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06-13-2001, 02:27 AM | #31 | |
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Ish
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Are you saying that the Hebrew language has some words that cannot be translated to English? Whoever was being addressed when he said "Let us make man in our own image" (I undestand Christians like to say that it was Jesus) - whatever it was -whether Jesus, the Holy spirit or whatever you think it is - was Gods equal - or at the very least his contemporary. This may not be true (ie - may not be a fact), but its what the author(s) meant. Now of course, we can painfully contrive what we want out of that - to make it fit The NT and our selfish needs, but that is what was meant by whoever wrote that. End of story. You will call it a myth but its what they meant. |
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06-13-2001, 02:42 AM | #32 |
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rodahi
You said: The writer presumed the pre-existence of water, so the gods created only the sky and land. This is consistent with the most ancient semitic creation mythology which predates the Hebrew version. I agree with this absolutely. I'd recommend Tercel, Truethinker to read the Sumerian creation story - Enuma Elish in the Astra Hasis text, The Epic of Gilgamesh - for the flood version, The Egyptian Book of the Dead, Ethiopian Nebgrast(?),various Egyptian Papyri texts etc. There is an unmistakable parallel to be drawn between bible stories in the OT (especially Genesis and Exodus) the idea that Genesis is simply an occulted version will become clear. From this discussion, Andrew has thrown in the Towel, Tercel has said he doesnt know and Freethinker is saying we should not discuss this because we do not understand Hebrew. Which is, to say the very least, escapist. I think the best Christians can do is comprehend the bible thoroughly (after all they have a duty to) - and then maybe they can glean a few facts out of the myths in the OT. We can then compare these few facts with the other myths worldwide that have not been occulted and only then, do we have a hope of knowing how some things came to be. |
06-13-2001, 07:55 AM | #33 | ||||
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I have admitted before when I was in error on things Rodahi. I don't think I've ever seen a concession on your part even when you were wrong... What keeps you from admitting your biased errors? Quote:
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Sorry everyone, I'm simply growing tired of Rodahi's lack of accurate knowledge and his willingness to share it. Ish [This message has been edited by Ish (edited June 13, 2001).] |
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06-13-2001, 08:25 AM | #34 |
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Ish
If you want us to beleive there was a God, I think it would help a hell of a lot if you could respond to James Ks post which I paste below partly: Ish, while it is true that when it was meant to say Yahweh alone, the writers used "Elohim" without the article ha (the) as well as the singular verb bara, this is not the case in all places of Genesis. In Exodus 12:12, the writers refer to the gods of Egypt, elohim is used with the article ha (ha-elohim, meaning "the gods"). Genesis 35:7 is similar. The Hebrew text states ha-elohim, meaning the gods were revealed (niglu) to Jacob. This verb form is plural. There are numerous examples all over the Bible of Hebrew polytheism. A few examples: Exodus 15:11 "Who is like unto you, O Yahweh, among the Gods (elohim)?" Psalm 95:3 "Yahweh is a great god (El) and a great King above all gods (elohim)" Psalm 86:8 "There is none like you among the gods (Elohim), O Yahweh" Exodus 22:28 "Thou shalt not revile the gods (ha-elohim), nor curse the ruler of thy people" And how about Chemosh being the god of the Ammonites just as Yahweh was the god of the Israelites (Judges 11:24)? So, the fact that the early Hebrews were polytheistic still stands, and there is evidence of it in the Bible. Please just respond to this. This guy has quoted enough verses. |
06-13-2001, 08:28 AM | #35 | |
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06-13-2001, 08:31 AM | #36 | |
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06-13-2001, 08:35 AM | #37 | |
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He seems to have confirmed my point about Genesis 1:1. Allah is the God of Muslims. Vishnu is one of the Indian Gods. Doh! I must be polytheistic! Ish |
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06-13-2001, 08:39 AM | #38 |
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However, here is Young's Literal Translation of Genesis 1:16:
And God maketh the two great luminaries, the great luminary for the rule of the day, and the small luminary -- and the stars -- for the rule of the night; No pluperfect tense, and not even a past tense. This "historic" past tense seems to be a figment of some apologist's imagination. URL: http://bible.gospelcom.net/bible?pas...nguage=english |
06-13-2001, 10:14 AM | #39 | |
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06-13-2001, 01:16 PM | #40 | |
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My points confirm that the early Hebrews believed that there was more than one God, and the Bible is very plain about this. This is quite different from the modern Judeo-Christian viewpoint. If the Bible was truly the "Word of God", then why would God talk about other Gods in his book if he was the only God? The fact that the early Hebrews acknowledge more than one God is more evidence that the OT is simply a collection of ancient Hebrew mythology and definitely not the Word of God. [This message has been edited by JamesKrieger (edited June 13, 2001).] |
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