Just for clarification to make sure I understand correctly, are you saying that Peter proposed 3 separate tabernacles so that the principals could commune with God individually rather than collectively - i.e. with separate, individual Tabernacles rather than a single Tabernacle?
If that is the case, then does this passage have implications for the individual's relationship with God in the post-Temple era, in the New Covenant?
It's my belief that "wars of liberation", in a spiritual sense, are fought within rather than externally. The individual's "liberation" is to be found in their relationship with God rather than in their relationship with a government. I believe that a number of people in that day - not necessarily Peter, but quite a few Jews - were looking after a secular solution to a spiritual problem, just as they are today. They sought - and still seek in some cases - to mix religion with politics, which to my way of thinking would have predictable, and potentially disastrous, results.
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If that is the case, then does this passage have implications for the individual's relationship with God in the post-Temple era, in the New Covenant?
It's my belief that "wars of liberation", in a spiritual sense, are fought within rather than externally. The individual's "liberation" is to be found in their relationship with God rather than in their relationship with a government. I believe that a number of people in that day - not necessarily Peter, but quite a few Jews - were looking after a secular solution to a spiritual problem, just as they are today. They sought - and still seek in some cases - to mix religion with politics, which to my way of thinking would have predictable, and potentially disastrous, results.
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