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Tabernacle of the Heavens
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Tabernacle of the Heavens Mapping: Hebrews 8:5
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PhD NT Dissertation
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Abstract
Atonement and the Logic of Resurrection in Hebrews 9:27–28: Jesus’ Ministry to Lead Believers for Salvation into Heaven A Very Little While after Individual
Death and Judgment
This project probes the question of Jesus
appearing to the dead waiting for him in Hebrews 9:27–28. It searches for
correspondence with the possibility of immediate resurrection in Matthew
27:52–53; 1 Corinthians 15:12–58; 2 Corinthians 4–5, and Philippians 1:21–24;
3:17–21. Living readers usually overlook the overarching discourse context of
Hebrews 9:27–28 and presume a traditional proof text for only Jesus’ earthly second
coming. Neither second coming features nor speculation for future earthly
resurrection of the flesh of believers ever emerge in Hebrews, which should be
puzzling.
Research appraises the thesis that Jesus now intercedes a very little while after death at
judgment to bring into heaven people who believe in his offering for sin, in
the same way God promptly raised him in salvation from the dead into
heaven, recaps Hebrews 9:27–28, as the true conversation of the exposition,
exhortation, and rhetoric. Rather than a tangential topic, contextual analysis explores
if the text functions as an interconnected macro conclusion/summary. The
rhetoric clarifies proper teaching conversation about what Jesus, as the Christ,
achieves for salvation completion in the tabernacle of the heavens and co-ministerial
teaching accountability when before Jesus in heaven. Hebrews 1:1–4 initiates
discourse topics/subtopics that track by corresponding cognates, related
referents and phrases, and OT midrash in a narrow path to this conclusion about
Jesus’ present ministry for approaching believers after death at an individual judgment.
Examination of the functional units of text that govern these discourse lines searches
for a cohesive message that Jesus, now, promptly at
death leads bodily into heaven those who believe in his offering for their sin—just
as God both promptly raised him, as a bodily, complete, eternal-place spirit, at
the instant of death on the cross, to inaugurate the promised, new covenant
benefits as Christ, and confirmed his spirit, eternal-place redemption by the sign
of his fleshly resurrection.
Investigation of this thesis begins with word studies for lexical meaning by correspondence to the
most probable to least possible extant first-century sources. Readers then explore
the spatial, background, aiōn-field
theology behind the discourse. Topic consistency evaluates next by discourse
and thought-structure analysis within a natural Greek chiasm. The assessment traces
the functional groupings of text above the sentence level that conceptually map
God’s speech about death, judgment, intercession, and salvation from the discourse
introduction through each discourse unit conclusion and section transition. In
the footnote discussion, the resultant macrosummary contextually compares with other
corresponding first-century conversation that relates to Jesus’ present
ministry. Also, the discussion differentiates common missteps that influence
listeners toward either a postmortem, inferior quality of bodiless soul or complete
closure of a believer’s immediate access into heaven, when at death inheriting
the indestructible life of the promise of God, who cannot lie.
William W. Henry Jr., MATh, MD, PhD
Supervisor: Terry Wilder, PhD
School of Theology
Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2023
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MATh Thesis
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Abstract
The Cosmology of the Heaven(s), Tabernacle, and Sanctuary of the Priestly Work of Christ in Hebrews 8-10
This thesis argues the author of Hebrews purposely used spatial referents in a context of ontological reality typified by the Tabernacle. Also, the Tabernacle framework outlines and shadows a background grid for the subtext main point explaining Christ’s priestly work.
Chapter 1 introduces cosmology which can be cartographically mapped. Chapter 2 establishes the synchronic existence of a text for plural heavens in Hebrews 8-10, tracks the diachronic treatment of the plural of οὐρανός, and explains the disappearance of the biblical textual usage of plural heavens. Chapter 3 develops semantically the context of plural heavens and includes a brief comparison among other New Testament authors. Chapter 4 answers proposed contra arguments. In Chapter 5 the subtext of the work of Jesus as High Priest is applied cartographically using the test text of Hebrews 9:11-14 with a test question of whether Jesus actually took his own blood to heaven. Finally, Chapter 6 concludes.
The 2023 dissertation research asserts avoidance of the common, scholarly, technical language terms of "cosmology" or "sanctuary" due to later, anachronistic sense away from intended meaning by biblical authors, especially the author of Hebrews. There is very little evidence for the common claim for a sense of a "tabernacle in heaven" or "heavenly tabernacle" as a localized unseen creation in God's heavenly domain. The biblically unsupported concept serves as a scholarly strawman to prop up the long-held ideology for an earth-centric eternal kingdom hope by offering flattened alternatives to biblical, aiōn-field language.
Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2015
William W. Henry Jr., MD, MATh
Supervisor: David L. Allen, PhD
School of Theology
Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2023
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PhD Research Excursus A Omitted Supplemental Material
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Abstract
Omitted PhD Research Excursus A
Other Runners: Corresponding Place(s) of Other NT Gospel Sequences:
A Nodal Example and Area for Further Research
This material was omitted from my dissertation due to space limitations. Bibliographic references, abbreviations, figures, tables, and appendixes locate in the main work: William W. Henry Jr., “Atonement and the Logic of Resurrection in Hebrews 9:27–28: Jesus’ Ministry to Lead Believers for Salvation into Heaven a Very Little While after Individual Death and Judgment” (PhD diss., Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2023).
This supplmental material explores the gospel as a process concerning the speech-action of God himself known as the Word of God, conversation, the Christ, the seed, the promise, and the gospel that was fulfilled by Jesus, so that he might shepherd believers as his assembling church into the Kingdom of God, now in the heaven. Exploration of a handful of canonical NT texts strongly supports the nodal point of continued, prompt, spirit body living with open heavens in a concrete substance-reality for believers after death and judgment. Further research is needed in this considered venue.
William W. Henry Jr., MATh, MD, PhD
Supervisor: Terry Wilder, PhD
School of Theology
Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2023
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PhD Research Excursus A Omitted Supplemental Material
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Abstract
Omitted PhD Research Excursus B
Avoiding Missteps: Example of A Detour From
the Way Toward Heavenly Place(s):
Martin Luther’s Misstep after 500 Years
This material was omitted from my dissertation due to space limitations. Bibliographic references, abbreviations, figures, tables, and appendixes locate in the main work: William W. Henry Jr., “Atonement and the Logic of Resurrection in Hebrews 9:27–28: Jesus’ Ministry to Lead Believers for Salvation into Heaven a Very Little While after Individual Death and Judgment” (PhD diss., Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2023).
This omitted supplmental material explores the tension between text and tradition often born out between the common Christian believer and those taught in inherited traditions. It tracks the probable translation misstep of Martin Luther to alter every sense of the Greek plurals of heaven as German singular, and the early English translators, who followed Luther's lead off course. Further research is needed in this considered venue.
William W. Henry Jr., MATh, MD, PhD
Supervisor: Terry Wilder, PhD
School of Theology
Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2023
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PhD Research Omitted Supplemental Material: Mapping the Ministry of Christ in the Tabernacle of the Heavens v8.0
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Abstract
Omitted PhD Research
Ministry of Christ Vertical Mapping in the Father's House
and the Tabernacle of the Heavens
This material was omitted from my dissertation due to space limitations. Bibliographic references, abbreviations, figures, tables, and appendixes locate in the main work: William W. Henry Jr., “Atonement and the Logic of Resurrection in Hebrews 9:27–28: Jesus’ Ministry to Lead Believers for Salvation into Heaven a Very Little While after Individual Death and Judgment” (PhD diss., Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2023).
This omitted supplmental material explores visual mapping, in the Tabernacle of the Heavens, of the ministry of Jesus, as the Christ, in atonement and in his ministry as shepherd of believers, either on approach to God in spiritual bodies at death, or like transformation while living at his second coming. The vertical mapping illustrates the coherence of the biblical, first-century, aiōn-field [apocalyptic], creation background of the kingdom of the heavens that explores in the dissertation work. Further research is needed in this considered venue.
William W. Henry Jr., MATh, MD, PhD
Supervisor: Terry Wilder, PhD
School of Theology
Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2023
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PhD Research Omitted Supplemental Material: Revelation of Jesus as Christ in the Tabernacle of the Heavens v10.0
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Abstract
Omitted PhD Research
Ministry of Christ Vertical Mapping in the Father's House
and the Tabernacle of the Heavens
This material was omitted from my dissertation due to space limitations. Bibliographic references, abbreviations, figures, tables, and appendixes locate in the main work: William W. Henry Jr., “Atonement and the Logic of Resurrection in Hebrews 9:27–28: Jesus’ Ministry to Lead Believers for Salvation into Heaven a Very Little While after Individual Death and Judgment” (PhD diss., Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2023).
This omitted supplmental material explores visual mapping, in the Tabernacle of the Heavens, of the biblical revelation of Jesus, as the Christ, in atonement and in his ministry as shepherd of believers, either on approach to God in spiritual bodies at death, or like transformation while living at his second coming. The horizontal and vertical mapping illustrates the coherence of the biblical, first-century, aiōn-field [apocalyptic], creation background of the kingdom of the heavens that explores in the dissertation work. Further research is needed in this considered venue.
William W. Henry Jr., MATh, MD, PhD
Supervisor: Terry Wilder, PhD
School of Theology
Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2023
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