Jesus as True God and True Man

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Correct, it is the fulfillment that is to be interpreted in light of the prophesy but saying that i have a particular interpretation of the prophesy itself is meaningless.
You haven’t established fulfilment. For example, you say Isaiah is talking about a virgin and Mary was a virgin, I don’t accept the ‘prophesy’ about virginity and I don’t accept that Mary was a virgin.

As yet, you’ve done nothing but assert.
 
You haven’t established fulfilment. For example, you say Isaiah is talking about a virgin and Mary was a virgin, I don’t accept the ‘prophesy’ about virginity and I don’t accept that Mary was a virgin.

As yet, you’ve done nothing but assert.
Ok, at least we are moving to the root cause of our divide.

So what exactly does Isaiah 7:14 talk about? What does it say and what do you think it means?
 
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So what exactly does Isaiah 7:14 talk about? What does it say and what do you think it means?
Ah, now we move to the usual proof text ‘pantomime debate’ (“Oh, yes it is!”/“Oh, no it isn’t!”)?

Doesn’t lead anywhere, used to be quite fun in the 90s when we all had to do it all fresh and think on our feet, now a quick google is all that’s needed.

Proof texts are the most barren form of apologetics, seriously.
 
Ah, now we move to the usual proof text ‘pantomime debate’ (“Oh, yes it is!”/“Oh, no it isn’t!”)?

Doesn’t lead anywhere, used to be quite fun in the 90s when we all had to do it all fresh and think on our feet, now a quick google is all that’s needed.

Proof texts are the most barren form of apologetics, seriously.
Of course i know the drill, the word means ‘a young woman’ mistranslated to a ‘virgin’.
Well, if this is not the most barren idea then i don’t know what is, coz a young woman giving birth is not a sign for anything, they do it all the time even now.
 
Well, if this is not the most barren idea then i don’t know what is, coz a young woman giving birth is not a sign for anything, they do it all the time even now.
Well, if you know the drill, you know the context.
 
Well, if you know the drill, you know the context.
A young woman giving birth is not a sign in any context, a child learning to speak is not a sign, a man walking down the street is not a sign, these are natural things expected to happen any time.
 
A young woman giving birth is not a sign in any context
Well, the child is, obviously, important in the context of the time. That you want it to be about an entirely different time and context is your problem not mine.
 
Well, the child is, obviously, important in the context of the time. That you want it to be about an entirely different time and context is your problem not mine.
It’s true, a young woman giving birth is not a sign of anything.

And now i can tell your problem is the idea that the OT is made up of write ups, prophesies and the law. Not at all, it is all prophesy, what was being said to the people and the kings, and what was happening to them real time was all prophesy about the end times which is now.

Isaiah 43:8-13 is a good hint
 
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Empty assertion isn’t argument.
It is not an empty assertion. In the NT we still see the same kind of talk about Judah and Jerusalem being separate, these consistency means whatever happened as a narrated in the OT was a prophesy which is being fulfilled today in the spiritual sense.

A barren assertion is the claim that a young woman giving birth is a sign.
 
A barren assertion is the claim that a young woman giving birth is a sign.
At best, proof text arguments are often not so much about signs as they are about signifieds. Usually, the signs don’t even count as signs.
 
At best, proof text arguments are often not so much about signs as they are about signifieds. Usually, the signs don’t even count as signs.
You have not explained how a young woman giving birth is a sign, how young? which young woman?
Text is all we have and is all we can argue from.
Why was prophesy and law and the so called writings recorded? If the sign of a young woman was only meant for king Ahaz during that period, why was it recorded later for people to read?
Of what importance was it to the people even today?
 
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You have not explained how a young woman giving birth is a sign, how young? which young woman?
As I suggested above, google is your friend in proof text arguments.
Of what importance was it to the people even today?
Why should we care what importance others ascribe to our texts?

Judaism isn’t Christianity minus Jesus, Christianity isn’t Judaism plus Jesus. They’re two different religions, you don’t get to determine how Jews view/interpret/use our scriptures any more than we get to determine how you use yours (or how you use ours).
 
Why should we care what importance others ascribe to our texts?

Judaism isn’t Christianity minus Jesus, Christianity isn’t Judaism plus Jesus. They’re two different religions, you don’t get to determine how Jews view/interpret/use our scriptures any more than we get to determine how you use yours (or how you use ours).
Our text our God our everything; don’t you see any problem with this?
In Genesis, God created the heavens and earth, not the Jews’ heaven and earth and everything after that is about mankind and not a particular group of mankind.

Yes, God used a particular nation as prophesy of what is to come.
 
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Our text our God our everything; don’t you see any problem with this?
Since we don’t see anybody as disadvantaged by not being Jewish, no, I don’t see a problem. That and the fact that Christianity would seem to be mainly harmless to its adherents, obviously.
 
Since we don’t see anybody as disadvantaged by not being Jewish, no, I don’t see a problem. That and the fact that Christianity would seem to be mainly harmless to its adherents, obviously.
I felt a little left out when you said ‘our texts’ which implies, ‘from our God’

I have a question about your text and specifically about Isaiah 7 when Isaiah was talking to king Ahaz. Was it written after the event (child being born by the young woman and the kingdom not falling) or before the event?
 
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I felt a little left out when you said ‘our texts’ which implies, ‘from our God’
Well, the Tanakh is long out of copyright so there’s not a lot we can do about its use (or misuse).
I have a question about your text and specifically about Isaiah 7 when Isaiah was talking to king Ahaz. Was it written after the event (child being born by the young woman and the kingdom not falling) or before the event?
I don’t think it’s that easy, it wasn’t a book, it was a collection of texts that could be used and re-used. Promise to cheer up Ahaz and later used to influence Hezekiah?

Of interest to scholars.

Of course, it has entirely different purposes for Christians. Not our problem.
 
Your claims that early Gospel writers did not view Jesus as divine and only John did is easily refutable. Precisely what Mark chapter 1 is about.
Let’s be clear: I am saying that the writers of the first three Gospels in no way clearly say that Jesus is GOD. This is difference from saying ‘divine’. There is noting in Mark 1 that says Jesus is God. Not a word.
 
Forgive my inane observation but we really have no idea what it means to be “True God” nor even “True Man”. But we have to start somewhere, I guess.
 
I don’t think it’s that easy, it wasn’t a book, it was a collection of texts that could be used and re-used. Promise to cheer up Ahaz and later used to influence Hezekiah?

Of interest to scholars.

Of course, it has entirely different purposes for Christians. Not our problem.
It is very important to our discussion; if it was written before the event, it would be important to also find a writing of when it was fulfilled and when Ahaz witnessed a young woman giving birth. If it was written after, then it is just another meaningless text.
 
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