If you can manage to sift through all the material, I think you will find (like I do) that Deut. 32:39 and Isaiah 44-45 are central to the arguments laid out by Paul (1 Cor. 8-10, Heb. 1:6-12) and John (Jn. 1:1-3), particularly when it comes to the notion of pre-existence.
It should also be pointed out that 2 Ezra 6 (especially 6:6) is an early Jewish attempt at understanding Isaiah 44-45 in light of Gen. 1, hence all the "intertextual" allusions made to both throughout. This is precisely what Paul (and John) do, and is particularly a good reason for not rendering Jn. 1:1 in the way Jehovah's Witnesses suggest it be rendered, "the Word was a god."
For one (as expressed previously),
And second (and probably a little bit more technical), Jn. 1:1 has verbal and conceptual affinities with Deut. 32:39 LXX and Isaiah 45:14-15 LXX. These texts do not use a preverbal predicate nominative, but rather—in contrast to Jn. 1:1—place the verb in the same position as Acts 28:6. Why are we not examining Jn. 1:1 in light of OT texts such as these, which have verbal and conceptual ties? Shouldn’t we keep a keen eye towards Isaiah’s (and Deut’s) influence on the Johannine framework?
The verb placement in Jn. 1:1 does not correlate with Deut 32:39 LXX, or Isaiah 45:14 LXX, which speaks of "other gods" existing with God. Rather, it correlates better with texts such as Deut. 4:35 LXX and Josh. 24:17 LXX, where the term, “God” is used qualitatively (rather than indefinitely).
Each time the OT speaks of “a god” being “with” YHWH, it always in a negative light, and places the verb before the noun to give it a sense of “another god.” These are precisely the reasons I reject the NWT, and your understanding of the text.
I am not trying to beat you up, simply trying to (from my perspective), "correct your lens."
It should also be pointed out that 2 Ezra 6 (especially 6:6) is an early Jewish attempt at understanding Isaiah 44-45 in light of Gen. 1, hence all the "intertextual" allusions made to both throughout. This is precisely what Paul (and John) do, and is particularly a good reason for not rendering Jn. 1:1 in the way Jehovah's Witnesses suggest it be rendered, "the Word was a god."
For one (as expressed previously),
The Word participated in the very work that Isaiah 44-45 solely attributes to God, something that can be said of no other god (Isaiah 44-45). That is the point. It just so happens that in Isaiah 45:4-6, God alone is credited with “forming light,” and “creating darkness.” This statement in Isaiah 45 is an immediate allusion to Gen. 1:1-3, and is something the Word Himself participates in (John 1:1-4; Targum Neofiti on Gen. 1:1-3).
The verb placement in Jn. 1:1 does not correlate with Deut 32:39 LXX, or Isaiah 45:14 LXX, which speaks of "other gods" existing with God. Rather, it correlates better with texts such as Deut. 4:35 LXX and Josh. 24:17 LXX, where the term, “God” is used qualitatively (rather than indefinitely).
Each time the OT speaks of “a god” being “with” YHWH, it always in a negative light, and places the verb before the noun to give it a sense of “another god.” These are precisely the reasons I reject the NWT, and your understanding of the text.
I am not trying to beat you up, simply trying to (from my perspective), "correct your lens."
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