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R. T. Tippett

The Ark of the Covenant

Updated: Feb 12

Recently, I had a visit from a couple of young Mormon missionaries.  I invited them in (it was cold outside) and I was asked if I was religious.  I told the one young man who asked that I am.  He then asked if I was Christian.  Again, I told him I am.  He then asked me if I go to church.  I told him I am a temple.


I then explained that what he called a church was a money-making business. This is opposite of a church that is formed when one’s body marries Yahweh and is then filled with His Holy Spirit, which is the soul of His Son Jesus (also named Adam).  That presence makes a body of flesh become a temple, with Jesus the High Priest of that temple.  That then makes a church be when two are joined in the name of Jesus, so there he will be.  A church then moves, going to people who are not churches, ministering to their need to be churches, as Jesus reborn in flesh.


Needless to say, this young missionary was not a temple who came to me for the purpose of telling me how to become a temple.  So, he basically ignored what I told him.


While I welcomed this pair into my home for a little further chat, the lead young man of the pair said they had to leave.  I understood; and, I wished them well on their way.


The point of a fixed church, like that founded by the likes of Joseph Smith, but all others as well, is it is not what Yahweh wants.  As I told this pair, a church building has no soul, so it can never do anything to save any lost souls.  David (who I explained to this visiting pair was a “Christ” and a “Messiah,” as a soul “Anointed” by the Spirit of Yahweh, where that Spirit is the soul of Jesus) had the idea that he would build a permanent structure to place the Ark of the Covenant in.  Nathan, the prophet who spoke with Yahweh (as a “Christ,” “Anointed” and filled with the Spirit of Adam-Jesus), was told to tell David, “Yahweh does not want to be placed in a soulless box, either one of cedar or one of stone (or one of brick and mortar).”  Yahweh must be free to go where those “Christs” – “Messiahs” – “Anointed ones” go.  Yahweh must be placed in a temple of flesh.


Here is a picture from the Internet that depicts the way the Ark of the Covenant looks, based on the specific instructions Yahweh gave to Moses and told him to have constructed as such.



Yahweh is the invisible presence that envelops the two cherubim.  There are two cherubim because a cherub is an eternal soul – an angel – that is life.  Two is a number of duality.  One cherub reflects one’s soul, which is connected to a box of wood (the flesh it animates).  The second cherub reflects the soul of Yahweh’s Son – Adam (or Jesus) – who was purposefully made to save souls in flesh.  Two cherubim are then joined in one box, which is underlying wood now covered in gold.  The invisible presence of Yahweh enveloping the two cherubim is then the Trinity that transforms a box of wood into a temple of Yahweh.  The Covenant within is the etched-in-stone marriage vows.  With the Covenant being within the wooden box covered with gold, the Law (vows of eternal commitment) is etched in the walls of one’s heart.  The rings through which poles would be placed depicts the mobility of this temple to Yahweh that takes the Trinity wherever the two cherubim go.  No sin can ever touch that holy ark, lest it be stricken dead (a demon soul removed from its body of death).


Here, it is important to grasp the Hebrew suffix that turns a singular cherub into the plural number cherubim.  The same suffix gets applied to the singular el (a word translating into god [lower-case]), making it become the plural number elohim (a word translating into gods [lower-case]).  In Genesis 1 there are thirty-two uses of the word elohim, with zero references to Yahweh.  In Genesis 2 there are three additional references to elohim (one each in verses two, three, and four), with eleven times found Yahweh elohim in the remaining verses of that chapter.


The elohim of Genesis 1 are the gods that were created by Yahweh (who is the unnamed creator of the gods).  If you believe in "angels, spirits, souls," and/or "laws" of physics, then you believe in "gods" ... elohim ... which are separately eternal, made by Yahweh ... extensions of His Being. The Creation was the plan of Yahweh, carried out by the workers He created (in the beginning elohim) to take matter (a wooden box) and add life spirit to that (cherub). The purpose of Yahweh creating His Son and having Moses reference this divine creation, as being Yahweh elohim, is because Yahweh added to an el (a cherub) and His Son’s el (a divine Son’s soul) makes one the Trinity that is Yahweh elohim


Still, the soul of the Son is itself an elohim because it is purposefully created by Yahweh to be a duplicated el in countless souls (each an el or cherub).  That makes Adam-Jesus an elohim because it lives within many other elohim at the same time – as seen in the true Israelites of Moses, Joshua (Yeshua) and the many “Christs” – “Messiahs” – “Anointed ones” of true Christianity, where all true saints are resurrections of the elohim Jesus (Yeshua), reborn into different flesh.


Christianity is then the mobility of the Ark of the Covenant in ministry, which is in the name of Jesus, where all reborn in that name are “Christs.”  There still has been no prophet sent by Yahweh (in a temple where His Son’s elohim is the Lord) that says, “Yahweh really likes that surround-style building, with a stage for bands to perform on and a huge-screen with color pictures on it.  Do that with a white stucco look and a huge parking lot.”


Nope.  There are still no divine plans to have Yahweh be stuck in some box somewhere.



Just like today is still the seventh “day” of Creation – the day when knowing about Yahweh began – the only way Yahweh wants to be in the world is as an invisible presence surrounding two invisible cherubim, atop a mobile box of flesh covered in the gold of salvation, which moves wherever Lord Jesus says to go. Buildings of wood and stone are nothing but dead matter, which eternal souls cannot possess. They only animate it temporarily.

 

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