Mystery animosity

From Sensus Plenior
Revision as of 09:27, 15 September 2021 by Pig (talk | contribs) (Created page with "''Mystery animosity'' There are hundreds of works purporting to teach the mystery or hidden teachings of Jesus. They are generally nothing more than free-for-all allegory...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

Mystery animosity

There are hundreds of works purporting to teach the mystery or hidden teachings of Jesus. They are generally nothing more than free-for-all allegory in an attempt to disqualify Jesus as God incarnate and make him out to be nothing more than a charismatic Gnostic teacher.

We reject all such writings as heretical nonsense. The true mystery speaks of Christ, the cross, and his bride. It speaks in agreement with the New Testament because the New Testament is the proper commentary on the mystery in the Old.


There is so much animosity against the mystery teaching of Christ, and some of it rightly so because of gross abuses [1], that a small defense for this work is necessary in sharing the boundaries of this 'eye opening' hermeneutic. Without explaining how free-for-all allegory is eliminated, many will claim that these teachings are nothing but more free-for-all allegory. Many will likely claim this also because of their laziness in applying the rules.
  1. Free-for-all allegory is used by many to 'expound' the mysteries, or hidden teachings of Jesus, claiming that Jesus was a Gnostic or Kabbalist. This is all nonsense.