J
jbeck43
Guest
Actually in John 8:58, He did. Here, Christ is calling Himself by the divine name. In Hebrew, it is the YHWH, but in Greek, it is Eigo Eimi. Jesus is using the name that God gave to Himself in Exodus 3:2-6, when Moses asks God in the burning bush, “Whom should I say sent me?” Here, God says, “tell them ‘I Am’ sent you.” The Greek from the Septuagint reads, Eigo Eimi. He is precisely calling Himself the Supreme God in this verse, and He is being shockingly unambiguous in His usage. There is no clearer way for Him to profess not only that He is God, but also that He is their God, the God of Israel, the YHWH. That is why they picked stones to kill Him as prescribed by the Law.
The question as to why others in the old testament were called sons of God is usually a reference to 1 Chron. 3:28, where Solomon is called a Son of God. Here, as in all other passages in the Old Testament, God is calling them sons not because they are by nature, but by declaration. God, in a sense, is adopting them, so long as they remain with Him and obey His precepts. So the Jews knew the context of these declarations and knew that David or Solomon were again not sons by nature, and this is evident by the Shma, “Here O Israel, the Lord your God is One”.
But this is very different with Jesus. With Christ, He, by not qualifying that He was a son in an adoptive sense, was declaring to the Jews that He was a son in the natural sense. The Jewish crowd knew what He meant. He was proclaiming for Himself the divine nature, and by doing so, declared Himself to be God also. This is why the Jews were so upset with Jesus, and tried to stone Him, once again in John 8. So don’t let them fool you with arguments from Scripture that they themselves don’t understand or appreciate. We’re the ones who put it together, which is why we understand it best.
The question as to why others in the old testament were called sons of God is usually a reference to 1 Chron. 3:28, where Solomon is called a Son of God. Here, as in all other passages in the Old Testament, God is calling them sons not because they are by nature, but by declaration. God, in a sense, is adopting them, so long as they remain with Him and obey His precepts. So the Jews knew the context of these declarations and knew that David or Solomon were again not sons by nature, and this is evident by the Shma, “Here O Israel, the Lord your God is One”.
But this is very different with Jesus. With Christ, He, by not qualifying that He was a son in an adoptive sense, was declaring to the Jews that He was a son in the natural sense. The Jewish crowd knew what He meant. He was proclaiming for Himself the divine nature, and by doing so, declared Himself to be God also. This is why the Jews were so upset with Jesus, and tried to stone Him, once again in John 8. So don’t let them fool you with arguments from Scripture that they themselves don’t understand or appreciate. We’re the ones who put it together, which is why we understand it best.
Re-read that passage, He said “I am” before Abramham, but He did Not say “I am God.” I know that it is our interpretation of the phrase “I am” that He meant He is God, but He never said that about Himself in a clear manner.
