• Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.

  • CF has always been a site that welcomes people from different backgrounds and beliefs to participate in discussion and even debate. That is the nature of its ministry. In view of recent events emotions are running very high. We need to remind people of some basic principles in debating on this site. We need to be civil when we express differences in opinion. No personal attacks. Avoid you, your statements. Don't characterize an entire political party with comparisons to Fascism or Communism or other extreme movements that committed atrocities. CF is not the place for broad brush or blanket statements about groups and political parties. Put the broad brushes and blankets away when you come to CF, better yet, put them in the incinerator. Debate had no place for them. We need to remember that people that commit acts of violence represent themselves or a small extreme faction.

Salvation and the Trinity

P

ParanoidAndroid

Guest
the earlist christians, Paul, Thomas, Mark, John etc, didn't call Jesus their God, the early christian gentiles steeped in Greek philosophy brought the concept to Christianity via logos christology. [/b]
Hi 2Duck,

I'm just curious before I respond to the rest of this post (I'll get to it when I understand your views a little better) - how exactly do you view Jesus? You make several references that my comments are making flawed assumptions, but in the absence of knowing your views, for the life of me I can't see what those flaws are.

Either Jesus is God, or Jesus is God's son, or he is neither (if he is neither you need to elaborate and explain). So which is it? Only after reading an answer, do I think I could possibly respond with any level of intelligence to your comment.

Thanks in advance :)

~ PA
 
Upvote 0
P

ParanoidAndroid

Guest
As I recall, some believe it should be 'only begotten" others are of the opinon that it shouldn't. My guess is that they are attempting to get the fact that Jesus was begotten by god out of the bible, and so they probably just made it up to do that, just like they often translate the Greek word that means begat as conceive in order to take the fact that Jesus was begotten of god out of the bible. It is a fact that rubs against the Jesus is god doctrine and contradicts that doctrine, so get it out of the bible. just like the grammar rules they invented to make the bible say something it doesn't. (sharps, coldwells, verbs have no subjects, is and become are action verbs and not linking verbs, nominative for vocative etc.)
*snip for brevity*
The bible says Mary conceived so I believe Mary conceived Jesus, don't you?
Fair enough, I misunderstood your use of the term "begotten" - most people I know who have used that, have tried to imply Jesus is some kind of half-breed God-man who was begotten in a traditional sexual manner. If that is not your intent, but simply referring to the conception of Jesus within Mary, then I have no problem with the idea that Mary was conceived by the Holy Spirit - in fact, I'd encourage that idea.

However, I don't see how this stops Jesus being God? Mary's conception of Jesus was simply his human incarnation. There is no indication in being "conceived" that MUST mean he did not exist before this time. The child was simply the human version of God, who came down to earth to tell His people the right way.

Just a thought,

~ PA
 
Upvote 0
P

ParanoidAndroid

Guest
the whole discussion in john 8 is Jesus claiming to be the Christ without directly stateing that he is the christ. The reason Jesus didn't straight out say he was the christ is because they would have stoned him to death if he did, which they did do at his trial when he finally straight out admited that he is the christ.
scripture makes it clear that this is what he meant when he said "before
Abraham was, I am (he , the Christ)."

John 10:24-25 The Jews therefore came round about him, and said unto him, How long dost thou hold us in suspense? If thou art the Christ, tell us plainly. Jesus answered them, I told you, and ye believe not: the works that I do in my Father's name, these bear witness of me.


Jesus told them that he was the christ previously in John 8.58, but not plainly,and they didn't believe him then. John 10.25 explains what john 8.58 means. I am he. he is understood.
Sorry, but that's just plain rationalisation. First, of only minor interest - you are assuming that John 10:24-25 is a direct reference to what Jesus was saying at the Temple in 8:58. Though to be fair, I've never heard this specific refutation of 8:58 before so I don't really know what scholars would make of comparing these comments in chapter 10 to those of chapter 8 - perhaps it is the scholarly view, though on a cursory examination of the rest of John 8, there is not much that would really change if John 10 was referencing the Temple incident.

However, (and this is more important), you would have to examine why the Jews tried to stone him in chapter 8 for claiming to be the Christ, and then later ask in chapter 10 to say plainly whether he was the Christ. This implies that he was not clear in John 8 as to whether he was or not, and by proxy it indicates that the Jews had no reason to stone him in verse 59. If we accept that Jesus was not clear in 8:58, then you must account for why the Jews reacted so angrily to this.

Second, and by far more importantly still, you're adding in an extra word in John 8:58 - "I am he", as opposed to simply "I am" - implying that "I am" is not a reference to the Yahweh "I AM" of Exodus, but simply "I am the Christ". This is absolutely a critical point because IF the simple translation of John 8:58 were actually "I am he" (as in "I am the Christ"), then the author got the Greek grammar horribly and heretically wrong.

I didn't bring this up in my last post because it was not really relevant at the time since the translation of the verse was not being disputed. However, most places in the Bible, this Greek phrase translated as "I am" in 8:58 is reversed. That is, the Greek normally reads: "eimi egō ". This is the traditional way of using the translation, and in such a way, it would be acceptable to render the phrase, "I am he".

However, the Septuagint (that is, the Greek version of the Hebrew Scriptures) uses this phrase the wrong way around to refer to the "I AM" of Exodus. It renders the term: "egō eimi".

If the writer of John did truly only imply "I am the Christ", he made an awfully horrible grammatical error - and if this author had any access to the Septuagint whatsoever, they would also have been aware of the intentions of this particular rendering being a reference to the I AM who identifies himself to Moses.

For some reason, I think the author of John would be smarter than making such a simple (and theologically critical) error :p

Just a thought to consider,

~ PA
 
Upvote 0

2ducklow

angel duck
Jul 29, 2005
8,631
125
✟9,570.00
Faith
Marital Status
Married
Hi 2Duck,

I'm just curious before I respond to the rest of this post (I'll get to it when I understand your views a little better) - how exactly do you view Jesus? You make several references that my comments are making flawed assumptions, but in the absence of knowing your views, for the life of me I can't see what those flaws are.

Either Jesus is God, or Jesus is God's son, or he is neither (if he is neither you need to elaborate and explain). So which is it? Only after reading an answer, do I think I could possibly respond with any level of intelligence to your comment.

Thanks in advance :)

~ PA
The false assumption you make when you say Jesus is God's son is that God, who is spirit, begat Jesus with his spirit. spirit begats spirit, flesh begats flesh, spirit does not begat flesh, and flesh does not begat spirit. you reason therefore that Jesus is God because of this false assumption that is contradicted by scripture, namely that God a spirit begat Jesus with his spirit .

I already explained it and you didn't respond to my explanation, either you didn't understand it or I dunno. anyway here is my explanation again from post #72
2dl#72 said:
the earlist christians, Paul, Thomas, Mark, John etc, didn't call Jesus their God, the early christian gentiles steeped in Greek philosophy brought the concept to Christianity via logos christology.

God is a spirit, and spirit does not begat flesh, yet God who is spirit begat flesh (Jesus). This was accomplished by god creating new human flesh (male seed) to begat Jesus with and with which he caused Mary to conceive, thus making Jesus , not a hybrid, but 100 percent human. Jesus was not half god and half man,


so your opening premise is based on a false assumption that god who is spirit begat by his spirit flesh, he didn't.



you are still assuming that god who is spirit begat Jesus who is flesh with his spirit , he didn't. That c oncept contradicts plain and clear scripture.

John 3:6 That which is born of the flesh is flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.

As to what I believe, I believe Jesus is the last adam ,the son of god and Mary, the new human creation of God, indwelt by god, but not god, Jesus was and is 100 percent human, new human, not old human like us.
 
Upvote 0

2ducklow

angel duck
Jul 29, 2005
8,631
125
✟9,570.00
Faith
Marital Status
Married
Fair enough, I misunderstood your use of the term "begotten" - most people I know who have used that, have tried to imply Jesus is some kind of half-breed God-man who was begotten in a traditional sexual manner. If that is not your intent, but simply referring to the conception of Jesus within Mary, then I have no problem with the idea that Mary was conceived by the Holy Spirit - in fact, I'd encourage that idea.

However, I don't see how this stops Jesus being God? Mary's conception of Jesus was simply his human incarnation. There is no indication in being "conceived" that MUST mean he did not exist before this time. The child was simply the human version of God, who came down to earth to tell His people the right way.

Just a thought,

~ PA
The part you snipped off of my explanation explains why to your question.

2dl#73 said:
god didn't have sex with Mary or mingle his DNA with Mary's, God created male seed that contained DNA that mingled with Mary's DNA. If Jesus didn't have DNA he wasn't human.

Jesus is the new creation of god to replace the old creation (Adam) who is dieng and about gone.


Jeremiah 31:22 How long wilt thou go about, O thou backsliding daughter? for the LORD hath created a new thing in the earth, A woman shall compass a man.

god created new human male seed (the new t hing) which enabled a woman (Mary) to compass or go around a man to conceive. thus Jesus is the beginning of that new creation of God.

Revelation 3:14 And to the angel of the church in Laodicea write: These things saith the Amen, the faithful and true witness, the beginning of the creation of God:

And Jesus is also called the firstborn of that new creation of god.

Colossians 1:15 who is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation;

and Jesus is called the firstborn amongst many brethern, who are also new creations by being in Christ Jesus who is the beginning of Gods new creation of man.

Romans 8:29 For whom he foreknew, he also foreordained to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brethren:
See especially my red highlight. Jesus is not God because Jesus is the result of Gods new creation. That being a new human male seed (sperm) that he used to fertilize Mary's egg with. Incarnation is not in the bible, but new thing refering to male seed is.
 
Upvote 0

2ducklow

angel duck
Jul 29, 2005
8,631
125
✟9,570.00
Faith
Marital Status
Married
Sorry, but that's just plain rationalisation. First, of only minor interest - you are assuming that John 10:24-25 is a direct reference to what Jesus was saying at the Temple in 8:58. Though to be fair, I've never heard this specific refutation of 8:58 before so I don't really know what scholars would make of comparing these comments in chapter 10 to those of chapter 8 - perhaps it is the scholarly view, though on a cursory examination of the rest of John 8, there is not much that would really change if John 10 was referencing the Temple incident.
Jesus said he had already told them he was the christ and they didn't believe him, Where did he already told them? John 8 is a long discourse wherein Jesus explains that he is the Christ indirectly, that is to say without directly saying he is. they wanted a direct statement that he is the christ in chapter 10 and jesus didn't give them a direct statement then either, the only time he gave them a direct statement that he was the christ was at his trial.

paranoid said:
However, (and this is more important), you would have to examine why the Jews tried to stone him in chapter 8 for claiming to be the Christ, and then later ask in chapter 10 to say plainly whether he was the Christ. This implies that he was not clear in John 8 as to whether he was or not, and by proxy it indicates that the Jews had no reason to stone him in verse 59.
No they knew he was claiming to be the Christ, but they wanted a direct statement to that effect so that they could have legal grounds to stone him. Jesus wouldn't do that, he even forbid his own disciples to tell anyone that he was the Christ.

Matthew 16:20 Then charged he his disciples that they should tell no man that he was Jesus the Christ.


Jesus was just following his own God given and directed advice , to tell no man that he was the Christ.

paranoid said:
If we accept that Jesus was not clear in 8:58, then you must account for why the Jews reacted so angrily to this.

Second, and by far more importantly still, you're adding in an extra word in John 8:58 - "I am he", as opposed to simply "I am" - implying that "I am" is not a reference to the Yahweh "I AM" of Exodus, but simply "I am the Christ". This is absolutely a critical point because IF the simple translation of John 8:58 were actually "I am he" (as in "I am the Christ"), then the author got the Greek grammar horribly and heretically wrong.

I didn't bring this up in my last post because it was not really relevant at the time since the translation of the verse was not being disputed. However, most places in the Bible, this Greek phrase translated as "I am" in 8:58 is reversed. That is, the Greek normally reads: "eimi egō ". This is the traditional way of using the translation, and in such a way, it would be acceptable to render the phrase, "I am he".
Your facts are in error.

john 8.24 has Jesus saying I am (ego eimi) in that order and it is translated I am he. Both john 8.24, and 58 have ego eimi in that same exact order, one is translated I am he, the other merely I am. Even in English when we say I am we sometimes mean I am he, with he being understood.

(Greek/English Interlinear (tr) NT) John 8:24 eipon <2036> (5627) {I SAID} oun <3767> {THEREFORE} umin <5213> {TO YOU} oti <3754> {THAT} apoqaneisqe <599> (5695) {YE WILL DIE} en <1722> taiV <3588> {IN} amartiaiV <266> umwn <5216> {YOUR SINS;} ean <1437> gar <1063> mh <3361> {FOR IF} pisteushte <4100> (5661) {YE BELIEVE NOT} oti <3754> {THAT} egw <1473> {I} eimi <1510> (5748) {AM [HE],} apoqaneisqe <599> (5695) {YE WILL DIE} en <1722> taiV <3588> {IN} amartiaiV <266> {SINS} umwn <5216> {YOUR.}


(Greek/English Interlinear (tr) NT) John 8:58 eipen <2036> (5627) {SAID} autoiV <846> o <3588> {TO THEM} ihsouV <2424> {JESUS,} amhn <281> {VERILY} amhn <281> {VERILY} legw <3004> (5719) {I SAY} umin <5213> {TO YOU,} prin <4250> {BEFORE} abraam <11> {ABRAHAM} genesqai <1096> (5635) {WAS} egw <1473> {I} eimi <1510> (5748) {AM.}

Search for 'Genesis 1:1' in the version

paranoid said:
However, the Septuagint (that is, the Greek version of the Hebrew Scriptures) uses this phrase the wrong way around to refer to the "I AM" of Exodus. It renders the term: "ego&#772; eimi".

If the writer of John did truly only imply "I am the Christ", he made an awfully horrible grammatical error - and if this author had any access to the Septuagint whatsoever, they would also have been aware of the intentions of this particular rendering being a reference to the I AM who identifies himself to Moses.

For some reason, I think the author of John would be smarter than making such a simple (and theologically critical) error :p

Just a thought to consider,

~ PA
your grammar is wrong as I demonstrated above.
 
Upvote 0

2ducklow

angel duck
Jul 29, 2005
8,631
125
✟9,570.00
Faith
Marital Status
Married
I interpret john 8.58 to mean something the bible says about Jesus, that he is the christ, you interpret it to means something the bible doesn';t say about Jesus, that he is god.[./quoe]

i interpret that the christ is not a purely human being becasue of this passage ....

Your father Abraham rejoiced to see my day: and he saw [it], and was glad.
Then said the Jews unto him, Thou art not yet fifty years old, and hast thou seen Abraham?

Jesus said unto them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Before Abraham was, I am.

it was clear between the dialogue that jesus claims pre- existence even before abraham.
well you gotta decide which makes more sense, that Jesus was saying and meant "I am before Abraham was" or that it means "I am he, the christ the one prophesised even before Abraham was"
hybrid said:
this did not simply told them that he is the christ in john 8:58, jesus plainly told them that he has seen abraham and abraham had seen his days.
he did not plainly say that. if he had he would have said "I saw abraham before I was born" or something like that. That would be plain and clear.
 
Upvote 0

Der Alte

This is me about 1 yr. old. when FDR was president
Site Supporter
Aug 21, 2003
29,120
6,150
EST
✟1,146,782.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Baptist
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Others
Jesus said he had already told them he was the christ and they didn't believe him, Where did he already told them? John 8 is a long discourse wherein Jesus explains that he is the Christ indirectly, that is to say without directly saying he is. they wanted a direct statement that he is the christ in chapter 10 and jesus didn't give them a direct statement then either, the only time he gave them a direct statement that he was the christ was at his trial.

No they knew he was claiming to be the Christ, but they wanted a direct statement to that effect so that they could have legal grounds to stone him. Jesus wouldn't do that, he even forbid his own disciples to tell anyone that he was the Christ.

Matthew 16:20 Then charged he his disciples that they should tell no man that he was Jesus the Christ.


Jesus was just following his own God given and directed advice , to tell no man that he was the Christ.

In the first eight chapters of John, Jesus never once claimed to be the Christ. Therefore Jesus' statement in John 8:58 cannot be interpreted as Jesus claiming to be Christ or the Messiah.

And OBTW there is no Jewish law which would require stoning for someone to claim they are the Messiah, or claiming to be older than Abraham. There are 18 stoning offenses listed in the OT. The only one that fits John 8:58 is blasphemy. To commit blasphemy requires pronouncing the name of God.
 
Upvote 0

Albion

Facilitator
Dec 8, 2004
111,127
33,263
✟584,002.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Anglican
Marital Status
Married
At bottom, this is not a debate over whether Christ is God. It's a debate over whether we accept 2ducklow's interpretation of the Bible over all the others.

For that matter, it's also not a debate over whether the Bible is correct, since he quotes from it to us in order to try to prove his own points.

And it's not as though the rest of the Christian world has never entertained and examined the points that 2ducklow raises. They are all very familiar to the rest of the religious world and they have been that for a long time. So, we we aren't dealing with something that's revolutionary or was previously unimaginable, either.

It's strictly a matter of whether 2ducklow's interpretation is more correct--in every one of the dozen or so places in scripture that appear to show Christ's divine nature--than that of almost the whole of the rest of the Christian world.

What are the chances that it is?
 
Upvote 0
H

hybrid

Guest
well you gotta decide which makes more sense, that Jesus was saying and meant "I am before Abraham was" or that it means "I am he, the christ the one prophesised even before Abraham was"

but the jews, already tried to clarify Jesus statement for us by asking jesus this .... (they don't wanna stone him to death because of just a simple misunderstanding, hahaha)

Then said the Jews unto him, Thou art not yet fifty years old, and hast thou seen Abraham?

and jesus never said, oh sorry that is not what i meant.

he did not plainly say that. if he had he would have said "I saw abraham before I was born" or something like that. That would be plain and clear.
his claim of preceding abraham in this particular passage is clear. abraham saw his days....

Your father Abraham rejoiced at the thought of seeing my day; he saw it and was glad."

i know it's not sensible but turning water to wine neither multiplying bread is.
but as usual, in your book, the jews in this case also misunderstood jesus, just like the rests of the the trits.

.
 
Upvote 0

2ducklow

angel duck
Jul 29, 2005
8,631
125
✟9,570.00
Faith
Marital Status
Married
but the jews, already tried to clarify Jesus statement for us by asking jesus this .... (they don't wanna stone him to death because of just a simple misunderstanding, hahaha)

Then said the Jews unto him, Thou art not yet fifty years old, and hast thou seen Abraham?

and jesus never said, oh sorry that is not what i meant.
I believe he ignored the question because it was silly. And the bible says to avoid foolish questions. I believe that is exactly what Jesus did.

2 Timothy 2:23 But foolish and unlearned questions avoid, knowing that they do gender strifes.




I believe he stayed on course with what he had said which was that abraham rejoiced to see Jesus day, then in vs. 58 he says in effect that not only Abraham saw Jesus day but people even before Abraham say Jesus day.
hybrid said:
his claim of preceding abraham in this particular passage is clear. abraham saw his days....

Your father Abraham rejoiced at the thought of seeing my day; he saw it and was glad."

i know it's not sensible but turning water to wine neither multiplying bread is.
but as usual, in your book, the jews in this case also misunderstood jesus, just like the rests of the the trits.

.
you think I misunderstand those verses, so what's the big deal if I think you misunderstand them?
 
Last edited:
Upvote 0
H

hybrid

Guest
I believe he ignored the question because it was silly. And the bible says to avoid foolish questions. I believe that is exactly what Jesus did.

2 Timothy 2:23 But foolish and unlearned questions avoid, knowing that they do gender strifes.




I believe he stayed on course with what he had said which was that abraham rejoiced to see Jesus day, then in vs. 58 he says in effect that not only Abraham saw Jesus day but people even before Abraham say Jesus day.
you think I misunderstand those verses, so what's the big deal if I think you misunderstand them?

there is such a thing as intellectual honesty
 
Upvote 0

2ducklow

angel duck
Jul 29, 2005
8,631
125
✟9,570.00
Faith
Marital Status
Married
At bottom, this is not a debate over whether Christ is God. It's a debate over whether we accept 2ducklow's interpretation of the Bible over all the others.

For that matter, it's also not a debate over whether the Bible is correct, since he quotes from it to us in order to try to prove his own points.

And it's not as though the rest of the Christian world has never entertained and examined the points that 2ducklow raises. They are all very familiar to the rest of the religious world and they have been that for a long time. So, we we aren't dealing with something that's revolutionary or was previously unimaginable, either.

It's strictly a matter of whether 2ducklow's interpretation is more correct--in every one of the dozen or so places in scripture that appear to show Christ's divine nature--than that of almost the whole of the rest of the Christian world.

What are the chances that it is?
that's easy. the answer is 100 percent.
 
Upvote 0

2ducklow

angel duck
Jul 29, 2005
8,631
125
✟9,570.00
Faith
Marital Status
Married
John 8
28 Jesus, therefore, said--Whensoever ye shall lift up the Son of Man, then, shall ye know, that, I, am he, and, of myself, am doing, nothing; but, just as the Father taught me, the same things, am I speaking. 58 Jesus said unto them--Verily, verily, I say unto you: Before, Abraham, came into existence, I, am. Rotherham.

so we have 2 verses

ye shall know that I am (he the christ) vers 28 (unless you trinitarians believe god can do nothing)
and

before abraham was, I am. (God according to trinitarians) verse 58

so , according to trinitarianss, sometimes Jesus means he is god and sometimes he means he is the christ when he says I am or ego eimi.

the trinitarian interpretation makes it look like Jesus can't make up his mind, first he says I am the christ the son of god, then no wait, I am god.

it would be like me saying "i am my fathers son, no wait, I am my father,
 
Last edited:
Upvote 0

Der Alte

This is me about 1 yr. old. when FDR was president
Site Supporter
Aug 21, 2003
29,120
6,150
EST
✟1,146,782.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Baptist
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Others
John 8
28 Jesus, therefore, said--Whensoever ye shall lift up the Son of Man, then, shall ye know, that, I, am he, and, of myself, am doing, nothing; but, just as the Father taught me, the same things, am I speaking. 58 Jesus said unto them--Verily, verily, I say unto you: Before, Abraham, came into existence, I, am. Rotherham.


so we have 2 verses

ye shall know that I am (he the christ) vers 28 (unless you trinitarians believe god can do nothing)

and

before abraham was, I am. (God according to trinitarians) verse 58

Two different contexts, Ego eimi/"I am" means two different things. Jn 8:28 "Whensoever ye shall lift up the Son of Man, then, shall ye know, that, I, am [he]" Jesus had just identified someone as "the son of man" next he said, "then, shall ye know, that, I, am [he]" i.e. "the son of man."

The next verse Jn 8:58, has a different context. Jesus had not mentioned any title which he could have been referring back to, therefore the reference to being before Abraham followed by "I am" could only be understood as claiming to be the "I am." And that is why the priests, scribes, and Pharisees tried to stone him in vs. 58 and not vs. 28.
 
Upvote 0
P

ParanoidAndroid

Guest
The false assumption you make when you say Jesus is God's son is that God, who is spirit, begat Jesus with his spirit. spirit begats spirit, flesh begats flesh, spirit does not begat flesh, and flesh does not begat spirit. you reason therefore that Jesus is God because of this false assumption that is contradicted by scripture, namely that God a spirit begat Jesus with his spirit .
Thank you for clarifying what you see asmy false assumption. It makes a little more sense now, though I think you are taking far too much of a hard-line stance to view it this way.

As to what I believe, I believe Jesus is the last adam ,the son of god and Mary, the new human creation of God, indwelt by god, but not god, Jesus was and is 100 percent human, new human, not old human like us.
I guess that begs questions of how a 100% human can "save us" by his blood. The natural question is how Jesus can be our saviour if he is just a "new human" (as opposed to us old ones). It also takes reconciliation to passages such as Philippians 2, in which Paul refers to Jesus as being "in very nature God" (Philippians 2:6), and others.

While I admit that proving the Trinity is much harder than simply proving the divinity of Jesus, this discussion isn't about the Trinity, and I think your views are simply theologically untenable - you need to "explain away" too much of the Bible to arrive at conclusions that should be obvious from the start. I hope that doesn't come across as too offensive.

Best wishes,

~ PA
 
Upvote 0
P

ParanoidAndroid

Guest
The part you snipped off of my explanation explains why to your question.
No it doesn't. Jesus didn't have DNA, so therefore than can be no mingling of DNA. To use an analogy, Mary was simply an "incubator" for Jesus' human incarnation. Though of course this analogy does not do credit to the value Mary played in Jesus' life, but in terms of giving birth, that is what she was - the incubator. Jesus existed in spirit form, as part of God, long before this (oh wait, I forgot, you dismiss John's gospel on the basis of it being a "metaphor").

See especially my red highlight. Jesus is not God because Jesus is the result of Gods new creation. That being a new human male seed (sperm) that he used to fertilize Mary's egg with. Incarnation is not in the bible, but new thing refering to male seed is.
I don't recall which verse referred to Jesus as being the "male seed" (sperm) used to fertilise Mary's egg. I remember that Mary was found to be with child by the Holy Spirit, but what part of this references the "seed" (sperm) of God?

Any information on this would be greatly appreciated.

~ PA
 
Upvote 0
P

ParanoidAndroid

Guest
Jesus said he had already told them he was the christ and they didn't believe him, Where did he already told them? John 8 is a long discourse wherein Jesus explains that he is the Christ indirectly, that is to say without directly saying he is. they wanted a direct statement that he is the christ in chapter 10 and jesus didn't give them a direct statement then either, the only time he gave them a direct statement that he was the christ was at his trial.

No they knew he was claiming to be the Christ, but they wanted a direct statement to that effect so that they could have legal grounds to stone him. Jesus wouldn't do that, he even forbid his own disciples to tell anyone that he was the Christ.

Matthew 16:20 Then charged he his disciples that they should tell no man that he was Jesus the Christ.


Jesus was just following his own God given and directed advice , to tell no man that he was the Christ.
So why did the Jews try to stone him in John 8:58???? If he was not clear on his comments, then they had no reason to stone him. Unless he was clear, in which case they had no reason to later ask him to be clear. Take your pick, you can't have it both ways!

Oh, as an aside, is claims of Messiahship grounds for stoning in Jewish law? In the decades before Jesus (and some after) there were several people who came and claimed to be the Messiah, however these were actually military attempts to overthrow the Roman government - this was why Jesus hid the fact that he was the Christ, so that he could first establish his purpose - of peace, and of salvation, and of the coming kingdom of God, rather than the overthrow of Roman rule. If he came right out and claimed status as the Christ, the people would think, "right let's gather up our swords and spears and march on the Romans".

Jesus had to get his message of peace, salvation, and God's Kingdom out before his message as the Christ.

Your facts are in error.

john 8.24 has Jesus saying I am (ego eimi) in that order and it is translated I am he. Both john 8.24, and 58 have ego eimi in that same exact order, one is translated I am he, the other merely I am. Even in English when we say I am we sometimes mean I am he, with he being understood.


your grammar is wrong as I demonstrated above.
I take your meaning, and perhaps concede somewhat. However, could I suggest a further consideration?

As I read my Study Bible next to me, the passage of verse 24 reads: "If you do not believe that I am [the one that I claim to be], you will indeed die in your sins".

The parenthesis show that the original Greek does not necessarily include this latter bit, but within the context of this sentence, it may be appropriate. Meanwhile, verse 58 has no such context - since there is no continuation of a thought process. Thus the Greek may allow the addition of "I am [the one that i claim to be]", or perhaps "I am [he]", in the middle of a sentence, when the character speaking has more to say, but does the same Greek principle apply to the end of a sentence? Is it akin to the grammatical convention of ending a sentence with a proposition?

Just a thought,

~ PA
 
Upvote 0
P

ParanoidAndroid

Guest
John 8
28 Jesus, therefore, said--Whensoever ye shall lift up the Son of Man, then, shall ye know, that, I, am he, and, of myself, am doing, nothing; but, just as the Father taught me, the same things, am I speaking. 58 Jesus said unto them--Verily, verily, I say unto you: Before, Abraham, came into existence, I, am. Rotherham.

so we have 2 verses

ye shall know that I am (he the christ) vers 28 (unless you trinitarians believe god can do nothing)
and

before abraham was, I am. (God according to trinitarians) verse 58

so , according to trinitarianss, sometimes Jesus means he is god and sometimes he means he is the christ when he says I am or ego eimi.

the trinitarian interpretation makes it look like Jesus can't make up his mind, first he says I am the christ the son of god, then no wait, I am god.

it would be like me saying "i am my fathers son, no wait, I am my father,
Well technically trinitarians claim Jesus is both Son and Father, so it is not too unsurprising if we state that Jesus claims both.
 
Upvote 0
P

ParanoidAndroid

Guest
Two different contexts, Ego eimi/"I am" means two different things. Jn 8:28 "Whensoever ye shall lift up the Son of Man, then, shall ye know, that, I, am [he]" Jesus had just identified someone as "the son of man" next he said, "then, shall ye know, that, I, am [he]" i.e. "the son of man."

The next verse Jn 8:58, has a different context. Jesus had not mentioned any title which he could have been referring back to, therefore the reference to being before Abraham followed by "I am" could only be understood as claiming to be the "I am." And that is why the priests, scribes, and Pharisees tried to stone him in vs. 58 and not vs. 28.
Thanks, that's about the thing I asked, though I wasn't entirely sure how it works. It seems that Jesus in verse 24 and 28 is responding to specific claims and continuing the thought discussion, whereas verse 58 seems to be a statement ending a sentence (the best English analogy I could think of at the time was "ending a sentence with a proposition".

Thanks for sharing further :cool:

~ PA
 
Upvote 0