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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“Trouble rather the tiger in his lair than the sage among his books. For to you kingdoms and their armies are things mighty and enduring, but to him they are but toys of the moment, to be overturned with the flick of a finger.”
― Gordon R. Dickson, Tactics of Mistake
― Gordon R. Dickson, Tactics of Mistake