More than some. The Trinitarian Baptist John Gill did too as did Matthew Henry. The idea appears in the 1599 Geneva Bible footnotes. Charles Spurgeon has statements along these lines too.Do you know that there were some folks (including adventists) who believe that Jesus is Michael the Archangel?
And the Bible is fairly clear on the point.
But since the question of Michael has nothing to do with non-trinitarianism in Adventism, this is the wrong thread for a discussion of this topic.
I have yet to meet anyone that denies that there are theophanies in the OT, where God appeared to people, where it was the Son who appeared, where the Son is called the Angel of the Lord. The question, then becomes whether Michael is a theophany or not.
I also haven't found anyone who denies that the "prince of the host" of Daniel 8 is Christ. The Hebrew for that phrase is also found in Joshua where the captain of the Lord's host appears to Joshua, and Joshua worships Him. That captain then talks to Joshua as if He Himself is God. I think there should be general agreement that this too is a theophany.
In the word "archangel," the word arche means first in time or palce, and is thus translated "beginning" and "ruler," depending on the context. Thus, "archangel" can simply mean "ruler of the angels." As such, it is functionally equivalent to the phrase "captain of the Lord's host," "prince of the host."
That is just one line of evidence, and there are several, that point to Michael the Archangel being the uncreated, divine, Son of God.
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