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Jett Clark said:But we're not debating whether Christ was God manifested in the flesh. That's obvious. What's not obvious is what degree of omniscience Christ had.
Was He sent on a mission which He worked to fulfill? Or did He know each and every exact detail of what was going to happen from day one? What I'm asking is what degree of "man" Christ was. Did God reveal to Him that He was God when He was baptised, or did He know all along? It's difficult to say, because the Markan text doesn't really reveal these things.
FWIW, my opinion is that Tom Wright is on track. Jesus' self knowledge was vocational rather than prepositional. He knew he had a vocation to say, do and be what the scriptures said YHWH would say and do.
It seems very clear from scripture that any "omniscience" was set aside
I think I would side with Ebia on this one as well (though we may have somewhat different understandings and that is fine). For example the one who came as Messiah/Jesus always was YHVH, the Word (see "the Memra" which in Greek was rendered Logos). This is a pre-Christian idea culminated in the Targums (whether from Babylonian Judaism or Jerusalem Judaism) that when we see or hear God in the OT it is the Word (any anthropomorphisms as well).
For Jesus said no one has seen or heard the Father at any time, the Son declares Him (that is, makes Him manifest). So John opens with a very Rabbinical idea which was that this Jesus was the Word...thus whenever God appeared (in His various forms...such as the Glory or Shekinah or even as a man) it was YHVH the Word, or what we call the Son (still YHVH), but as the Son of Man He laid His majesty aside, and for example does not know the day or the hour when He would return (thus not totally omniscient in one sense)...but yes this was off topic.
Paul
Except I've pointed out to you before that the fragment does not actually say that, does it?Harry3142 said:According to The Muratorian Fragment the book of Acts was already completed prior to St. Paul's release from his first imprisonment and his journeying to Spain.
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