Mathematical
Metaphors, Part 1
August 16 , 2019
Throughout Scripture, we see numbers repeated again and again
and again. What most folks miss is that these numbers are metaphors in
Hebrew with pictures that go well beyond the surface.
When John wrote, “And I John saw the holy city, New Jerusalem, coming down from
God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband,” the angel of the Lord was showing him
the same thing that Ezekiel had seen in a vision. It was not a city in
the sense of a physical or geographical place; it was the ensample of a
principle: a principle which strikes at the very heart of all that the Lord has
been doing in our midst.
The mathematical revelations of this city are, individually and
collectively, inescapable proofs of the calling, the preparation, and the final
adornment of us as a people for Jesus Christ. As John was carried about
the city in the Spirit, he saw the following:
1) And [it] had a wall
great and high, and had twelve gates,
2) And at the
gates twelve angels, and the names written thereon,
3) Which are the names
of the twelve tribes of the children of Israel.
4) And the wall of the
city had twelve foundations,
5) And in them the
names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb.
6) And he measured the
city with the reed, twelve thousand furlongs.
7) The length and the
breadth and the height of it are equal. (i.e., 12,000 X 12,000 X 12,000furlongs)
8) And he measured the
wall thereof, an hundred and forty four cubits, according to
the measure of a man, that is, of the angel. (i.e., 12 X 12 cubits)
Before we continue, let me take you back to two earlier pictures
in Revelation which parallel this picture of the city.
In Revelation 7:3 - 4, 14, John describes hearing an angel cry, “Do not harm the earth or the sea or the trees, until we have
sealed the bond-servants of our God on their foreheads.’ And I heard the
number of those who were sealed, one hundred and forty-four thousand sealed
from every tribe of the sons of Israel……
“…And he said to me,
‘These are the ones who have come through great tribulation, and they have
washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.”
Then John describes a second group of 144,000 (see Revelation
14:1). “And I looked, and behold, the Lamb was
standing on Mount Zion, and with Him one hundred and forty-four thousand,
having His onoma, and the onoma of His Father written on their
foreheads. And I heard a voice from heaven, like the sound of many waters
and like the sound of loud thunder, and the voice which I heard was like the
sound of harpists playing on their harps. And they sang a new song before
the throne and before the four living creatures and the elders; and no one
could learn the song except the one hundred and forty-four thousand who had
been purchased from the earth.”
Have you ever considered the significance of this number,
144? It is twelve in its completeness: 12 X 12, twelve squared, twelve
completed and fulfilled.
As you will easily remember, we have discussed the number, 12,
and its significance on numerous occasions over the years. Twelve is the
number of Ekklesia. It is the
number of preparation and processing. It is the number of tribulation and
affliction.
Twelve in atomic physics, as we have previously noted, is the
maximum number of atoms which can be cohesively related one to another.
It is the number of relationship.
When Jesus chose His disciples, He chose twelve – not nine or
ten or thirteen or fourteen. Why? Because it was the maximum number
of people with whom He could develop an interpersonal, intimate
relationship. It was the maximum number of people (units, actually; where
we define a family as a unit – not just the father or the husband) with whom a
relationship of trust, transparency, openness, faith and love could develop
without becoming watered down or diminished.
Twelve was the maximum number of individuals who could relate
one to another without becoming divided into cliques or private little
circles. It was the perfect number of trust and transparency.
Within the framework of twelve, relationships could develop in which barriers
of distrust and fear could be dissolved. Processing and change could take
place within the individuals without the fear of betrayal. (OK, I know
the original twelve had a Judas, but the Lord permitted that so as to fulfill
His plan to have a Bride, free from the bondage of the Serpent. The
apostle Paul recognized that he was one “chosen out of due
season” to replace Judas as
a completing member of the original twelve.)
This picture was initiated with Israel’s selection as the first
Bride in the earth. Jacob had twelve sons, each of whom represented
one/twelfth of the whole Bride. Some have erroneously concluded that
there were thirteen tribes because of the half-tribes of Joseph: Ephraim and
Manasseh, but Ephraim was chosen to take the place of Levi, whose inheritance was
the Lord – not land and holdings as did each of the other tribes. Levi
was instructed to live amongst the other tribes, being a separate yet joined
people who existed entirely as a channel of communication between the
Bridegroom and this corporate Bride.
Anyway, John sees two distinct groups of 144,000. The
first is taken from the twelve tribes of Israel. The second was
“purchased from among men” (in the larger sense of the earth). Why two
groups instead of one?
Remember the first Bride in the earth: the Bride who chose the
flesh and the Law instead of the intimate relationship being offered by
God? That Bride was Israel. Here is an extraordinary picture of the
Spirit of Grace and Supplications, of whom Zechariah prophesied.
Though Israel had been divorced by the Lord, though she had been
“sent away” into captivity for her adulteries, and even though the Law
specifically forbade remarriage to one who had been “put away” (see Deuteronomy
24:1-4), the Lord promised that He would once again call Israel to Himself,
that He would take her back, divorce, warts and all! He even sent Hosea
to live the picture of that promise prophetically before Israel.
Hosea was instructed to marry Gomer, a woman who had been a prostitute, and to have children
with her. True to her past life, Gomer ran off from Hosea after several years of marriage,
and married another man. Hosea was instructed by the Lord to go and find
her and bring her back to himself, and in so doing to say to Israel, “Thou shalt abide for me many days; thou shalt not
play the harlot, and thou shalt not be for another man: so will I also
be for thee. For the children of Israel shall abide many days without a
king, and without a prince, and without a sacrifice, and without an image, and
without an ephod, and without teraphim: Afterward shall the children of Israel
return, and seek the Lord their God, and David their king; and shall fear the
Lord and His goodness in the latter days.”
Jesus made it clear that there would come an end to the days of
His Grace to the Gentiles (all non-Jewish nations), that Jerusalem (which had
been under foreign occupation and rule since the first days of Israel’s
captivity) and Israel would once again return to a place of relationship with
Him, becoming a free people. Luke quotes Jesus as saying, “For there shall be great distress in the land, and wrath upon
this people. And they shall fall by the sword, and shall be led away
captive into all nations: and Jerusalem shall be trodden down of the Gentiles,
until the times of the Gentiles be fulfilled.” (Luke 21:23b-24 NASB)
Then Paul shares some startling revelation and promises.
“For I do not want
you, brethren, to be uninformed as to this mystery, lest you become wise in
your own estimation, that a partial hardening has happened to and in Israel
until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in; know therefore that Israel will
be saved, healed, delivered and made whole, just as it has been written, ‘The Deliverer
will come from Zion, He will remove ungodliness from Jacob. And this is
My Covenant with them, when I shall have taken away their sins.’
“From the standpoint
of the gospel (at this moment in time) they are enemies for your sake, but from
the standpoint of God’s choice, they are beloved for the sake of the fathers;
for the gifts and calling of God are irrevocable. For just as you were
once disobedient to God, but now have been shown mercy through and because of
their disobedience, so these also have now been disobedient, in order that
because of the mercy shown to you, they may now likewise be shown mercy.” (Romans 11: 25-29, RAC Translation
& Amplification)
What he is saying is this: the purpose of the Bridegroom from
the beginning was to permit Israel to fall away so that He could extend His
mercy to the nations, calling them to Himself; and that when the day of His
mercy and calling to those nations is fulfilled, He will – because of their
past disobedience – now again show mercy to Israel and call her to Himself as
in the days of old. The promise of the Bridegroom to Israel, therefore,
is His Covenant. In spite of Israel’s adulteries, and her subsequent
divorce from the Lord, the Bridegroom’s gifts and calling to her are without
repentance.
That this is Truth is evidenced in a stupendous move in today’s
Jewish community. When I first began to work on this article, I was told
that in New York City alone, more than a thousand Jews per day are
coming to know Jesus Christ as their Messiah and Bridegroom. In Israel,
in spite of the media attention to the uprisings and problems between the Arab
and Jew, hundreds and even thousands of both Arabs and Jews are turning to
Jesus Christ with their whole heart.
Jews are forsaking their Judaism and legalistic past in
staggering numbers. Even though the media spotlight is turned on the
political conflicts, a spiritual peace is in the works which will sweep the
nation of Israel and bring about the fulfillment of Jesus’ promise.
I know this doesn’t seem to fit with many of the contemporary
interpretations of “end times,” but it is happening nonetheless! We are
about to behold a miracle of the ages as the Lord brings about a peace between
brethren: Jews and Arabs. (And, NO, I didn’t grab this out of thin air,
or make it up as some kind of new doctrine. Isaiah prophesied it.
Ezekiel prophesied it. Jeremiah prophesied it.)
Jerusalem – the New Jerusalem – the Bride of Christ has, as her
gates, the fulfilled, the completed, the made whole Bride drawn from Israel and
seen in the representation of each of the twelve tribes. Standing before
each of the twelve gates are twelve angels who sound forth the call of the
Bridegroom. But the New Jerusalem does not only consist of Jews.
Next week, we’ll wrap up this picture of the New
Jerusalem. Maybe these analogies don’t fit with what you’ve heard or been
taught but I want to stir your spirit and cause you to rethink things.
Hopefully, this overall picture I’ve been drawing for you of the Call to the
Bride by the Bridegroom going forth in the earth today will awaken things in
you and cause you to realize that the Lord has a grand and glorious purpose for
His people.
Things are not unfolding in the traditional ways we’ve been
taught. God is working in extraordinary ways with folks who are
responding. This is a year of overflow for those who walk in commitment
to the Lord Jesus Christ. It is a year of tremendous change. It is
a year of spectacular disasters, and a year of spectacular blessings for those who
are one with the Lord.
If you aren’t experiencing that overflow, perhaps it is time for
you to reevaluate your responses to the Lord. Maybe it is time for you to
junk some doctrines that have kept you in bondage, doctrines that have kept you
from walking in the fullness of all that Jesus Christ is doing, saying, and
breathing into His called-out people.
I've used this phrase in the past before, and I want to repeat
it for this Coffee Break.
"When you want what God wants for the same reason that God
wants it, you become unlimited and unstoppable!"
In case you are missing out on real fellowship in an environment
of Ekklesia, our Sunday
worship gatherings are available by conference call – usually at about 10:30AM
Pacific. That conference number is (712) 770-4160, and the access
code is 308640#. We are now making these gatherings available
on video using ZOOM. If you wish to participate by video on ZOOM,
our login ID is 835-926-513. If you miss the live voice-only call,
you can dial (712) 770-4169, enter the same access code and
listen in later. The video call, of course, is not recorded – not
yet, anyway.
Blessings on you!
Regner A. Capener
CAPENER MINISTRIES
RIVER WORSHIP CENTER
Temple, Texas 76504
Email Contact: CapenerMinistries@protonmail.com
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