Analysis of The Worthless Sword



See Peter as he is surrounded by Roman soldiers drawing his sword to cut off the high priest servant’s right ear as he hears Jesus saying, “Put up again thy sword into his place: for all they that take the sword shall perish with the sword. Thinkest thou that I cannot now pray to my Father, and he shall presently give me more than twelve legions of angels? But how then shall the scriptures be fulfilled, that thus it must be?”

I am told that the word “legion” is a military term that denoted a group of at least 6,000 Roman soldiers, although the total number could vary.

This means that the demon possessed man of Mark 5:9 had a demonic legion of at least 6,000 demons inside him.

Now, I want you to use your sanctified imaginations here, in that one “legion” of angels refers to at least 6,000 angels so that twelve legions of angels would come to at least 72,000 angels.

Isaiah 37:36 records that one single angel killed 185,000 men in one night, so if a one angel had this kind of power then 72,000 angels would have the combined strength at Jesus’ disposal to have killed thirteen billion, three hundred twenty million men, which is almost twice the number of people presently living on the earth.

Listen, please don’t miss this: Jesus did not need Peter’s worthless sword the night of His arrest.

At the snap of His fingers, Jesus could have summoned 72,000 powerful angels and in the blink of an eye they could have killed the Roman soldiers and the temple guards who had come to arrest Him.

In fact, the combined strength of twelve legions of angels could have wiped out the entire human race.

I submit to you that there was no human force on earth strong enough to take Jesus against His Will and the only way Jesus was going to be taken was if He allowed Himself to be taken.

This is why Jesus later told Pilate, “Thou couldest have no power at all against me, except it were given thee from above” (John 19:11).

I tell you it was not the LORD who needed Peter’s worthless sword, but it was Peter who so needed the LORD and friend, I tell you it is not the LORD who so needs you nor me, but it is us – who so need the LORD!


Scheme A A B X X X B X X X X
Poetic Form
Metre 11011101011010101111101110111111010110111011111111011101011111101111100111001111110110111101010111111 111101101010011010011111010101010110 11101001111100101011110011 1111111100101011101100111110111101101111110 100111101011011110110111110110110011110010111111011010101111101011010010101 1011111011110101011101 1011110101110100100001111111101010001011111011 010011111011011110010101 10111111110111101111001110010110110111011101011110 1111010111111101101101101011011 1111110111010101111101110010111111101111111111111101
Characters 2,180
Words 434
Sentences 13
Stanzas 11
Stanza Lengths 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
Lines Amount 11
Letters per line (avg) 152
Words per line (avg) 37
Letters per stanza (avg) 152
Words per stanza (avg) 37
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Submitted by Vernon.McCarty on March 04, 2024

Modified by Vernon.McCarty on March 04, 2024

2:10 min read
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