicians, “sophistēs
                . . parapaiōn
                khelun”
              A.Fr.314, cf. Eup.447, Pl.Com.
                  140; sophistē
                Thrēki
              (sc. Thamyris) E.Rh.924,
              cf. Ath.14.632c: with
              modal words added, “hoi
                s.
                tōn
                hierōn
                melōn”
              
            kapęl-euô , A. to be a retail-dealer, drive a petty trade... kapęleu' drive a trade, chaffer with your vegetable food Hdt.1.155
            II. c. acc., sell by retail, ton
                herpin Hippon.51 .
            2. metaph., k. ta pręgmata, of Darius,  mathęmata sell learning by retail, hawk it about, Pl. Prt.313d; k. ton logon tou theou 2
                  Ep.Cor.2.17 ; .
                fight half-heartedly,
                A.Th. 545; k. tęi Chariti tęn amoibęn Epicur. politeian traffic in grants of
                  citizenship,
                D.C.60.17;  of prostitutes, Ph.2.394,576; eiręnęn pros Rhômaious
                Chrusiou k. Hdn.6.7.9; tuchę kapęleuousa . . ton bion playing
                  tricks with life, [p.
                876] corrupting 
          
          
            Iamblichus.
            There are some,
                however, who suppose there is likewise, the subject-race
                of a tricky nature, artful, and assuming all shapes, turning many ways, that personates gods and dćmons and souls of the dead like
              actors on the
                  stage;
                and that through these everything that seems to be good
                or bad is possible. They are led to form this judgment
                because these subject-spirits are not able to contribute
                  anything really beneficial as relates to the soul, nor even to perceive such
                things; but on the other hand, they ill treat, deride, and often impede those who are returning to
                virtue.
            They are likewise
                  full of conceit, and take delight in vapors and
                  sacrifices.
            
              5. Because the begging priest with open mouth attempts
                  in many ways to raise our expectations. Note 13
              13. The agurtes or begging priest
                  generally belonged to the worship of Rhea [ZOE] or
                      Cybele, the Mother. He is frequently
                  depicted in a most unfavorable light. Apuleius speaks
                  of a company of these emasculate priests in the eighth book of
                  the Metamorphoses. They are also described
                  in the Republic of Plato: 
              "Agurtć and Mantics frequent the houses of the rich and persuade
                  them that they possess a power granted by the gods
                      to expiate, 
              by sacrifices and chants any unjust act that has
                  been committed and that they induce the gods by blandishments
                      and magic rites to help them. 
              They collected money
                      in this way, and they also followed the selling of
                  nostrums and telling of fortunes." 
              G726 harpaz˙ har-pad'-zo From a
                  derivative of G138 ; to seize (in various
                  applications):;catch (away, up), pluck, pull, take (by
                  force).
            
          
        
        Eph. 4:20 But ye have not so learned
            Christ; 
            Eph. 4:21 If so be that ye have heard him, 
                    and have been taught
              BY him, 
                    as the truth is in
              Jesus: 
          
        Matthew 28:19 Go ye therefore,
            and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the
            Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:
            Matthew 28:20 Teaching them to observe all things
              whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am with
            you alway, even unto the end of the world. Amen. 
         Eph. 4:22 That ye put off
            concerning the former conversation the old man, 
                    which is  corrupt
            according to the deceitful lusts; 
            
        Phtheirō 3. 
          corrupt, bribe, tina D.S.4.73; lure,
            entice, trap, “kēmoisi plektois porphuras phtheirei genos” S.Fr.504
          (s. v. l.); “phtheirei gar hē pronoia tēn aboulian” entices to
            its ruin, entraps  
          “akouō se lurōdou gunaikos
          b. seduce a woman, “hupo tēs thugatros adikoumenon kai Dionusiou tou phtheirantos autēn kinaidou” (Dog, Cynic, Catamite)
          “pharmakōn
           II b. with a Prep., phtheiresthai pros tous plousious, of hangers-on and flatterers,
          D.21.139, cf. Plu.Phoc.21,
          Eum. 14, Ant.24; “eis hēdonas apo . . ponōn”
          “phthora” 8), “poson khronon pontou 'pi nōtois halion ephtheirou planon;” E.Hel.774;
          
          planos 1. 
            Act., leading astray, deceiving, p. kateseion edōdan the bait, Theoc.21.43,
            cf. AP7.702 (Apollonid.); p. dōra, agra, Mosch.1.29,
            Fr.1.10;
            “pneumata” 1 Ep.Ti.4.1.
            III.  of persons, planos, ho, vagabond,impostor,
            Nicostr.Com.24, Dionys.Com. 4, D.S.34/5.2.14, Ev.Matt.27.63.
          
          
            1
                  Timothy 4.1 But the Spirit says expressly that
              in later times some will fall away from the faith, paying
              attention to seducing spirits and doctrines of demons,
          
          CORRUPT
              is Listening to a female Lyre Player
          “akouō se lurōdou gunaikos
          
          Lur-aoidos (or rather luraoidos Hdn.Gr.1.229), o(, h(,
            A. one who
                  sings to the lyre, AP7.612
              (
Agath.), 
APl.4.279:—contr. 
lurōdos , 
AP6.118 (Antip.), 
Plu.Sull.33:
              Adj. -“
ōdos harmonia” 
Callistr.Stat.7.
              
                 Plut.
                      Sull. 33 [2]
                  He conducted the sales of confiscated estates in such
                  arrogant and imperious fashion, from the tribunal
                  where he sat, that his gifts excited more odium than
                  his robberies. 
                          He bestowed on
                  handsome women, musicians, 
                            comic actors,
                  and the lowest of freedmen, 
                          the
                  territories of nations and the revenues of cities, 
                          and women were
                  married against their will to some 
                          of his
                  favourites
              
              Aōdos , o( (and in Paus.10.5.12,
                h(), contr. for aoidos,
                A. singer,
                  “
khrēsmōn” (
A.
                  oracular response, oracle) E.Heracl.488,
                  cf. 
Phld.Mus.p.20
                  K., etc.; 
meta Lesbion ōdon, prov. of a 
second-rate
                    musician, Cratin.243,
                  cf. 
Arist.Fr.545;
                  “
hoi tou Dionusou ō.” 
Pl.Lg.812b;
                  
khorous tinas . . ōdous ib.
800e;
                  of 
cicadae, “
hoi huper kephalēs ō.” 
Id.Phdr.262d,
                  cf. 
AP6.54 (
Paul.Sil.); “
ton alektruona ton ōdon apopnixasa mou” 
Pl.Com.14D.; 
hupo ton ōdon ornitha about cockcrow,
                  
Poll.1.71. 
 
                II. the cup passed round when a scolion was sung,
                    
                    THIS
                      IDENTIFIES THE CROOKED GENERATION OF ACTS
                   
             
          
        
         Eph. 4:23 And be renewed in
            the spirit of YOUR
            mind; 
            Eph. 4:24 And that ye put on the new man, 
                    which after God is
            created in righteousness and true holiness.
           
        
        AGAIN, THE MEANING OF THE ASSEMBLY OR ANYWHERE
        
        Eph. 4:25 Wherefore putting away LYING, 
                    speak every
            man truth with his  neighbour: 
                    for we are members one
            of another. 
          
        SPEAK IS THE OPPOSITE OF POETRY OR
          MUSIC: MUSIC WAS ALWAYS KNOWN AS LYING
        Mendācĭum B. 
             Esp., a fable, fiction (Opposite historic truth): “poëtarum,”
          “prophetāsti
            mendacium,”
          Vulg. Jer. 20, 6;
          cf. id. ib. 27, 10: “credere
            mendacio,”
          to believe a lie, id. 2 Thess. 2, 11.
          Jer. 20:6 And thou, Pashur, and all that dwell in
            thine house shall go into captivity: and thou shalt come
              to Babylon, and there thou shalt die, and shalt be
            buried there, thou, and all thy friends, to whom thou
              hast prophesied lies. 
          Pŏēta
          , ae (POETES, Inscr. Orell. 1163),
m.,
          = poiētēs.
          I.  In gen., 
a
              maker, 
producer (ante-class.): “
nec
              fallaciam
              Astutiorem
              ullus
              fecit
              poëta,”
            
a contriver, 
trickster, 
Plaut. Cas. 5, 1, 7:
            “
tu
              poëta
              es
              prorsus
              ad
              eam
              rem
              unicus,”
            
you are just fit for it, 
id. As. 4, 1, 3.—
            
poëta, Enn. ap. 
Cic. Ac. 2, 16,
                51 (Ann. v. 6 Vahl.); 
Cic. de Or. 2, 46, 194:
            “
oratores
              et
              poëtae,”
            
id. ib. 3, 10, 39: “
versificator
              quam
              poëta
              melior,”
            
Quint. 10, 1, 89
            Scaenĭcus
            (
scen-
            ), a, um, adj., = 
skēnikos 
          
          Pseudos
          , eos,
          to/, Ep. dat. pl. pseudessi,
          in NT of what is opposed to religious truth, false
            doctrine, Ep.Rom.1.25; poiōn
            bdelugma
            kai
            ps.,
          i.e. doing what is repugnant to the true faith, Apoc.21.27;
          Rom. 1:23 And changed the glory of the
            uncorruptible God into an image 
                    made like to
            corruptible man, and to birds, and fourfooted beasts, 
                    and creeping things. 
            Rom. 1:24 Wherefore God also gave them up to uncleanness
            through the lusts of their own hearts, to dishonour their
            own bodies between themselves:
            Rom. 1:25 Who changed 
                    the truth of God into
            a lie [poiōn,
            poetry or music]
                    and worshipped and
            served the creature [effeminate
                male performers]
                    more than the Creator,
            who is blessed for ever. Amen. 
            Rom. 1:26 For this cause 
                    God gave them up unto
            vile affections: 
                    for even their women
            did change the natural use into that which is against
            nature:
          
          SEE PAUL'S REFERENCE TO MOUNT
              SINAI AS HE DOES IN OTHER PLACES.
          
            
              "When the Hebrews
                  were in Egypt - living as Egyptians, worshipping the Golden Calf of Horus, etc. - they also
                  worshipped Horus's "twin," Set, whence comes Satan. Where Horus is the Golden Sun in the Age of Taurus the Bull, Set represents the Serpent of the Night, i.e., the
                  night-time sky. The battle between Horus/Jesus and
                  Set/Satan represents the struggle between day and
                  night for supremacy.
              "The triumphal hymn
                  of Moses had unquestionably a religious character
                  about it; but the employment of music in religious
                    services, though idolatrous, is more distinctly marked in the festivities which
                  attended the erection of the golden calf." (Smith's
                  Bible Dictionary, Music, p. 589).
            
            
              Stephen in Acts 7 refers to the worship of the starry
                host to which God abandoned Israel.
            
            
               Take
thou
                  away from me the noise of thy songs; 
                   
                      for I will not hear the melody of thy viols. Amos 5:23
                But let
                judgment run down as waters, 
                          and righteousness as a mighty stream. Amos
                  5: 24 
                But ye have borne
                    the tabernacle of your Moloch and Chiun your images, the star of your god, which ye
                    made to yourselves. Amos 5: 26
                   Therefore will I
                      cause you to go into captivity beyond Damascus,
                      saith the Lord,whose name is The God of hosts. Amos
                      5: 27
               
            
            Rev. 21:7 He that overcometh shall inherit all things; 
                    and I will be his God,
            and he shall be my son. 
            Rev. 21:8 But the fearful, and unbelieving, and the
            abominable, and murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers,
            and idolaters, and all liars, shall have their part
            in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone: which is
            the second death. 
            
            Rev. 21:27 And there shall in no wise enter into it any
            thing that defileth, neither whatsoever worketh abomination,
            or maketh a lie: but they which are written in the
            Lamb’s book of life. 
          
        
        TESTIMONY OF HISTORY
        
          Hide me from the secret counsel of the
              wicked; from the insurrection (noisy crowd)
              of the workers of iniquity: Psalm 64:2NIV 
          
            They sharpen
their
                  tongues like swords and
              aim their words like deadly arrows. Psalm 64:3 
            
              Shanan (h8150) shaw-nan'; a prim. root; to point
                  (trans. or intrans.); intens. to pierce;
                  fig. to inculcate: - prick, sharp (en), teach diligently, whet. 
              Whose arrows are sharp, and all
                  their bows bent, their horses hoofs shall be counted
                  like flint, and their wheels like a whirlwind: Is.5:28
                
            
          
        
        According to
            Philo condenming instrumental music at religious festivals,
            the gods of the pagans exploit this weakness of men. For the sake of a better effect, 
                    and with the intention of more easily cheating their devotees, 
                    they have set
              their lies to melodies, rhythms and meters. 
          
            Philodemus held as self deceptive the view that music
                mediated religious ecstasy. He saw the entire condition
            induced by the noise of cymbals and tambourines as a
            disturbance of the spirit.
             
                He found it significant that, on the
            whole, 
                    only women and effeminant men fell
                into this folly.
              Accordingly, nothing of value could be attributed to
              music; it was no more than a slave of the sensation of
                pleasure, which satisfied much in the same way that
              food and drink did. Johannes Quasten  
        Eph. 4:26 Be ye angry, and sin not:
            let not the sun go down upon your wrath: 
            Eph. 4:27 Neither give place to the devil. 
              
            First, God in Christ makes
              room only for evangelists who teach that which HAS BEEN
              taught and AS it has been taught. Of the future "School of
              the Word" Christ said:
            
        Is. 8:20 To the law and to the testimony: 
                  if they speak not
          according to this word, 
                  it is because there
            is no light in them.
         Second,
              when God delivers Spirit or Word to the Son, he speaks
              WITHOUT METER.  And so, none of the Bible can be sung
              in the modern tunful sense: that mark is left to identify
              LIARS and ROBBERS.
              
              Third, there is NO FUNDING for the extra "ministry
              staff" riding on the backs of widows and honest workers.
              
              Therefore, all of the STAFF speak "on their own"
              and Jesus said they were sons of the Devil. Therefore
              again,
            
            Eph. 4:28 Let him that stole steal no more: 
                    but rather let him labour,
            working with his hands the thing which is good, 
                    that he may have to
            give to him that needeth. 
            
            Eph. 4:29 Let no corrupt communication proceed out
            of your mouth, 
                    but that which is good
            to the use of edifying,
                (Education)
                      that it may minister
grace
              unto the hearers.
            
        
         Eph. 4:30 And grieve not the
            holy Spirit of God, 
                    whereby ye are sealed
            unto the day of redemption. 
            
            Eph. 4:31 Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger,
            and clamour, 
                    and evil speaking, be
            put away from you, with all malice:  
        31 pasa pikria kai thumos kai orgē kai kraugē kai blasphēmia arthētō aph' humōn sunpasēkakia.  
        Thumos A. soul,
            spirit, as the principle of life, feeling and
            thought, esp. of
            strong feeling and passion (rightly derived from thuō
          
          II.  soul,
            as shown by the feelings and passions; and so, 
          1.  desire or inclination, esp. desire
          for meat and drink, appetite,
          
          Orge A. natural
            impulse or propensity (v. orgaō
          II): hence, temperament, disposition, mood suiting
          one's own mood or human wisdom, sophian
            hēgoumenos”
          [leader] Pl.R.493d.
          
            Sophia . cleverness
              or 
skill in handicraft and 
art, in 
music
              and 
singing, 
tekhnē
                kai
                s.
              
h.Merc.483,
              cf. 
511; in
              
poetry, 
              
              Plat. Rep. 493d that it
              is wisdom to have learned to know the moods and the
              pleasures of the motley multitude in their assembly,
              whether about painting or 
music or, for that matter, 
politics?
              For if a man associates with these 
                      and offers and
              exhibits to them his 
poetry or any other 
product
              of his 
craft or any political service,
                         
              and grants the 
mob authority over himself more
              than is unavoidable, 
                      the proverbial
              necessity of Diomede will compel him to give the public
              what it likes, 
                      but that what it
              likes is really good and honorable, 
                         
                  have you ever heard an attempted proof
              of this that is not 
simply ridiculous?” 
              
                 Ridiculous: they have
                  heard no argument advanced for it but such as might
                  make the angels and almost the very jack-asses weep
              
             
          
          Krauge Crying, screaming,
          shouthing, speaking in a loud voice,
          Aeschin. 1 167 His offensive
            talk against Philip is foolish and out of place, but not so
            serious a mistake as that which I am about to mention. For
            confessedly he will be making his slanderous charges against
            a man—he who is himself no man. But when he insinuates
            shameful suspicions against the boy, by deliberately
            applying to him words of double meaning, he makes our city
            ridiculous.
          
          Aeirō
          , II.  raise up, exalt, “apo
            smikrou
            d'
            an
            areias
            megan”
          A.Ch.262,
          cf. 791; olbon 
            Dareios
            ēren
          Id.Pers.164:—esp.
of
          pride and passion, exalt, excite, hupsou
            ai.
            thumon
          grow excited, S.OT914;
          
          2.  raise by words, hence, praise,
            extol, E.Heracl.322,
          etc.; ai.
            logō
          to  exaggerate, D.21.71.
          2.  ogkon
            arasthai
          to be puffed up, S.Aj. 129;
          “thaumaston
            ogkon
            aramenoi
            tou
            muthou”
          Pl.Plt.277b.
           Pind. O. 1 From there
              glorious song enfolds the wisdom of poets,
              so that they loudly sing [10] the son of Cronus, when they
              arrive at the rich and blessed hearth of Hieron, who
              wields the scepter of law in Sicily
              of many flocks, reaping every excellence at its peak, and
              is glorified [15] by the choicest music, which we men
              often play around his hospitable table. Come, take the
              Dorian lyre down from its peg, if the splendor of Pisa placed your mind under the
                influence of sweetest thoughts,...
                      Yes, there are many
              marvels, [Thaumatos lying wonders]
              
                      and yet I suppose
              the speech of mortals beyond the true account 
                      can be deceptive,
                stories adorned with embroidered lies; 
              [30] and Grace, who fashions all gentle things for men, 
                      confers esteem and
              often contrives to make believable the unbelievable.
              
                      But the days to come
              are the wisest witnesses. and of Pherenicus
            Homer Odyssey Hom. Od. 21.401 
          
          3.  raise, lift, “tupōma
            ērmenoi
            kheroin”
          S.El.54;
          kanoun
            ai.
          Ar.Av.850;
          “bous”
          IG22.1028.28, cf. Thphr.Char.27.5;
          rhothion
          raise a surging cheer, Ar.Eq. 546;
          “Samosata
            aramenos
            metethēken”
          Arariskō
            (redupl. form of root
              ar,
            2. please, gratify, “eme
              g'
              ha
              stonoess'
              ara^ren
              phrenas”
            S.El.147
            (lyr
            V. make fitting or pleasing, arsantes
              kata
              thumon
            (sc. to
              geras),
            Il.1.136.
            Areskō
            a^,
             appease, conciliate,.
        
        PARALLEL: OF WHAT PAUL CALLS THE SYNAGOGUE OR
            CHURCH 
        Rom. 15:1 We then that
                    are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the
                    weak, and not to please ourselves. 
            
          Plăcĕo 
            1. In scenic lang., of players or pieces presented,
          to please, find favor, give satisfaction:
          “primo
            actu
            placeo,
            Ter.
            Hec.
            prol.
            alt.
            31: cui
            scenico
            placenti
          2. Placere sibi, to be pleased or satisfied
with
one's
            self, to flatter one's self, to pride or
          plume one's self: 
                  scaenĭcus
          (scen-
          ), a, um, adj., = skēnikos,
           
             
                  I. of or belonging to
              the stage, scenic, dramatic, theatrical
            (class.). 
                  I.  Lit.:
          “poëtae,”
          dramatic poets, Varr. L. L. 9, §
              17 Müll.: “artifices,”
          players, actors  
                 “gestus,”
          Cic. de Or. 3, 59, 220:
          “modulatio,”
          Quint. 11, 3, 57:
                  2.  scaenĭca
          , ae, f., a female player, an actress, organa,”
          Orgănum
          , i, n., = organon,
          I. an implement, instrument, engine
          of any kind 
          Vitr. 10, 1.—Of
musical
          instruments, a pipe, Quint. 11, 3, 20;
          9, 4, 10; Juv. 6, 3, 80; Vulg. Gen. 4, 21;
          id. 2 Par. 34, 12
          et saep.
          
          Organon
          , to/, (ergon,
            erdō)
          . instrument, implement, tool, for making or doing
          a thing
          A. 3.  musical instrument, Simon.31, f.l. in A.Fr.57.1 ; ho
            men
            di'
            organōn
            ekēlei
            anthrōpous,
          of Marsyas, Pl.Smp.215c
          ; aneu
            organōn
            psilois
            logois
          ibid., cf. Plt.268b
          ; “o.
            polukhorda”
          Id.R.399c,
          al.; “met'
            ōdēs
            kai
            tinōn
            organōn”
          Phld.Mus.p.98K.; of the
          pipe, Melanipp.2, Telest.1.2.
          Rom. 15:2 Let every one of us
                      please his neighbour for his good to edification.
                  
          Aedificatio, I. Abstr., the act
              of building, a building or constructing. II. Concr., a building, a structure, edifice,  
          III. Figurative, building up,
              instructing, edification.  
              Absolute: loquitur ad Aedificationem  
              aedificationem Ecclesiae,Vulg. 1 Cor.
              14, 12 ; ib. Eph. 4, 12.
          1Cor. 14:3 But he that
              prophesieth speaketh
            1Cor. 14:12 Even
                so ye, forasmuch as ye are zealous of spiritual gifts, 
                        seek that ye may
                excel to the edifying of the church. 
          Loquor
            a. [Sanscr. lap-, to talk, whisper; Gr. lak-, elakon, laskô], to speak, talk,
            say (in the language of common life, in the tone of conversation;  
          B. Act. 1. To speak out, to say, tell,
            talk about, mention, utter, name, declare, show, indicate
                or express clearly
              
            Logos Speak opposite of
              myty, poetry, meter
          Logik-os
          , ē,
          on,
          (logos)
          A. of or for speaking or speech,
          merē
            l.
          the organs of speech, Plu.Cor.38:
          logikē,
            hē,
          speech, Opposite .
          mousikē,
          D.H. Comp. 11; “l.
              phantasia”
          expressed in speech, Stoic.2.61.
        
          Plut. Cor. 38. These words
            were actually uttered twice, as the story runs, 
                    which would have us
            believe what is difficult of belief and probably never
            happened. 
            For that statues have appeared to sweat, and shed tears,
            and exude something like drops of blood, is not impossible;
            since wood and stone often contract a mould which is
            productive of moisture, and cover themselves with many
            colours, and receive tints from the atmosphere; and there is
            nothing in the way of believing that the Deity uses these
            phenomena sometimes as signs and portents. 
                    [2]
            It is possible also that statues may emit a noise like a
              moan or a groan, 
                    by reason of a
            fracture or a rupture, which is more violent 
                    if it takes place in
            the interior. 
            But that articulate speech, and language so clear
            and abundant and precise, should proceed from a lifeless
              thing, is altogether impossible; since not even the
            soul of man, or the Deity, without a body duly organized and
            fitted with vocal parts, has ever spoken and conversed.
          SPEAK FOR EDIFICATION IS OPPOSITE
            TO MUSIC
          
          Mousikē
          (sc. tekhnē), A. any
art
over
which
the
            Muses presided, esp. poetry sung to music,
          Pi.O.1.15,
          Hdt.6.129; “mousikēs
            agōn”
          Th.3.104, cf. IG12.84.16, etc.; “poiēsis
            hē
            kata
            mousikēn”
          Pl.Smp.196e,
          cf. 205c; tis
            hē
            tekhnē,
            hēs
            to
            kitharizein
            kai
            to
            adein
            kai
            to
            embainein
            orthōs;
          Answ. “mousikēn
            moi
            dokeis
            legein”
          Id.Alc.1.108d.
          
          Rom. 15:3 For even Christ pleased not
            himself; but, as it is written, 
                    The reproaches of them
            that reproached thee fell on me. 
            Rom. 15:4 For whatsoever things were written aforetime 
                    were written for
              our learning, 
                    that we through
            patience and comfort of the scriptures might have
            hope. 
          Para-klęsis, eôs, hę, calling to
            one's aid, summons, hoi ek paraklęseôs sunkathęmenoi
            a packed party in the assembly, D.18.143.
          2. imploring, appealing, tinos of or on the part of
          one,  
          3. invocation of gods,  , PLond.3.1164d10 (iii A.
          D.). 
          II. exhortation, address,  parainesin grapsantes 
                  not a mere address to
          their feelings, 
                  but counsel to act rightly
           Isoc.1.5; p. tôn politôn pros aretęn Aeschin.1.117 ;
          tęn tęs sôphrosunęs paraklęsin . . autous parakeklęka
          Id.2.180 ; axiôseiskai-klęseis Plb.1.67.10 .
          III. consolation, LXX Is.30.7,
          Na.3.7, Ep.Hebr.6.18,
          
          Isoc. 1 5  Therefore, I
            have not invented a hortatory exercise, but have written a
            moral treatise; and I am going to counsel you on the objects
            to which young men should aspire and from what actions they
            should abstain, and with what sort of men they should
            associate and how they should regulate their own lives. For
            only those who have travelled this road in life have been
            able in the true sense to attain to virtue—that possession
            which is the grandest and the most enduring in the world. 
            This discourse is really
                hortatory in the general sense of that word, but
                Isocrates distinguishes it from hortatory (“protreptic”)
                discourses of the sophists, which were lectures to
                stimulate interest in whatever kind of learning they
                professed to teach, commonly oratory.
          
        
        Rom. 15:5 Now the God of
            patience and consolation [paraklesis]
              
                    grant you to be likeminded
            one toward another according to Christ Jesus: 
            Rom. 15:6 That ye may with one mind and one mouth 
                    glorify God,
            even the Father 
                    of our Lord Jesus
              Christ. 
            Rom. 15:7 Wherefore receive ye one another, 
                    as Christ also
            received us 
                    to the glory of God.
            
            Rom. 15:8 Now I say that Jesus Christ 
                    was a minister of the
            circumcision for the truth of God, 
                      to confirm the
            promises made unto the fathers:
            
            Rom. 15:9 And that the Gentiles might glorify God
            for his mercy; 
                    as it is written, For
            this cause 
                    I
            will confess to thee among the
            Gentiles,  [outward]
                    and sing unto thy
              name.                             
              [Inward]
            
          Exomolog-eomai
          , II.  later in Act., agree, consent, Ev.Luc.22.6:—Pass., exōmologēmenai
            apodeixeis
          agreed, admitted proofs,
          2 Samuel 22.50 Therefore I will
            give thanks to you, Yahweh, 
            among the nations, Will sing praises to your name.
          Latin: Confĭtĕor
            III. In eccl. writers, to
            confess, own, acknowledge: Christum, Prud. steph.
          5, 40.— With dat.: “tibi,
            Domine,”
          Vulg. Psa. 137, 1:
          “nomini
            tuo,”
          id. ib. 141, 8.—Absol.,
          Cypr. Ep. 15.—confessus
          ,
          
            Psa. 137:1 By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat down, yea,
            we wept, when we remembered Zion. 
            Psa. 137:2 We hanged our harps upon the willows in the midst
            thereof. 
        
        Eph. 4:32 And be ye kind one to
            another, tenderhearted, 
                    forgiving one
            another, even as God for Christ’s sake hath forgiven you. 
           
        
        
          6.04.10 4.10.11 280  11.05.11 380  8.06.14  725
          
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