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The originally inspired order of Bible books was set by Ezra the prophet (for the Old Testament)

and
the Apostle John (for the New Testament). Many years after John died, however, their arrangement
was changed. Who changed the inspired arrangement of the Bible? Why did they do it? <---The
whores of Babylon and bastard did

Ezra divided the books (manuscripts) of the Bible that compose the Old Testament into three major
divisions. These divisions are called the Law, the Prophets, and the Writings (or Psalms). Jesus Christ
validated this order of the Bible when he said, "These are the words which I spoke to you while I was
still with you, that all things must be fulfilled which were written in the LAW of Moses and the
PROPHETS and the PSALMS (or Writings) concerning Me" (Luke 24:44).

How did Ezra arrange the Old Testament manuscripts? The first section of the Bible, the Law,
contained the books of Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy. The second section,
the Prophets, contained Joshua and Judges (considered one manuscript), 1Samuel, 2Samuel, 1Kings
and 2Kings (one manuscript), Isaiah, Jeremiah and Ezekiel, plus one manuscript containing all twelve
of the Minor Prophets.

The final section of the Bible, called the Writings (or Psalms), contained the Psalms, Proverbs, Job,
Song of Solomon, Ruth, Lamentations, Ecclesiastes, Esther, Daniel, plus Ezra and Nehemiah (one
manuscript), along with 1Chronicles and 2Chronicles (one manuscript). The Old Testament was
originally inspired to have three main sections with a grand total of 22 manuscripts (one for each
letter of the Hebrew alphabet).

God gave the final task of collecting and canonizing the New Testament to the apostle John. In the
period between 96 and 99 A.D., John, as the last living disciple of Christ, arranged the manuscripts
he had into four main divisions. The first division, the Gospels and then Acts.

Following the Gospel division came the General Epistles, which had the writings of James, 1Peter,
2Peter, 1John, 2John, 3John and Jude. The next section in what would become Bible then contained
all the writings of Paul in the following order: Romans, 1 and 2 Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians,
Philippians, Colossians, 1 and 2 Thessalonians, Hebrews, 1 and 2 Timothy, Titus and Philemon. The
final section contained Revelation.

God originally inspired the entire Bible to have seven divisions (seven symbolizes spiritual perfection)
with a total of forty-nine (seven times seven or perfection multiplied perfectly) manuscripts. This is
vastly different from modern translations of Scripture (like the KJV, NKJV, NIV, etc.) which have no
divisions, no logical arrangement of manuscripts and contain 17 more manuscripts than what was
intended! Who changed it?
It was the fourth-century priest Jerome (c. 347 to 420 A.D.) who rearranged the Scriptures to what
we have today. He changed the inspired original order of God's word for political and ecclesiastical
reasons. <----Satanist

". . . the (modern) Old Testament books are arranged in an ECCLESIASTICAL order devised by Jerome
in the fourth century A.D. when he translated the Bible into Latin . . . (he) did not wholly follow the
inspired order of the books according to the final canonization by the high priest Ezra and the Great
Assembly . . .

"Instead, he chose to follow the order found in the Septuagint, an early Greek translation of the
third century B.C." (HBFV, Second Edition, page 1)

"In an attempt to exalt the religious and political position of the Roman Church, Jerome not only
REJECTED the original order of the Scriptures to follow . . .

"the LXX (another name for the Septuagint), he also single-handedly devised a "new" arrangement
of the books of the New Testament" (ibid. page 3).

7 times 7 =49

The meaning of the number 49 is derived from the fact that it is 7 times 7. Seven is a Biblically
perfect numeral representing spiritual perfection.

Peter asked Jesus how many times he should forgive a person who sinned against him. He suggested
that forgiving someone seven times seemed fairly generous to him. The Lord's response, however,
was "I do not say to you until seven times, but until seventy times seven (490 or 49 x 10)" (Matthew
18:22). Christians are not to limit themselves in regards to forgiveness and mercy. If they are to be
perfect, like their heavenly Father (Matthew 5:48), believers are required to offer unlimited
forgiveness.

The name of the Apostle John is recorded forty-nine times in the KJV version of the Gospels.

49 = end = end of the prophecy

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