Eagle anointing .
Menorah, seven candlestick . What Is A Menorah and Where Is It used? A menorah, Hebrew for “lamp,” generally refers to two specific candelabras: the seven-branched golden menorah lit daily in the Holy Temple in Jerusalem, or the eight-flame lamp lit each night of Chanukah.
Ram's horn .
... various other symbols which is connected to the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ.
I would not have a cross in this place because cross is not symbol of the church of the Lord Jesus Christ. Cross is a curse and it is a symbol of Babylonian religion. Not anything else. The Lord Jesus Christ conquered death. Curse is over. He is no longer hanging on the cross. He risen the living Saviour and the Redee8 So brothers and sisters, I'm eternally thankful to God for God's grace. And I know in the days ahead there will be some important things would be happen as far as the bride of the Lord Jesus Christ is concerned.
The Curse of the Cross
Today we will look again at how Christ’s death on the cross fulfills the demands of the Law.
In Galatians 3:13, we read that Jesus became a curse for us on the cross. The stipulations of the covenant give us the background for understanding this curse. Under the Mosaic covenant, indeed, under every covenant, there are blessings promised for obedience and curses promised for disobedience. The greatest blessing the people of God could hope for under the old covenant was the direct vision of God Himself. This vision is called the beatific vision, and it remains the greatest blessing for believers under the new covenant. We see the hope for the beatific vision in Numbers 6:22–27 where God tells the priests to pronounce blessing upon the Israelites. The parallelism between the Lord blessing His people in verse 24 and the hope that God would lift His countenance upon His people in verse 27 tells us that the greatest blessing a person could receive would be the direct experience of God.
If the greatest blessing a person could hope for is the direct experience and vision of God’s glory, then the greatest curse one could ever receive would be found in being cut off from such a vision. Nothing could be worse than being cut off from the merciful presence of God, finding oneself in the presence of His wrath. This eternal damnation by God is foreshadowed by the curse of exile in the Old Testament and revealed clearly by the teachings about hell in the New Testament.
This is the curse that Christ bore for us. On the cross, He was forsaken by the Father and sent into the outer darkness, away from the merciful presence of God. This experience is deeply mysterious and no one can plunge its depths fully. However, we must not think that on the cross the ontological unity between the divine Father and the divine Son was separated. To say this would be to introduce a change into the being of God.
Still, on the cross, Jesus was actually forsaken by the Father. Perhaps we can explain this by saying that, on the cross, the Father’s wrath was poured out upon the Son in such a way that it interrupted their fellowship. This disruption was so awful that it brought fear to Jesus on the eve of His execution and caused His lament on the cross (Matthew 27:46).
We deserve the curse. We deserve to be cut off from the merciful presence of God. Our want of conformity and transgression of the Law brings the curse on our heads. But that curse has been borne for us. Christ was cast out into the darkness so that we do not have to be. If you are in Christ, you need not fear being forsaken by the Father.
What does "Coram Deo" mean?
Coram Deo is a Latin phrase meaning "before the face of God" or "in the presence of God." It emphasizes that every aspect of life is lived openly before God, who sees and knows everything.
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