Vic
Elite Member
- Jun 12, 2001
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Originally posted by: slurmsmackenzie
Originally posted by: Vic
Originally posted by: slurmsmackenzie
Originally posted by: Vic
Originally posted by: slurmsmackenzie
this from the wiki:
Jewish relevance of the word YHWH to the (I Am) in the New Testament
The New Testament does not use the Tetragrammaton. The two Greek words that are consistently used to speak in reference to God are ?????? (?lord,? ?master?) and ?e?? (?God?). However, in the past, some some scholars endeavored to make a connection between Jesus? use of the first person singular personal pronoun e?? in conjunction with the first person singular form of e?µ? (?to be?) as an allusion to the tetragrammaton. Today, few scholars would say that there is a connection between the ?I am? and the divine name. Edwin Freed explains, ?the meaning of the sentence in the mind of the writer was: 'Before Abraham was, I, the Christ, the Son of God, existed.? [10] William Loader notes that the ?text need mean no more than I am and was in existence before Abraham, still a majestic unique claim but not an allusion to the divine name.? [11] The Simple English Bible translates it as, ?I am the Messiah.? K.L. McKay notes, ?The emphatic words used by Jesus in the passages referred to above [including John 8:58] are perfectly natural in their contexts, and they do not echo the words of Exodus 3:14 in the normally quoted Greek version.? [12] John 9:9 is but one example that Margaret Davies uses to show that it ?allowthe speaker to identify himself ... thus the man born blind identifies himself as the man born blind.? [13]
If you could go back 2000 years, find this Jesus of Nazareth, and you asked him if he is the Son of God, he might say "Yes, aren't you too?"
It should be understood that Jesus was not even formally deified by the Catholic church until 325 AD.
BTW, this -- ?????? (?lord,? ?master?) -- translates from Greek into Hebrew as Adonai, which is the spoken form of the YHWH (which was never to be spoken aloud).
This -- ?e?? (?God?) -- is Zeus (or Deus). And yes, it means God.
who gives a schniz what the catholics think? they molest boys and count beads. when the hell was jesus ever a bead counting petteras?
You think maybe you should have actually read (or tried to understand) my post before this little rant? I seriously doubt that engineereeyore will think that I was coming to his rescue in your little argument with him (because I wasn't), so what's your problem?
didn't think i had one.... i was just expressing my thoughts on the catholic religion and when they decided what.
Yeah well, as you're obviously not aware, the Catholic church IS Christianity. Not its own separate religion. They have over a billion members and account for roughly half of the people who call themselves Christians. And in 325 AD, they were the only Christian church. So if they decided to deify Jesus at that time, that made it a pretty big deal for Christian dogma, especially when he wasn't deified before.
BTW, the word "catholic" is Latin for universal. Translated simply, it means The One Church.
WTF, how do you people even pretend to yourself that you can argue these subjects, or that you can hate on the beliefs of billions of people when you don't even know what those beliefs are? Really...
