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تفسير كل المقاطع الكتابية
التي ورد اسم ميخائيل رئيس الملائكة فيها
أولا : 1 تسالونيكي 4 : 16
[
Verse 16.
The Lord himself—
That is: Jesus Christ shall descend from heaven;
shall descend in like manner as he was seen by
his disciples to ascend, i.e. in his human form,
but now infinitely more glorious; for thousands
of thousands shall minister unto him, and ten
thousand times ten thousand shall stand before
him; for the Son of man shall come on the throne
of his glory: but who may abide the day of his
coming, or stand when he appeareth? ..... 1.
Jesus, in all the dignity and splendor of his
eternal majesty, shall descend from heaven to
the mid region, what the apostle calls the air,
somewhere within the earth’s atmosphere. 2. Then
the
keleusma,
shout or order, shall be given for the dead to
arise. 3. Next the archangel, as the herald of
Christ, shall repeat the order, Arise, ye dead,
and come to judgment! ]
and here is anoter analytical commentary for
this verse
[ 16.
The word of the Lord,
ver. 15, is apparently not intended to include
the specific details which follow. In that word
the revelation was to the effect that all
believers simultaneously should share the
blessings of the advent. The following
description of the Lord’s descent from heaven is
intended to emphasise the fact that the reunion
of dead and living believers will be
accomplished by the Lord in person (aujto<v).
%Oti
does not indicate the contents of the word of
the Lord
(that,
as A.V.), but means
for
or
because;
and the details are meant to strengthen the more
general declaration of ver. 15. In the details
themselves there are traces of certain O.T.
theophanies, as Exodus 19:11-18; Micah 1:3. 27
Shall descend from heaven.
Used nowhere else of Christ’s second coming.
Frequently in the Fourth Gospel, of Christ’s
descent to earth as man. See 3:13; 6:33, 38, 41,
etc. In Ephesians 4:9, of his descent by the
Spirit in order to endow the church.
With a shout
(ejn
keleu>smati).
N.T.o. Once in LXX, Proverbs 24:62 (English Bib.
30:27). From
keleu>ein
to summon.
Often in Class. Lit.
a shout of command,
as of a general to his army, an admiral to his
oarsmen, or a charioteer to his horses.
Archangel
(ajrcagge>lou).
Only here and Jude 9. Not in O.T. The Pauline
angelology shows traces of Rabbinical teachings
in the idea of orders of angels. See Ephesians
1:21; Colossians 1:16; Romans 8:38. The
archangels appear in the apocryphal literature.
In the Book of Enoch (see on Jude 14) four are
named, Michael, Uriel, Raphael, and Gabriel.
Michael is set over the tree which, at the time
of the great judgment, will be given over to the
righteous and humble, and from the fruit of
which life will be given to the elect. In Tob.
xii. 15, Raphael appears as one of the seven
holy angels. Comp. Revelation 8:2. See also on
Jude 9, and comp. Daniel 12:1. 28
With the trump of God
(ejn
sa>lpiggi qeou~).
For the trumpet heralding great manifestations
of God, see Exodus 19:13, 16; Psalm 47:5; Isaiah
27:13; Zechariah 9:14; Zephaniah 1:16; Joel 2:1;
Matthew 24:31; 1 Corinthians 15:52; Revelation
1:10; 4:1.
Of God
does not indicate the size or loudness of the
trumpet, but merely that it is used in God’s
service. Comp.
harps of God,
Revelation 15:2;
musical instruments of God,
1 Chronicles 16:42. The later Jews believed that
God would use a trumpet to raise the dead. ]
and Final Proove for those people here is
Different Translation for the Same Verse
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Available Translations and Versions for
1Th 4:16 |
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For the
Lord Himself will descend from heaven
with a shout,
with the voice of an archangel,
and with the trumpet of God. And the
dead in Christ will rise first.
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For the
Lord himself will come down from heaven
with a commanding shout,
with the call of the archangel,
and with the trumpet call of God. First,
all the Christians who have died will
rise from their graves. |
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For the Lord Himself will descend from
heaven with a shout,
with the voice of the archangel and with
the trumpet of God, and the dead in
Christ will rise first. |
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For the
Lord himself will descend from heaven
with a cry of command,
with the archangel's call,
and with the sound of the trumpet of
God. And the dead in Christ will rise
first; |
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For the
Lord himself will descend from heaven
with a shout,
with the voice of an archangel,
and with the trumpet of God: and the
dead in Christ shall rise first: |
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because
the Lord himself,
in a shout, in the voice of a
chief-messenger, and in the
trump of God, shall come down from
heaven, and the dead in Christ shall
rise first, |
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for the
Lord himself, with an assembling
shout, with archangel's
voice and with trump of God,
shall descend from heaven; and the dead
in Christ shall rise first; |
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For the
Lord himself shall descend from heaven,
with a shout, with the voice of the
archangel, and with the trump of God:
and the dead in Christ shall rise first; |
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For the
Lord himself will descend from heaven
with a shout, with the voice of the
chief angel, and with God's shofar. The
dead in Messiah will rise first, |
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quoniam
ipse Dominus in iussu et in voce
archangeli et in tuba Dei descendet de
caelo et mortui qui in Christo sunt
resurgent primi |
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Now Note this well
1- Where the Comma is "
,
"
For the Lord Himself will descend from heaven
with a shout,
with the voice of an archangel,
and with the trumpet of God. And
the dead in Christ will rise first
which means in all Translation that is the lord
is different than Archangel , and this verse
give us what will happen in the last day , When
Jesus Christ Come , what will happen first ,
next and then .....
2- “ With “ word in the previous verse , which
mean 2 persons not one ..
ثانيا : دانيال 13:10
David Guzik
Study
2. (12-14)
The angel explains his coming to Daniel, and the
opposition he faced on the way
a. God had
responded to Daniel's prayer the very moment he
had made his request known; but the answers was
delayed by the Prince of the kingdom of
Persia
b. This prince
is not a man, but an angel; and an evil angel, a
demonic being
i. The New
Testament recognizes that demonic forces are
organized, and have a hierarchy; one group is
called "principalities" or literally,
"governments"
ii.
Romans 3:38;
Ephesians 1:21; 3:10; 6:12;
Colossians 1:16; 2:10, 15;
Titus 3:1 all refer to demonic powers
associated with human governments; and on three
occasions, Jesus referred to Satan as the
prince of this world (John
12:31; 14:30; 16:11)
c. Michael is
often associated with the battle between good
angels and evil angels (Revelation 12, Jude 9)
d. The
correlation between Daniel's time of self-denial
and prayer (verse
3) and the duration of the battle (verse
13) establishes a link between Daniel's
prayer and the angelic victory
i. "There may be
hindering factors of which a praying Christian
knows nothing as he wonders why the answers to
his requests are delayed. Nevertheless, he is to
keep on praying. It may be that he will not
receive an answer because he has given up on the
twentieth day when he should have persisted to
the twenty-first day." (Archer)
ii. Jesus
mentioned that prayer and fasting have special
place in spiritual battles (Matthew
17:21)
ii. Jesus taught
that men ought always to pray, and to not give
up (Luke
18:1)
e. Why did God
allow such a conflict? He certainly could
have blasted away at any demonic opposition
which dared raise its head. God's plan probably
was to use the time of delay to train and
develop Daniel as a man of persistent prayer.
i. Persistence
in prayer is not necessary because God's
reluctance needs to be overcome; it is necessary
to train us
ii. How much
angelic assistance or insight has never been
realized, or greatly delayed, because of a lack
of persistence in prayer?
f. Michael seems
to be the angelic representative of Israel,
battling against the demonic representative of
Persia; on earth, Israel seemed lowly and weak;
but in the heavens, it had the mightiest
representative of all
g. The example
of angelic cooperation is instructive for the
body of Christ, who pray "your will be done on
earth as it is in heaven"
h. The latter
days: the vision of chapters 11-12 is
focused on the latter days, although it may also
relate to the time of Antiochus Epiphanes
Robert
Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown
Commentary Critical and Explanator on the
Whole Bible (1871)
Michael--that
is, "Who is like God?" Though an archangel, "one
of the chief princes," Michael was not to be
compared to God.
Available
Translations and Versions for Dan 10:13
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But the
prince of the kingdom of Persia
withstood me twenty-one days; and
behold, Michael, one of the chief
princes, came to help me, for I had been
left alone there with the kings of
Persia.
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But for
twenty-one days the spirit prince of the
kingdom of Persia blocked my way. Then
Michael, one of the archangels, came to
help me, and I left him there with the
spirit prince of the kingdom of Persia.
Footnote:
a) Hebrew the prince; also in
10:13c, 20.
b) Hebrew the chief princes.
c) As in one Greek version; Hebrew reads
and I was left there with the kings
of
Persia.
The meaning of the Hebrew is uncertain.
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"But the
prince of the kingdom of Persia was
withstanding me for twenty-one days;
then behold, Michael, one of the chief
princes, came to help me, for I had been
left there with the kings of Persia.
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The
prince of the kingdom of Persia
withstood me twenty-one days; but
Michael, one of the chief princes, came
to help me, so I left him there with the
prince of the kingdom of Persia
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But the
prince of the kingdom of Persia
withstood me one and twenty days: but
lo, Michael, one of the chief princes,
came to help me; and I remained there
with the kings of Persia. |
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`And the
head of the kingdom of Persia is
standing over-against me twenty and one
days, and lo, Michael, first of the
chief heads, hath come in to help me,
and I have remained there near the kings
of Persia; |
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But the
prince of the kingdom of Persia
withstood me one and twenty days; and
behold, Michael, one of the chief
princes, came to help me; and I remained
there with the kings of Persia. |
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But the
prince of the kingdom of Persia
withstood me one and twenty days; but,
lo, Michael, one of the chief princes,
came to help me: and I remained there
with the kings of Persia. |
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But the
prince of the kingdom of Paras withstood
me twenty-one days; but, behold,
Mikha'el, one of the chief princes, came
to help me: and I remained there with
the kings of Paras. |
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Princeps
autem regni Persarum restitit mihi
viginti et uno diebus: et ecce Michael
unus de principibus primis venit in
adiutorium meum, et ego remansi ibi
iuxta regem Persarum. |
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ثالثا : رسالة يهوذا : 9
Adam Clark Commentary
Verse 9.
Yet Michael the archangel—
Of this personage many things are spoken in the
Jewish writings “Rabbi Judah Hakkodesh says:
Wherever Michael is said to appear, the glory of
the Divine Majesty is always to be understood.”
Shemoth Rabba, sec. ii., fol. 104, 3. Let it be
observed that the word archangel is never found
in the plural number in the sacred writings.
There can be properly only one archangel, one
chief or head of all the angelic host. Nor is
the word devil, as applied to the great enemy of
mankind, ever found in the plural; there can be
but one monarch of all fallen spirits. Michael
is this archangel, and head of all the angelic
orders; the devil, great dragon, or Satan, is
head of all the diabolic orders. When these two
hosts are opposed to each other they are
said to act under these two chiefs, as leaders;
hence in Revelation 12:7, it is said: MICHAEL
and his angels fought against the DRAGON and his
angels. The word Michael
lakym,
seems to be compounded of
ym
mi, who,
k
ke, like, and
la
El, God; he who is like God; hence by this
personage, in the Apocalypse, many understand
the Lord Jesus.
Disputed about the body of Moses—
What this means I cannot tell; or from what
source St. Jude drew it, unless from some
tradition among his countrymen. There is
something very like it in Debarim Rabba, sec.
ii., fol. 263, 1: “Samael, that wicked one, the
prince of the satans, carefully kept the soul of
Moses, saying: When the time comes in which
Michael shall lament, I shall have my mouth
filled with laughter. Michael said to him:
Wretch, I weep, and thou laughest. Rejoice not
against me, O mine enemy, because I have fallen;
for I shall rise again: when I sit in darkness,
the Lord is my light; Micah 7:8. By the words,
because I have fallen, we must understand the
death of Moses; by the words, I shall rise
again, the government of Joshua, etc.” See the
preface. Another contention of Michael with
Satan is mentioned in Yalcut Rubeni, fol. 43, 3:
“At the time in which Isaac was bound there was
a contention between Michael and Satan. Michael
brought a ram, that Isaac might be liberated;
but Satan endeavored to carry off the ram, that
Isaac might be slain.” The contention mentioned
by Jude is not about the sacrifice of Isaac, nor
the soul of Moses, but about the BODY of Moses;
but why or wherefore we know not. Some think the
devil wished to show the Israelites where Moses
was buried, knowing that they would then adore
his body; and that Michael was sent to resist
this discovery.
Durst not bring against him a railing accusation—
It was a Jewish maxim, as may be seen in
Synopsis Sohar, page 92, note 6: “It is not
lawful for man to prefer ignominious reproaches,
even against wicked spirits.” See
Schoettgen. Dr. Macknight says: “In Daniel
10:13, 21; 12:1, Michael is spoken of as one of
the chief angels who took care of the Israelites
as a nation; he may therefore have been the
angel of the Lord before whom Joshua the high
priest is said, Zechariah 3:1, to have stood,
Satan being at his right hand to resist him,
namely, in his design of restoring the Jewish
Church and state, called by Jude the body of
Moses, just as the Christian Church is called by
Paul the body of Christ. Zechariah adds, And the
Lord, that is, the angel of the Lord, as is
plain from Zechariah 3:1, 2, said unto Satan,
The Lord rebuke thee, O Satan! even the Lord
that hath chosen Jerusalem, rebuke thee!” This
is the most likely interpretation which I have
seen; and it will appear the more probable when
it is considered that, among the Hebrews,
Pwg
guph, BODY, is often used for a thing itself.
So, in Romans 7:24,
swma thv amartiav,
the body of sin, signifies sin itself; so the
body of Moses,
hçm lç Pwg
guph shel Mosheh, may signify Moses himself; or
that in which he was particularly concerned,
viz., his institutes, religion, etc. It may be
added, that the Jews consider Michael and
Samael, one as the friend, the other as the
enemy, of Israel. Samael is their accuser,
Michael their advocate. “Michael and Samael
stand before the Lord; Satan accuses, but
Michael shows the merits of Israel. Satan
endeavors to speak, but Michael silences him:
Hold thy tongue, says he, and let us hear what
the Judge determines; for it is written, He will
speak peace to his people, and to his saints;
Psalm 85:8.” Shemoth Rabba, sec. xviii. fol.
117, 3.
David Guzik Study Guide for Jude Chapter 1:9
A good example to contrast with the
character of the deceivers
a. Jude's
mention of angels should bring up the point that
there are angels and demons all around us;
ministering spirits sent by God to assist us,
and demons wanting to defeat us
i. It is true
that Satan can't unsave a saved person; but
through his deceptions he can corrupt and defile
a saint who is supposed to be walking in purity
and freedom - to the devil, we are time bombs,
ready to wreck his work
b. Satan's
desire to remain anonymous has nothing to do
with modesty; he uses it as a means to more
effectively battle against us. No Christian says
"Satan Is Dead" but many believe it
c. Or, if we
will believe he exists, he wants us to think of
him comically, as in the Middle ages: "miracle
plays" were a chief form of entertainment; sort
of a religious pageant in which religious
stories were acted out on stage. The audience
learned to look for one character who was always
dressed in red, wore horns on his head, and had
a tail dangling behind him. His shoes looked
like cloven hoofs, and he had a pitchfork in his
hand. The audience was amused by this silly
characterization of Satan, and got the idea that
he is sort of a comical character.
i. The end
result of both strategies: The Devil is taken
about as seriously as the Loch Ness monster
d. Angels are
real too; we should recognize that God has not
allowed the spirit realm to be the uncontested
property of Satan
e. Who is
Michael, specifically?
i. He is
mentioned by name in four passages of the Bible:
Daniel 10, Daniel 12, Revelation 12 and here
ii. Every time
he is presented in the context of battle, or
readiness to fight
iii. He is an
archangel, or a leading angel; we don't know for
certain if he is the only archangel or not
iv. He is not
Jesus Christ; you'll see why later
f. Why was
Michael disputing about the body of Moses?
i.
Deuteronomy 34:5-6 says this about the death
of Moses: So Moses, the servant of the Lord
died there in the
land of Moab,
according to the word of the Lord. And He buried
him in a valley in the land of Moab, opposite
Beth Peor; but no one knows the grave to this
day
ii. According to
teachers in the early church, Jude is referring
to an apocryphal book known as the Assumption
of Moses, of which only small portions
survive.
iii. This is a
mysterious passage; some have said that the
Devil wanted to use Moses' body as a object of
worship to lead Israel astray into idolatry
iv. Others have
thought that Satan wanted to desecrate the body
of Moses, and claimed a right to it because
Moses had murdered an Egyptian
v. But consider
that God had another purpose for Moses' body,
that Satan wanted to defeat: Moses appears in
bodily form with Elijah (whose body was caught
up to heaven [2 Kings 2]) at the Transfiguration
(Matthew
17:1-3); perhaps Moses and Elijah are the
two witnesses of Revelation 11
vi. But the main
point isn't why Michael was disputing,
but how he was disputing with Satan
h. The manner of
Michael's fight: a model for spiritual warfare
i. Notice that
it is Michael who is battling; God has put us in
the midst of a spiritual battle; you don't have
to get into spiritual warfare; you are in
it already
ii. Notice that
Michael is battling in God's authority, not his
own (and if he does this, how much more
should we!)
iii. Some
Christians get drunk on the doctrine of "the
believer's authority" and start thinking that
they can order the devil around like a lap dog -
or speak of him in comical, mocking terms.
Follow Michael's example!
iv. God hasn't
called us to judge the devil, to condemn the
devil, to mock him or accuse him, but to battle
against him in the name of the Lord!
v. The balance:
we are in a fight; but God is battling through
us; it is bad to either sit back or to
get prideful
vi. Example:
David's fight against Goliath: for the battle
is the Lord's and He will give you into our
hands; but David slung the stone! (1
Samuel 17)
vii. Michael is
not Jesus Christ; Jesus rebuked the devil in His
own authority
Available
Translations and Versions for Jud 1:9
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Yet
Michael the archangel, in contending
with the devil, when he disputed about
the body of Moses, dared not bring
against him a reviling accusation, but
said, "The Lord rebuke you!"
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But even
Michael, one of the mightiest of the
angels, did not dare accuse Satan of
blasphemy, but simply said, "The Lord
rebuke you." (This took place when
Michael was arguing with Satan about
Moses' body.)
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But
Michael the archangel, when he disputed
with the devil and argued about the body
of Moses, did not dare pronounce against
him a railing judgment, but said, "The
Lord rebuke you!"
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But when
the archangel Michael, contending with
the devil, disputed about the body of
Moses, he did not presume to pronounce a
reviling judgment upon him, but said,
"The Lord rebuke you."
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Yet
Michael the archangel, when contending
with the devil he disputed about the
body of Moses, durst not bring against
him a railing accusation, but said, The
Lord rebuke thee. |
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yet
Michael, the chief messenger, when, with
the devil contending, he was disputing
about the body of Moses, did not dare to
bring up an evil-speaking judgment, but
said, `The Lord rebuke thee!' |
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But
Michael the archangel, when disputing
with the devil he reasoned about the
body of Moses, did not dare to bring a
railing judgment against [him], but
said, [The] Lord rebuke thee. |
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But
Michael the archangel, when contending
with the devil he disputed about the
body of Moses, durst not bring against
him a railing judgment, but said, The
Lord rebuke thee. |
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