Thursday, March 15, 2007

Transfiguration, Crucifix, and Resurrection

Transfiguration, Crucifix, and Resurrection


Jesus Christ did not have to use spies; but there must be a kind of informants or secret followers.

If a soldier of the Roman military happened to be a believer like the centurion whose family had been saved by Jesus Christ, he could not come to listen to Him openly under the daylight.

If one of rabbis subject to a high priest happened to be a believer, he could not come to listen to Him openly under the daylight.

In that case, they had to send messengers to Jesus Christ and asked Him to meet them in the night, for example, on a certain hill.

In this way, Jesus Christ accompanied by Peter and other two disciples climbed a hill to meet the two secret followers one night.

It is described in the Bible as an occasion and a scene of the "Transfiguration."

The "two secret followers," however, that night must have brought a specific and horrible piece of information about Judas and a plot he was involved in.

(The Roman Governor, having realized a wide influence Jesus Christ had caused, must have decided to take a decisive action to handle the case for himself.)

Jesus Christ could have avoided confrontation with the plot and left Jerusalem or even Judea for as far as Egypt or Persia. But, as He was informed of details about Judas situations, He decided to save Judas and other followers by staying in the situation.

It must have been a very tense conversation. The two secret followers knew graveness of their information, and thus even the air around them got tense, since the two secret followers risked their lives to tell it to Jesus Christ.

The tension had an influence on Peter and other two who took the two secret followers as Moses and Elijah, due to extraordinary tense, pressure and the strong will to carry out a holy mission.

Jesus Christ could have avoided the encounter with the plot by performing miracles or using supernatural power. But, if he had done so, Judas or other followers should have been killed by Roman soldiers. Therefore, He decided to accept the accomplishment of the plot.

The moment He made this great decision, Heaven responded and praised Him, sending a "special power" to Him, making the clothes of Jesus Christ "dazzling white," so that He would revive after "Crucifixion" expected to inevitably happen sometime soon. He was now prepared for "Resurrection."

The rest of story is described in the Bible.

Avoiding the tragedy, which must have been very easy, is an act of an ordinary man or a person of religion by trade.

By saving the life of Judas or a lost sheep, who however committed a suicide later, Jesus Christ showed an extreme example of supreme altruism.

(If you do not save a sheep because it is just one of many, you will probably not save any sheep. If you do not save one man, you will probably not save mankind at all and you cannot be called the Messiah.)

However, it has not been taught as such for too many years, making Judas forever an enemy of Jesus' followers and making Jesus Christ a failed saint (significance of which should be discussed later).

Now, it is a time for religious establishments to put an end to their blasphemy. And, they should not continue to make their innocent followers pagans.


(It is truly said that unless you become like a little child in learning the Bible, you cannot enter Heaven.

Especially good girls in Europe and America should learn more respect to Jesus Christ and His chosen disciples who were all Israelites, though Japanese I am, shouldn't they?)


"SENT ONLY TO THE LOST SHEEP OF ISRAEL PEOPLE"