It should go without saying that a person who speaks about “my God” has a God. Unfortunately, sometimes it has to be said.
The Apostles are Jewish monotheists, as is the Messiah himself.
Jewish monotheists do not acknowledge Jesus Christ to be God Almighty. Jewish monotheists acknowledge that the God and Father of Jesus Christ is God Almighty. No one else. The Father alone.
Thomas is a Jewish monotheist. He did not declare that a fellow Jewish monotheist is God Almighty. What Thomas acknowledged in his declaration about Jesus is that, finally, he sees the Father when he sees Jesus. (He hadn’t seen that in John 14.)
I like the heading of this chapter in NASB “Isaiah’s vision”. That’s not scripture, but it is the understanding of the translators passed along to assist the reader.
Where was Isaiah when he saw the glory of Yahweh?
Which translation are you quoting from? John 12:41 is not rendered that way in any translation I’ve seen.
John 12:45 makes clear that Jesus is Yahweh’s shaliach. When we see and hear Jesus it is as if we see and hear the one who sent Jesus - Yahweh.
We’ve spoken frequently enough that by now you should know that‘s not what I say.
Would you be offended if I were to say that trinitarianism is a cult?
See my comment above.
The Apostles are Jewish monotheists, as is the Messiah himself.
Jewish monotheists do not acknowledge Jesus Christ to be God Almighty. Jewish monotheists acknowledge that the God and Father of Jesus Christ is God Almighty. No one else. The Father alone.
Thomas is a Jewish monotheist. He did not declare that a fellow Jewish monotheist is God Almighty. What Thomas acknowledged in his declaration about Jesus is that, finally, he sees the Father when he sees Jesus. (He hadn’t seen that in John 14.)
I like the heading of this chapter in NASB “Isaiah’s vision”. That’s not scripture, but it is the understanding of the translators passed along to assist the reader.
Where was Isaiah when he saw the glory of Yahweh?
Which translation are you quoting from? John 12:41 is not rendered that way in any translation I’ve seen.
John 12:45 makes clear that Jesus is Yahweh’s shaliach. When we see and hear Jesus it is as if we see and hear the one who sent Jesus - Yahweh.
We’ve spoken frequently enough that by now you should know that‘s not what I say.
Would you be offended if I were to say that trinitarianism is a cult?
See my comment above.
Personally, I use the NASB. I do like the Cambridge Bible and what it says about John 12:41.
John 12:41
These things said Esaias, when he saw his glory, and spake of him.
41. when he saw] The better reading is, because he saw. We had a similar double reading in John 12:17, where ‘when’ is to be preferred. In the Greek the difference is only a single letter, ὅτε and ὅτι. Christ’s glory was revealed to Isaiah in a vision, and therefore he spoke of it. The glory of the Son before the Incarnation, when He was ‘in the form of God’ (Php 2:6), is to be understood.
I also like what the Keil and Delitzsch OT Commentary says:
In that year, says the prophet, "I saw the Lord of all sitting upon a high and exalted throne, and His borders filling the temple." Isaiah saw, and that not when asleep and dreaming; but God gave him, when awake, an insight into the invisible world, by opening an inner sense for the supersensuous, whilst the action of the outer senses was suspended, and by condensing the supersensuous into a sensuous form, on account of the composite nature of man and the limits of his present state. This was the mode of revelation peculiar to an ecstatic vision (ἐν ἐκστἀσει, Eng. ver. "in a trance," or ἐν πνεὐματι, "in the spirit"). Isaiah is here carried up into heaven; for although in other instances it was undoubtedly the earthly temple which was presented to a prophet's view in an ecstatic vision (Amos 9:1; Ezekiel 8:3; Ezekiel 10:4-5; cf., Acts 22:17), yet here, as the description which follows clearly proves, the "high and exalted throne"
(Note: It is to this, and not to ‛Adonai, as the Targum and apparently the accents imply, that the words "high and exalted" refer.)
is the heavenly antitype of the earthly throne which was formed by the ark of the covenant; and the "temple" (hēcâl: lit., a spacious hall, the name given to the temple as the palace of God the King) is the temple in heaven, as in Psalm 11:4; Psalm 18:7; Psalm 29:9, and many other passages. There the prophet sees the Sovereign Ruler, or, as we prefer to render the noun, which is formed from âdan equals dūn, "the Lord of all" (All-herrn, sovereign or absolute Lord), seated upon the throne, and in human form (Ezekiel 1:26), as is proved by the robe with a train, whose flowing ends or borders (fimibrae: shūilm, as in Exodus 28:33-34) filled the hall. The Sept., Targum, Vulgate, etc., have dropped the figure of the robe and train, as too anthropomorphic. But John, in his Gospel, is bold enough to say that it was Jesus whose glory Isaiah saw (John 12:41). And truly so, for the incarnation of God is the truth embodied in all the scriptural anthropomorphisms, and the name of Jesus is the manifested mystery of the name Jehovah. The heavenly temple is that super-terrestrial place, which Jehovah transforms into heaven and a temple, by manifesting Himself there to angels and saints. But whilst He manifests His glory there, He is obliged also to veil it, because created beings are unable to bear it. But that which veils His glory is no less splendid, than that portion of it which is revealed. And this was the truth embodied for Isaiah in the long robe and train. He saw the Lord, and what more he saw was the all-filling robe of the indescribable One. As far as the eye of the seer could look at first, the ground was covered by this splendid robe. There was consequently no room for any one to stand. And the vision of the seraphim is in accordance with this.
Btw, saying I'm in a cult, "Sticks and Stones.
IN GOD THE SON,
bluto
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