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@ -193,11 +193,6 @@ Jesus became the “mediator”(μεσίτης/g3316) of the new covenant betwee
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See: Mediator; New Covenant; Sin
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See: Mediator; New Covenant; Sin
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### What was the “sprinkled blood”?
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### What was the “sprinkled blood”?
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When the author wrote about "sprinkled blood," he used a metaphor. All covenants in the Bible were made using blood. That is, animals were killed so their blood could be sprinkled to make the covenant. In the same way, Jesus made the new covenant between God and man effective by shedding his own blood. The blood of Jesus atoned for man’s sin once.
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When the author wrote about "sprinkled blood," he used a metaphor. All covenants in the Bible were made using blood. That is, animals were killed so their blood could be sprinkled to make the covenant. In the same way, Jesus made the new covenant between God and man effective by shedding his own blood. The blood of Jesus atoned for man’s sin once.
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@ -222,11 +217,6 @@ See: Heaven; Gospel; Judge (Judgment); Bless (Blessing)
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See: Exodus 19:18
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See: Exodus 19:18
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### Why did the author write that God will also shake the heavens?
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### Why did the author write that God will also shake the heavens?
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When the author wrote that God will also shake the heavens, he used the metaphor of an earthquake to speak about God's final judgment. The Old Testament spoke about this (see: Exodus 19:18; Psalm 68:8, 77:18, 114:7; Isaiah 13:1-22; Joel 2:1-11; Haggai 2:6, 2:21, 12:26). He wanted people to think that when that happens, God will remove everything that is evil.
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When the author wrote that God will also shake the heavens, he used the metaphor of an earthquake to speak about God's final judgment. The Old Testament spoke about this (see: Exodus 19:18; Psalm 68:8, 77:18, 114:7; Isaiah 13:1-22; Joel 2:1-11; Haggai 2:6, 2:21, 12:26). He wanted people to think that when that happens, God will remove everything that is evil.
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