Hi Shirley and Recoverer and everyone

The Shamen is wonderful literature. I agree with you Recoverer; the Divine Plan. That was a lovely insight you had there. And to answer my own question; yes prophecy will be fulfilled. I opened my book and my eye fell right on this passage:
"Go thy way, Daniel: for the words are closed up and sealed till the time of the end" Daniel 12:9.
Hamlet's Mill turns slowly but steadily marking the time.
Heya Shirley hope you are well;
Yes, the Bible was manmade - the authors were men and women receiving the message of God through them. The Apostles (the 12 disciples of Christ) are like Shamen even more so because they were given great visions.
Yes, 2000 years is a relatively a short period of time (25 odd generations) but then this is called an Age (2,125 odd years) and this Age marks Christ in the Age of Pisces. The returning of Christ happened 3 days after He was crucified.
I am sorry you do not feel a spiritual connection with the Bible and cannot see through the dogma that has been placed upon this sacred book. Here are some writings I post here so as maybe you may see my perspective on the Bible:
The Bible relates the creation of the world. Whoever accepts it as a description of outer events, knows only half of it.
Everything in the Bible acquires a profoundly symbolic meaning when seen from this point of view. Philo becomes the interpreter of this symbolic meaning. He reads the Bible as the story of the soul.
We read the account of creation, and find in it not only a narrative of outward events, but a representation of the ways which the soul must take to reach the divine. Thus as a microcosm, the soul must repeat in itself the ways of God, and its mystical striving for wisdom can take only this form. The drama of the universe must be enacted in every soul. The soul life of the mystic is the fulfillment of the prototype given in the account of creation. Moses wrote not only to recount historical facts, but to represent pictorially the ways the soul must take if it desires to find God.
All this, in Philo's conception of the world, is contained within the human spirit. Man experiences within himself what God has experienced in the world. The Word of God, the Logos, becomes an experience of the soul. God led the Jews out of Egypt into the Promised Land; He made them undergo trials and privations before bestowing the Promised Land upon them. This is the outward event. Let us experience it inwardly. From the land of Egypt, the transitory world, passing through privations which lead to the suppression of sensuous experience and into the promised land of the soul, we reach the eternal. With Philo all this is an inner process. The God Who was poured out into the world, celebrates His resurrection in the soul, if His creative word is understood and re-created in the soul. Then within himself, man has given spiritual birth to God, to the Spirit of God that became Man, to the Logos, to Christ. In this sense, cognition, for Philo and those who thought like him, was a birth of Christ within the world of spirit.
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Reading and understanding the Bible is a life-time's work and we read in Revelations 10:9
"And he said to me Take it, and eat: it will be bitter to your stomach but sweet in your mouth like honey.”
However, Shirley I copy this from the first paragraph:
"the ways the soul must take if it desires to find God."
If there is no desire then saying the above is really pointless.
All my love
Caryn