POLL: The Deity of Christ

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The Deity of Christ?


  • Total voters
    61
  • Poll closed .
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purgedconscience

Guest
A son is given...His name shall be called...Eternal Father, Isa 9:6
I'm sorry, flob, but the prophet Isaiah is not going to be of any help to your position either. Before we look at Isaiah chapter 9 verse 6, let's back up a bit to Isaiah chapter 7 verse 14:

Therefore the Lord himself shall give you a sign; Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel.

Now, let's look at the fulfillment of the same in Matthew chapter 1 verses 18 thru 23:

Now the birth of Jesus Christ was on this wise: When as his mother Mary was espoused to Joseph, before they came together, she was found with child of the Holy Ghost.
Then Joseph her husband, being a just man, and not willing to make her a publick example, was minded to put her away privily.
But while he thought on these things, behold, the angel of the Lord appeared unto him in a dream, saying, Joseph, thou son of David, fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife: for that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost.
And she shall bring forth a son, and thou shalt call his name JESUS: for he shall save his people from their sins.
Now all this was done, that it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the prophet, saying,
Behold, a virgin shall be with child, and shall bring forth a son, and they shall call his name Emmanuel, which being interpreted is, God with us.


What comes first in these passages? The conception or the bringing forth of a son? Elin has made a big deal of the use of the Greek word gennao in regard to that which is conceived in her, but I'll ask you the same question that I asked her:

Do you believe that this conception was somehow eternal?

Was Christ eternally conceived in Mary's womb?

Don't you see how ridiculous that is?

Hopefully, you do. Either way, conception preceded the bringing forth of a son and said conception took place in real time approximately two thousand years ago and not in eternity past when Jesus was allegedly eternally begotten, a self-refuting lie, but when Jesus was made of a woman and made under the law.

Now, let's look at Isaiah chapter 9 verse 6:

For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counseller, The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace.

Again, I ask:

How and when was this child born and how and when was this Son given?

This Son was made of a woman and made under the law approximately two thousand years ago and this Son was not eternally begotten which, again, is a self-refuting lie. Why would you want to believe and teach a lie which refutes itself? What good can possibly come of the same?

Yesterday, oldhermit posted the following and you might not have understood the significance of it:

oldhermit said:
The relationship of father and son seems to linked to time rather than eternity because of 2Sam 7:14. This would be an interesting think to see in just what perspective these terms apply.
Let's look at 2 Samuel chapter 7 verse 14 to see what oldhermit meant in relation to the Father and Son relationship being linked to time:

I will be his father, and he shall be my son. If he commit iniquity, I will chasten him with the rod of men, and with the stripes of the children of men:

This is one of many portions of scripture in the Old Testament where a dual application exists. In other words, it's partly referring to Solomon, David's son, and it's partly referring to Christ, the ultimate son of David. How can we be sure that this partly refers to Christ? Well, because it's given in that context in the New Testament book of Hebrews:

Hebrews chapter 1 verses 1 thru 5

God, who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the fathers by the prophets,
Hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son, whom he hath appointed heir of all things, by whom also he made the worlds;
Who being the brightness of his glory, and the express image of his person, and upholding all things by the word of his power, when he had by himself purged our sins, sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high;
Being made so much better than the angels, as he hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent name than they.
For unto which of the angels said he at any time, Thou art my Son, this day have I begotten thee? And again, I will be to him a Father, and he shall be to me a Son?

Why the futuristic tense of I will be to Him a Father and He shall be to me a Son if Jesus truly was God the Son from eternity past as you, Elin and others allege? In other words, why didn't God say, I am His Father and He is my Son? I'll tell you exactly why:

Because Jesus Christ didn't become the Son of God until at least the time of His incarnation. Why do I say until at least the time of His incarnation? Because it's quite probable that He couldn't rightly be called the Son of God until after His resurrection from the dead. I mean, think about it:

We have 2 Samuel chapter 7 verse 14 given here in direct association with Psalm 2 verse 7 where God declares on a set day in history that Christ is His Son because He has been begotten or raised from the dead.

We also have Romans chapter 1 verse 4 to consider which reads:

And declared to be the Son of God with power, according to the spirit of holiness, by the resurrection from the dead:

This verse leads me to believe that in order to fully be declared the Son of God, Christ needed to fulfill what was written in regard to the Son of God in relation to being raised from the dead or begotten.

There's also this to consider:

On what two occasions did God the Father speak from heaven audibly and declare that Jesus was His Son?

Well, He did so at Christ's baptism which signifies being buried and resurrected from the dead and on the Mount of Transfiguration when Moses and Elijah spoke unto Christ of His coming death and Christ's glory basically shown through the veil of His flesh as if He were in His glorified state or risen from the dead.

Thoughts?

Anybody?

I apologize that my posts have been getting lengthy here, but we really need to examine scripture if we're even going to come to a place of agreement. Thanks for understanding.
 
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purgedconscience

Guest
Is this really necessary - or wise ?

Could we not ask simply "Have you considered ..... "
or even "Do you think that .... ".

Far less confrontational and patronising.
I see what you're saying, but that certainly wasn't my intent. That said, it was a poor choice of words and I'll be more careful in the future. Thanks for pointing that out to me.
 
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purgedconscience

Guest
Do you say that the Son of God is God?
I'll explain again what I presently believe and then also explain how it differs from that which you, Elin and others believe.

I believe that in the beginning was the Word and the Word was God. In other words, I believe that the Word is God from eternity past.

I believe that approximately 2,000 years ago the Word was made flesh and given the name of Jesus as we now commonly refer to Him.

I believe at some stage of His incarnation and resurrection from the dead, Jesus came to rightly be called the Son of God. In other words, I do not presently believe that Jesus was the Son of God from eternity past, but instead that His Sonship is in direct relation to things which transpired at or after His incarnation and resurrection from the dead.

Since Jesus is the Word made flesh and since the Word was always God from the beginning, I believe that the One Whom we commonly refer to as Jesus is both fully God and fully man or the God-man.

How does this differ from your view and the views of some others?

Well, you believe that Jesus was eternally begotten, a self-refuting lie in that that which is eternal can never be begotten or generated or have a starting point, and that Jesus was always the Son of God or God the Son. I see no basis for the same in scripture.
 
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purgedconscience

Guest
The titles 'Son of God' and 'Christ' refer to His Deity, His divinity.
Again, Christ means anointed, so how can that title refer to His Deity? Who anointed the God part of Jesus? Did God the Father somehow anoint the One Whom you call God the Son? Why would God need to anoint God? The title of Christ refers to Jesus' humanity and not to His Deity. It was His humanity which needed to be anointed and not His Divine nature.

flob said:
As an aside, do you likewise avoid the words 'Triune' or 'Trinity' because they aren't verbatim in Scripture?
I don't have much occasion, in daily life, to use the expression God the Son; but I think the distinction is that 'God the Son' emphasizes (or refers to) the Son before Incarnation, while 'Son of God' refers to Him at any point. But I don't think that's a 'legal' or strict rule necessarily. As far as Scripture............I will force myself to wait (per above) for a little more understanding of your thought
I have no problem using such terms as Triune or Trinity because such concepts are easily supported by a wealth of scriptures. Contrariwise, I have a major problem with God the Son in that I believe that concept to be totally unsupported by scripture. The Son of God Who became the same at some time during His incarnation and/or after His resurrection from the dead? Yes. God the Son Who allegedly was eternally begotten, a self-refuting lie? No and there is a world of difference between the two and I've sought to explain the distinction more than once here already. Hopefully, you and others can at least understand what that distinction is even if you don't agree with it presently.
 
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Isaiah chapter 7 verse 14:
Therefore the Lord himself shall give you a sign; Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel.

Now, let's look at the fulfillment of the same in Matthew chapter 1 verses 18 thru 23:
Now all this was done, that it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the prophet, saying,
Behold, a virgin shall be with child, and shall bring forth a son, and they shall call his name Emmanuel, which being interpreted is, God with us.
Careful Purge, old mate.
You are no doubt aware that no virgin birth prophecy existed.
Isaiah's "alma" simply meant 'young woman' - and in any case, referred to a specific situation in Isaiah's time.
 
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purgedconscience

Guest
Careful Purge, old mate.
You are no doubt aware that no virgin birth prophecy existed.
Isaiah's "alma" simply meant 'young woman' - and in any case, referred to a specific situation in Isaiah's time.
In its very first appearance in scripture, alma clearly meant a virgin:

Genesis chapter 24 verse 43

Behold, I stand by the well of water; and it shall come to pass, that when the virgin cometh forth to draw water, and I say to her, Give me, I pray thee, a little water of thy pitcher to drink;


How can we know that this very first usage of alma, here translated as virgin, spoken in relation to Rebekah literally meant a virgin? Easy. Just back up a bit within this same chapter and read what was said about this same exact Rebekah:

Genesis chapter 24 verse 16

And the damsel was very fair to look upon, a virgin, neither had any man known her: and she went down to the well, and filled her pitcher, and came up.

This alma was clearly a virgin.

:)
 

oldhermit

Senior Member
Jul 28, 2012
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In its very first appearance in scripture, alma clearly meant a virgin:

Genesis chapter 24 verse 43

Behold, I stand by the well of water; and it shall come to pass, that when the virgin cometh forth to draw water, and I say to her, Give me, I pray thee, a little water of thy pitcher to drink;


How can we know that this very first usage of alma, here translated as virgin, spoken in relation to Rebekah literally meant a virgin? Easy. Just back up a bit within this same chapter and read what was said about this same exact Rebekah:

Genesis chapter 24 verse 16

And the damsel was very fair to look upon, a virgin, neither had any man known her: and she went down to the well, and filled her pitcher, and came up.

This alma was clearly a virgin.

:)
I do not know Hebrew but, from what I understand, there is no word in Hebrew for 'virgin'. This idea is implied in the use of alma - young maiden. However, both Luke and Matthew refer to this passage from Isaiah and give their inspired translation of that verse using the Greek παρθένος which means literally 'virgin'. This defies any notion that suggest Mary was not a virgin but merely a young woman.
 

Yahshua

Senior Member
Sep 22, 2013
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[...]The Word, the Second Person of the Trinity, has always existed, but you've not offered even a single shred of evidence that the Word was always the Son of God.
I may be misunderstanding the challenge here, and forgive me if I am, but Elin surely has offered evidence that the Word was/is the Son of God, at least well before Christ was raised from the dead, which I think is the original point Elin is making.

------

I think we're getting too hung up on the words "begotten" and "raised up" as fulfilling Psalm 2:7 when we have no record of The Father literally saying to Christ *after his resurrection*, "I have begotten you today". We have the writer of Hebrews attributing the Psalm passage to the Father as well as a record of Paul attributing the passage to the Father, each for Christ. But nowhere in the record we do have - the four gospels - does the Father say "I have begotten you today" *after* Christ's resurrection.

However...3 Times during Christ's ministry (before his death and subsequent resurrection), The Father himself speaks from heaven to Christ in the presence of witnesses...and 2 of those times He declares about Christ, "This is my Son."

1) During Christ's baptism (Matthew 3:17), witnessed by John and the other bystanders
2) During Christ's transfiguration at Tabernacles (Matthew 17:5), witnessed by John the beloved, Peter and James

Two or more witnesses establishes a truth, so this is at least twice we read The Father calling Christ (who is called the Word of God, established in John 1:1) His Son...again, before his resurrection.

Now the important part of Psalm 2:7 is The Father's DECREE; saying "you are my son".

Psalm 2:7
I will proclaim the LORD's decree: He said to me, "You are my son; today I have become your father [or today I have begotten thee]".


It's the DECLARATION the Father makes to Christ that fulfills the Psalm passage. We read that the writer "will proclaim" God's decree, and that "[God] said to me 'You are my son...'". The fulfillment of the passage - as prophesied by the passage itself - is when God says these words, and the only times God said these words are at the beginning of Christ's ministry and again around the time of the feast of Tabernacles...before his resurrection.

So if the fulfillment of the passage hinges on God saying "you are my son", then the rest of his declaration ("today I have begotten you" or "today I have become your father") is subsequently *attached to* and *follows* the main statement. In other words, Christ is *begotten of God*, not because of his resurrection but because God told the world (twice) that Christ is truly his Son, in his own words...that is, if we follow the prophecy of Psalm 2:7.

This lends itself to what Elin is saying: that Christ's resurrection is *proof* of the truth God himself testified to during Christ's ministry: that Christ is "The Only Begotten" (i.e. that Christ is The Son of God)...and that Paul is summarizing how Christ is that promised seed.

------

So what does "begotten" mean?

Well another important point we can pull from Psalm 2:7 is that a link is made by God between "begotten" and "Son". In other words, one is begotten because one is a son...so this passage establishes that the two words are interchangeable.

Now our own natural reasoning tells us why a Son is begotten of a Father and that is, because that son comes from his Father.
"Son" = "Begotten" = "Comes From"


Then Christ gives explanations that there is only one who comes from God: The Son.

John 6:45-46
"45"It is written in the prophets, 'AND THEY SHALL ALL BE TAUGHT OF GOD.' Everyone who has heard and learned from the Father, comes to Me.

46 [No one] has seen the Father, except the One who is from God; He has seen the Father."


As "the only one from God" (i.e. "only begotten", "Only Son"), Christ is the *only one* who has seen the Father. This means not even the ministering spirits of the heavenly hosts have seen the Father. Yet with this truth established by Christ we have to revisit each of the times we read God communicating either to his angels, to man and even to Satan in the Old testament.

"Anyone who has heard or learned from the Father comes to me (as a truth)."

"No one come to the Father except THROUGH me".​


If the "Word of God" is his Son and his "words"...and if the Son is the image of the *invisible* God...and if The Father is that very "unapproachable light" that Christ dwells in (preached by Paul in 1 timothy 6:16), and if no one comes to the Father except through the Word of God, then each time The Father communicated with man or angel it most likely was The Son communicating *for* the Father, in his name. NO one has seen the Father. Only the Son make him known.

"Before Abraham was...I am", says Christ.
 
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flob

Guest
Christ means anointed, so how can that title refer to His Deity?
He was anointed in His baptism, yet He was Christ before then, so He was anointed as God
(the Son of God, the Word of God, the Wisdom of God, the Image of God) before His incarnation.

In addition (I wish I could be as clear as the word of God): He was anointed as God once His
humanity became God. Romans 1:4; Hebrews 1:9.
Therefore God, Your God, has anointed You with the oil of exultant joy above Your partners.






Who anointed the God part of Jesus?
Who else could but God?




Did God the Father somehow anoint the One Whom you call God the Son?
Since Christ was Christ before He became flesh, and Christ is the Son before He became flesh,
and Christ is God before He became flesh, and God is ThreeOne before God became flesh,
the Father apparently anointed the Son with the Spirit some 'time' in eternity past.




Why would God need to anoint God?
a) Because He wants to. b) Because God is not a barren, sterile, One;
He is Three in One. And c) Because the Triune God has an eternal purpose
to fulfill







The title of Christ refers to Jesus' humanity and not to His Deity.
To the contrary: it refers primarily to His divinity when used in conjunction with His name
'Jesus.' Since the word and name 'Jesus' refers to His humanity. However, since the time
the Word became flesh (incarnation), and since the time that flesh was designated 'Son of God'
in power according to the Spirit of holiness out of the resurrection of the dead (resurrection), Christ
(Anointed One) includes both His divinized humanity and His divinity. Just like His name 'Son.'






It was His humanity which needed to be anointed and not His Divine nature.
You are more than welcome to tell that to God. 'Anointed' refers to His office. His commission. Which
He had even before Incarnation, as well as at His human birth and life, as well as in resurrection and ascension.
And it's not so much to say His 'nature' was anointed-----------but that He was anointed. Him, Himself. His Person.





God the Son Who allegedly was eternally begotten, a self-refuting lie? No and there is a world of difference between the two and I've sought to explain the distinction more than once here already. Hopefully, you and others can at least understand what that distinction is even if you don't agree with it presently.
I think I understand your distinction. And your concerns and fears and thoughts. On this.
I promised to try to supply you the Scriptures especially directly on the thought of the term 'God the Son,' so as to help you see why the Son is without beginning and without end. Just like His Father (and His Spirit). And I will get to that. I appreciate very much your kind patience with me. Especially given the seeming volume of each post we end up offering one another.
I am not 'for' the term 'God the Son.' I use it only as I use Triune, to make an emphatic description of what Scripture, God Himself, reveals through His apostles and prophets. I certainly have no law that anyone use or must use non-explicitly-Bible words, such as Triune, Trinity, God the Son, Eternally Begotten.

In regard to the last term, Eternally Begotten, I fail to see how it is a self-refuting lie. I understand what you said about it. But to me it is clear that reproduction and life are God's main concerns, or nature, or theme. And thus the theme of His Book. And also, creation, of all life---they serve as pictures, however lower than His life: of the transcendent, mysterious, profound, life and being we call God. Which also fits into His purpose (namely: to have many sons, Rm 8). God predestinated His lovers and believers in His only begotten Son, such that, at the end of His process, in time, and creation, redemption and salvation, both now and in eternity future: God will have many sons, as many brothers, of His now Firstborn Son. To effectively, however mysterious it is to understand: 'enlarge and expand' His Son as His expression and masterpiece, and family, for eternity.

The point of all that is that I mean Father, Son, and Spirit are dynamic. Not static. They are not separate, They are one. Connected. On an elemental level. Namely on the level of life. They comprise one life. The eternal life. Eternal life isn't (merely) living forever. Eternal life is the Triune God. So 'Eternally Begotten' is simply some dear believers' attempt to describe that. Brought about, in fact, by the 'heat,' or opposition, and attack of heresy. Arius' heresy. Actually, Satan's heresy. God the Father in this way can be likened to a spring. The Son to the visible fountain gushing forth. And the Spirit to the eternal river of water of life flowing out (to whoever will receive Him). They are connected. They are one. They are distinct. But They are one life. One flow. Ever-living. Even to the extent of constant begetting, constant filling, constant moving. Thanks for putting up with my poor attempts at utterance (if you are). I'll try to both be more economical with words,
as well as address all your other questions or arguments. : )
 
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This whole alma/young woman, bethulah/virgin thing has been done to death I suppose - and no fundie christian is ever going to accept the most logical arbiter .... Jewish sources !

However, just in case there are any without a closed mind ..........



Does the Hebrew Word Alma Really Mean “Virgin”? | Outreach Judaism

" For nearly two millennia the Church has insisted that the Hebrew word almah עַלְמָה can only mean “virgin.”
This is a vital position for defenders of Christianity to take because Matthew 1:22-23 translates
alma in Isaiah 7:14 as “virgin.”
The first Gospel quotes this well known verse to provide the only “Old Testament” proof text for the supposed virgin birth of Jesus.
The stakes are high for Christendom.
If the Hebrew word
alma does not mean a virgin, Matthew crudely misquoted the prophet Isaiah, and both a key tenet of Christianity and the credibility of the first Gospel collapses.

In the same way that in the English language the words “young woman” does not indicate sexual purity, in the Hebrew language there is no relationship between the words almah and virgin.
On the contrary, it is usually a young woman who bears children.
The word alma only conveys age/gender.
Had Isaiah wished to speak about a virgin, he would have used the word
betulah (בְּתוּלָה) not almah.
The word
betulah appears frequently in the Jewish Scriptures, and is the only word – in both biblical and modern Hebrew – that conveys sexual purity. "
 
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flob

Guest
Jewish sources translated the Septuagint. Did they not?
Is Genesis a Jewish source?

In Judaism, and the ordinances and commandments and such, should unamarried young women be virgins?
I translate Isa 7:14 'young woman.' Mary was a young woman. From Matthew and Luke we also know she was a virgin
when she conceived and bore Christ. Matthew's translation of Isaiah is both inspired and, to whatever extent, appreciates
the Septuagint. (Some of it's translations seem inspired by God. To me.)

A mere, married, young woman conceiving and bearing a son is not in itself much of a 'sign,' Isa 7:14.
(This reflects some of the wisdom and intelligence of some of the Jewish sources, B.C., in their commentary and
translation.) Also a sign is that His name is Immanuel. Frequently prophecy is dually-fulfilled. Such as also with Solomon
building a temple. Solomon and Christ are both sons of David, descendants. And One build His church, Mt 16:18.
The only way God chose, or could, enter the human race---in fact the way He designed----was by the Holy Spirit impregnating Mary, conceiving in her womb, thus producing a God-Man. 1 Cor 11:12; etc.
 
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In its very first appearance in scripture, alma clearly meant a virgin:

Genesis chapter 24 verse 43

Behold, I stand by the well of water; and it shall come to pass, that when the (alma - young woman - wrongly translated as >)virgin cometh forth to draw water, and I say to her, Give me, I pray thee, a little water of thy pitcher to drink;


How can we know that this very first usage of alma, here translated as virgin, spoken in relation to Rebekah literally meant a virgin?
Easy. Just back up a bit within this same chapter and read what was said about this same exact Rebekah:

Genesis chapter 24 verse 16

And the damsel was very fair to look upon, a (alma - young woman -wrongly translated as >) virgin, neither had any man known her: and she went down to the well, and filled her pitcher, and came up.

This alma was clearly a virgin. :)
Good try, Purged. Unfortunately, you destroy your own argument.

If alma meant 'virgin', there would obviously be no need to add "neither had any man known her".
By doing so it says ... "a virgin who was a virgin".

But because alma does not denote virginity, it simply says that, in this case, the young woman had not 'known' a man.
 

oldhermit

Senior Member
Jul 28, 2012
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"BEHOLD, THE VIRGIN (παρθένος) SHALL BE WITH CHILD AND SHALL BEAR A SON, AND THEY SHALL CALL HIS NAME IMMANUEL," which translated means, "GOD WITH US." Matt. 1:23
 
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flob

Guest
Do you believe that this conception was somehow eternal?
Was Christ eternally conceived in Mary's womb?
Don't you see how ridiculous that is?
I prolly don't understand the questions. Everybody got an everlasting soul.
So all people conceptions result in that.
(That's one reason Once born anew, Always born anew's true.)
If you mean Mary's eternally begetting the Lord: of course not.






Jesus was made of a woman and made under the law.
Dear gentleman sir: I've noticed you have the tendency of doing that.
Of misrepresenting----or, that's too strong: mistranslating----or substituting a little bit loosely
for some Bible words. Galatians 4:4 reads that: When the fullness of time came, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman , born under law. I have a beautiful song to that. God 'sending forth' His Son matches 1 Jn 5:20 that The Son of God has come.
That doesn't mean He came in His adulthood. It means that He came from the heavens. From God. Just like the Bread of Life in John 6. The manna in Exodus. He was already the (eternal) Son of God when He came. He didn't need birth through Mary to become Son. The virgin-birth is not what constitutes the Son of God the Son of God. Rather: that was His means of Incarnating. Of becoming, putting on, flesh, a body (with soul and spirit). The fullness of time in Gal 4:4 means the time to be incarnated. God sent forth His Son 1. Born of a woman 2. Born under law 2 also. 4:4 does not read or mean: When the fullness of time came, God became a Son. (Yes, God became a son of Mary, Son of David, son of Abraham, son of Adam, Son of Man, when the fullness of time came. But God was already the Son of God when He was sent forth (by His Father) and conceived into the womb of Mary.)
Maybe that is what Elin is referring to. I don't know. I would have to go back and read. I sharply disagreed with Elin over the (plain to me) meaning of John 10:38; 14:10, 20a; 17:21middle. But Matthew 1:20, That which has been begotten in her is of the Holy Spirit, indicates that the Son of God (God the Son), the Same who was sent forth in the fullness of time to be born of a woman,----indicates, I was saying: that the Son of God was born into the womb of Mary. Via conception of her egg by the Spirit. The beginningless Son of God came forth to be conceived into, begotten in, Mary; to be born, begotten, and delivered by Her as the Son of Man, mingled with the Son of God, Micah 5:2; Leviticus 2:4
 
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"BEHOLD, THE VIRGIN (παρθένος) SHALL BE WITH CHILD AND SHALL BEAR A SON, AND THEY SHALL CALL HIS NAME IMMANUEL," which translated means, "GOD WITH US." Matt. 1:23
Unfortunately Oldie, that is the problem !

Whoever wrote the 'gospel' of Matthew is probably quoting Isaiah from the Septuagint - agreed ?
In which the 'alma -young woman' is mistranslated into Greek as 'parthenos- virgin'.

"Matthew" may have been quoting the truth as he knew it ..... but he was wrong.



Incidentally, is there any hint of Yeshua ever having been called 'Immanuel' ?
 
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oldhermit

Senior Member
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Unfortunately Oldie, that is the problem !

Whoever wrote the 'gospel' of Matthew is probably quoting Isaiah from the Septuagint - agreed ?
In which the 'alma -young woman' is mistranslated into Greek as 'parthenos- virgin'.

"Matthew" may have been quoting the truth as he knew it ..... but he was wrong.



Incidentally, is there any hint of Yeshua ever having been called 'Immanuel' ?
Matthew was written by Matthew and what was written was not copied from any secondary or tertiary sources. Whatever any biblical writer wrote was done so by the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. "BEHOLD, THE VIRGIN (παρθένος) SHALL BE WITH CHILD AND SHALL BEAR A SON, AND THEY SHALL CALL HIS NAME IMMANUEL," which translated means, "GOD WITH US" is not the words of Matthew, he was only the instrument through which these words were written. What is written in this verse is the Holy Spirit's own translation of the words of Isaiah. The Holy Spirit has decided what the term alma meant in Isaiah. I do not know why this should be surprising since the Holy spirit is the source of both Isaiah and Matthew. When you call into question the authority and legitimacy of ANY part of the written word then it is clear you do not know what the Bible is.
 
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It is crystal clear that all 'scriptures' have been penned by men.
It is up to you to establish that they were guided by some holy spirit.


And take care - you cannot prove a book from within that book !
I can produce a tome tomorrow ..... chock-full of claims that I have been directed by a god.
I might even believe it.
Doesn't make it so.
 
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