INSTRUCTIONS FROM GOD ON CLEANING THE CHURCH

3 days ago
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This video is a special message from God about the cleaning out of His church. Calling people that call themselves Christians to repent of false beliefs, false practices; to turn from their evil ways. To believe God and obey Him, not ingrained false teachings. This is Tribulation. Tribulation is for the Church, for the Body of Christ. For its refinement and purification. And the Church is you if you call yourself a believer. So, your refinement and purification. The Truth is being manifest. Those that embrace the Truth and Truly seek to follow and obey the Truth will repent and be purified. The rest will be burnt up as chaff. But God has made it clear that He is cleaning up His church, purifying it and restoring it.

Edit: I looked at the time wrong! I read 40:54 as 40:45. I suspect God wanted it in the message so I'll leave it.
G4054 perissoteron: More abundantly, exceedingly, beyond measure
KJV: more abundantly, a great deal, far more
Word Origin: [neuter of G4055 (περισσότερος - Greater) (as adverb)]
1. in a more superabundant way
Strong's Exhaustive Concordance
more abundantly, a great deal, far more.
Neuter of perissoteros (as adverb); in a more superabundant way -- more abundantly, a great deal, far more.
HELPS Word-studies
Cognate: 4054 perissóteron (from 4012 /perí, "all-around, exceed") – abundantly, beyond expectation ("more than"), i.e. exceeding the normal (upper limit). See 4052 (perisseuō).
Meaning and Nuance
Perissóteron is the comparative adverb drawn from the idea of perissós (“overflowing, beyond the expected”). It highlights any action, quality, or blessing that rises above ordinary measure, stressing “even more,” “still further,” or “in fuller abundance.” Though the particular form is not recorded in the Greek New Testament, the concept saturates Scripture wherever God’s grace, love, and power are portrayed as surpassing human limits.
Old Testament Background
Hebrew poetry often underscores divine excess by piling up terms such as “abundance,” “fullness,” and “more than enough.” When the Septuagint translators reached phrases like “my cup overflows” (Psalm 23:5) or “You open Your hand and satisfy the desire of every living thing” (Psalm 145:16), they regularly chose Greek words from the periss- family to render that sense of overflowing provision. This laid a linguistic foundation so that Jewish readers of the New Covenant writings would already associate the perissós family with God’s generous character.

Time 40:45 peripiptó: To fall into, to encounter
1. to fall into something that is all around, i.e. light among or upon, be surrounded with
Definition and Scope
Strong’s Greek 4045, περιπίπτω, portrays the notion of being suddenly surrounded by, or plunged into, something—whether hostile persons, adverse circumstances, or natural obstacles. The verb implies an element of surprise, stressing that the object did not deliberately seek the condition but was overtaken by it.
You were overtaken by robbers. They stole the Truth from you and gave you lies, since you were born.

Probably 40:46 just guessing
G40:46 peripoieó: To acquire, to obtain, to preserve, to save.
Semantic Range in Scripture
The verb conveys the idea of securing something for oneself—either by purchasing at great cost, by preserving from loss, or by obtaining a privileged position. The range moves from God’s redemptive action (Acts 20:28), to the disciple’s struggle over self-preservation (Luke 17:33), to the honorable outcome of faithful service in the church (1 Timothy 3:13). In each setting, the focus rests on value: what is deemed worth acquiring, and by what means.

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