And the world will be as one

The coming of ‘one like unto the son of man’ (Revelation 14:14) was a much awaited event scheduled for the so-called ‘End of Days’, or ‘End Times’. The term ‘son of man’ is not easy to translate into English from Semitic languages.

For Setswana speakers however, I can better convey exactly what it meant. When I say “Ijahh! A ngwana wa motho a itsamaele’ it is understood that I am speaking of myself as a poor, blameless soul who deems it best to walk out of a nasty situation without antagonising anyone. Here, as in scripture, ngwana wa motho (innocent, blameless soul) can still be erroneously translated as ‘son of Man’. In reality, it was applicable to almost anyone who was being led into, or finds himself in, a difficult situation not of his doing (see, for example, Ezekiel 2:1).

So, when John speaks of one like a son of man (this is how my New American Standard Bible correctly translates Revelation 14:14) he was subtly telling us that this was an innocent man who, by some contrivance of ‘Fate’, finds himself in the thick of things; commanded by war-mongering ‘angels’ to sink his “sharpened sickle into the ground” – which metaphors I explained in a recent article. It is easy to determine when such End Times were to come. In Daniel 8:13-14 they were to come 2300 ‘days’ from the Artaxerxes Decree of BC 457. When we apply the prophetic formula of ‘one day for every year’ as elucidated in Numbers 13:34 (see also Ezekiel 4:6), this amounts to 2300 years, leading to AD 1844.

Editor's Comment
Closure as pain lingers

March 28 will go down as a day that Batswana will never forget because of the accident that occurred near Mmamatlakala in Limpopo, South Africa. The tragedy affected not only the grieving families but the nation at large. Batswana throughout the process stood behind the grieving families and the governments of Botswana and South Africa need much more than a pat on the back.Last Saturday was a day when family members said their last goodbyes to...

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