.... that according to the bible, God's only begotten son was Solomn?
There are many who have become sons of God, in spirit, by their faith,
but only one man was actually made God's son by God himself, and that
one man was Solomon.
The reason that this biblical fact is never mentioned in church is
because it would become all too obvious that Solomon was the one and
only person in the bible who actually owned **all** of these titles;
"son of David", "son of God", "Son of man", and "messiah", and then
the unanswerable question of why Jesus appears to have had those
titles, would have to be answered.
It is quite simple however, if one reads the bible for it's story of
continuity, and not simply for the single verses which have "prove"
his preconceived beliefs.
The gospel, which was preached first to Abraham as an everlasting
promise, is that a great nation, on all the land between the Euphrates
and the river of Egypt, will bring the blessing of **peace on earth**
to all nations.
Since God cannot lie, the gospel will be fulfilled exactly as God
promised it to Abraham, so the great nation of God's promise, must
exist on all the land between the Euphrates and the river of Egypt, in
order for gospel fulfillment to take place. That is precisely why
Jesus came preaching the gospel that the kingdom of God's promise is
coming.
Unless God is a liar, His promised gospel kingdom will exist
specificly on all the land between the Euphrates and the river of
Egypt, so it's existence in Jesus' day would have required the
overthrow of the Roman empire. The Romans found it expedient to
change the kingdom which existed as a hope in hearts and minds, to a
kingdom which has already come, in hearts and minds. I'm sure that
the Romans never imagined that their subterfuge would still be as
strong as ever more than 1500 years in the future.
The gospel which God preached first to Abraham, was obviously still
being preached by Paul, because it was Paul who explained that
Abraham's children are those who believe the gospel preached first to
Abraham.
The gospel must have been changed after the death of the apostles, and
the "new" gospel made "orthodox" at the council of Nicea in 325.
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