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12-12-2005, 06:36 AM | #41 | ||
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Please stop doing both, k? |
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12-12-2005, 08:12 AM | #42 | |
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Almah always means "young woman." A young woman can be a virgin, just like a young woman can be an Australian, but it would be ridiculous to suggest that it should be specifically translated as such with no context. The only way to specifically say "virgin" is to say bethulah, even if sometimes a bethulah was just a woman who wasn't sexually active. |
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12-12-2005, 12:17 PM | #43 | |
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Many times we have to look at the context. My friend explained this to me"explained to me that an almah was a high-quality young woman but not necessarily a virgin. She could be a newlywed...but he said the context is the guide, I.E. "Moshe has a daughter, an almah, living in his home." He said that if the almah were single, it was a gimme that she was a virgin. I believe the KJV men & others who wrote "virgin" in Isaiah were quite right, as they were using an overview of all Scripture to help shape their translations" So I think this answers the problem. |
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12-12-2005, 12:46 PM | #44 |
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Isaiah 7:14 does not say that the almah was unmarried. In fact, its says that she was already pregnant which would imply that she was married.
Moreover, the almah was a character in that story. The baby was born in that story. The passage has nothing to do with the Messiah. If your friend doesn't know that, then he's extremely uneducated about his own religion and about his own Bible. |
12-12-2005, 01:51 PM | #45 | |
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As for IsVfan, that explanation still fails to account for why God used a word that "could imply" virgin, instead of a word that "almost definately" means virgin in every case. once again, the word used means a young woman, plenty of whom got married and had children at that age. Nothing unusual and that sentence doesn't implies virginity. You can try and insert it, but that's incredibly weak. God failed to use the proper word apparantly. The word that means virgin (except in rare instances) and is closest to concrete wasn't used. Instead he used a word that in the context could only be interpretted that way after the claim was made and even then doesn't hold up. |
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12-12-2005, 01:57 PM | #46 | ||
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Remember, the Jews AT THE TIME, who heard Christians citing this as prophecy for virgin birth, opposed it. They said "That's a mistranslation" and showed the hebrew texts to demonstrate it. That's why the Jews went back to writing everything in Hebrew (which became a requirement for a book to be canon) and abondened Greek (which they'd begun using due to the hellenistic culture they were in. That's also why te christians used the Greek instead of the originals. Tells you something. |
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12-12-2005, 05:21 PM | #47 | |
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12-13-2005, 10:06 AM | #48 | |
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You do realise what you have just posted, don't you? You have validated the doubts that have been expressed about your source. Looks like the rebuttals made here were correct. |
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