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Was Jesus "God" or "the
son of God"?
For the first nine years of
the church there were no gentiles in their fellowship. It was
not until Peter's visit to Cornelius in about 39CE that gentiles were even
permitted to fellowship with the followers of Rabbi Joshua ben Joseph [a.k.a. Jesus
the Christ].
It was not until the Jerusalem Council in 50CE that it was decided that
gentiles did not have to convert to Judaism prior to fellowshipping with
the church.
Actually, there was no church until about 135CE. The
followers of Rabbi Joshua ben Joseph were called Nazarenes. By the time of the destruction
to the Temple in 70CE the Nazarenes were the largest sect in Judaism
numbering over eighty thousand people [some records list the number as
eight hundred thousand]. It is ironic, therefore, that by the fourth
century of the common era, the Jewish followers of Rabbi Joshua would all be
labeled as heretics and the original faith would be hijacked by an
exclusively gentile church.
Look at what Karen Armstrong
wrote concerning the early followers of Rabbi Joshua ben Joseph:
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...Like the divine Wisdom, the "Word"
symbolized God's original plan for creation. When Paul and John spoke
about Jesus as though he had some kind of preexistent life,
they were not suggesting that he
was a second divine "person" in the later Trinitarian sense. They
were indicating that Jesus had transcended temporal and individual modes
of existence. Because the "power" and "wisdom" that he represented were
activities that derived from God, he had in some way expressed "what was
there from the beginning."
These ideas
were comprehensible in a strictly Jewish context, though later
Christians with a Greek background would interpret them differently. In
the Acts of the Apostles, written as late as 100 CE, we can see that
the first Christians still had an
entirely Jewish conception of God.
[from A History of God, by Karen
Armstrong, page 89] |
Aime Palliere quotes M. Loyson
as saying:
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The chief reason why
the Jews do not accept
Christianity is that the latter
departed from its origins in
creating a God of secondary importance, as Justin Martyr
said. And little by little after having made Jesus equal to
the Heavenly Father, have we not practically substituted him for the
Heavenly Father?
[from The Unknown Sanctuary, by Aime Palliere] |
The phrase "only begotten son"
in John 3:16 comes from an intentional mistranslation by Jerome when he
translated the Greek into Latin. The Greek word monogenes is
correctly translated "a unique son."
Early in the second century,
church orthodoxy began to develop; and through the second and third
centuries the documents which would make up the New Testament were revised
in order to establish the orthodox view. Bart Ehrman documents many of
these revisions in his book, The Orthodox Corruption of Scripture.
It was the Christological debates of the second and third centuries
that finally led to the formation of the doctrine of the Trinity.
The Encyclopedia Britannica
[11th Edition] says:
|
The Trinitarians and
the Unitarians
continued to confront each other, the latter at the beginning of the
third century still forming
the large majority. |
Why were the Jewish followers
of Rabbi Joshua ben Joseph labeled as heretics by the Roman church? One reason for
this is because they did not believe that Rabbi Joshua [Jesus] was God. They were
labeled as "adoptionists" by the orthodoxy because
the general belief was
that Rabbi Joshua ben Joseph did not even become the
son of God until he was
immersed by John. Paul, on the other hand, did not believe that
Rabbi Joshua became the son of God until he was resurrected from the dead
(Acts 13:33; Romans 1:4). [See where the "firstborn
son of God" is mentioned in the Old Testament].
Look at these revealing
statements from Paul:
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But to us there is but
one
God,
the Father, of whom are all things, and we in him; and
one
Lord,
Jesus Christ, by whom are all things, and we by him.
[1 Corinthians 8:6] |
For there
is one
God,
and one
mediator between God and men,
the man
Jesus Christ.
[1 Timothy 2:5] |
Notice that
Rabbi Joshua ben Joseph [Jesus] is called
"Lord" and "mediator" but he is never called "God".
In fact in 1 Timothy Paul says that Rabbi Joshua is a "man."
Now let's look at the words of
Rabbi Joshua himself said in the gospel of John:
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Joshua [Jesus] said to her, Do not touch me; for I have
not yet ascended to my Father: but go to my brothers, and say to
them, I am ascending to my
Father, and your Father; to my God, and your God.
[John 20:17] |
From this passage we see that
Rabbi Joshua is referring to God as his father in the same way that he was the
father of his disciples (or brothers?). He also says that the Father
is his God.
John Shelby Spong wrote:
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The simplistic
suggestion that Jesus is God is nowhere made in the biblical story.
Nowhere!
[from This Hebrew Lord, by John Shelby Spong] |
Alterations to the text of the
New Testament are quite revealing. Ehrman documents over two hundred
such deliberate alterations. One example is a pattern that appears a
number of times, where the phrase "his father and mother" is altered to
read "Joseph and his mother." Likewise the phrase "his parents" is
also changed to "Joseph and his mother." Another pattern that
appears is where the text "chosen of God" has been altered to read "son of
God" in a number of places. In Luke 9:35 the phrase "the one who has been
chosen" is dropped from the text altogether.
Look at
this curious admission: In Acts 2:30 it says that Messiah came
from the fruit of David's loins according to the flesh -- that he was a
flesh and blood descendent of David through Joseph (according to Peter's
testimony). Obviously Peter did not believe in a "virgin birth."
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Therefore being a prophet, and knowing that God
had sworn with an oath to him, that of
the fruit of his loins,
according to the flesh, he would raise up Messiah to sit on
his throne;
[Act 3:20] |
To conclude, I have included
some paragraphs from the summary of chapter 2 of The Orthodox
Corruption of Scripture by Bart Ehrman, p 97-98:
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Our investigation of
these changes has followed the rubrics provided by the
proto-orthodox polemicists themselves. Some scribal changes
emphasize that Jesus was born of a virgin; others circumvent the
adoptionist claim that he was not. One regular target for such
changes were passages that originally spoke of Joseph as Jesus'
father or parent (e.g., Luke 2:33, 43, 48). Other changes served to
emphasize Mary's virginity (e.g., Matt 1:16). In several instances,
the idea of Jesus' miraculous birth was imported into passages that
originally said nothing about it (John 1:13; 1John 5:16).
Orthodox scribes not
infrequently altered texts that might be taken to suggest that Jesus
became the Son of God only at his baptism (Luke 3:22; Acts 10:37,
38; John 1:34), or at his resurrection (Rom 1:4), or at some
unspecified moment (e.g., Luke 9:35; 1John 5:18). Correspondingly
they changed other passages so as to highlight their view that Jesus
was already the Son of God before his baptism (Mark 1:1) or even
before his coming into the world (Matt 1:18).
By far the most common
anti-adoptionist corruptions simply designate Christ as "God."
Sometimes these variants are widely attested (1Tim 3:16; John 1:18);
more frequently they occur in a restricted portion of the tradition
(e.g., Mark 1:3; 1John 3:23; John 10:33; 19:40), or exclusively
among the early versions (e.g., Luke 1:17, 76; 2:26). On occasion,
such changes occur in manuscripts that can actually be dated to the
period of concern (e.g. 2Pet 1:2; Jude 5). Even when the supporting
witnesses are uniformly late, however, they appear to represent
vestiges of an earlier age (e.g., Mark 3:11; Luke 7:9; 8:28).
Moreover, Christ's divinity is sometimes affirmed through an
exchange of predicates, in which his characteristics and activities
are attributed to God (e.g., references to God's blood or passion,
cf. Acts 20:28; 1Pet 5:1), conversely, God's are attributed to him
(e.g., Christ as "judge of the earth," cf. 1Cor 10:5, 9).
Finally, the orthodox
emphasis on Jesus' divinity occasionally led to a de-emphasis on his
humanity. So far as we can judge, scribes never eliminated the
notion that Jesus was fully human. This would have embroiled them in
a different set of problems, for then the text could be taken to
support docetic Christologies that the proto-orthodox opposed on
another front. But scribes did modify texts that could implicate
Christ in human weaknesses and frailties that were not appropriate
to one understood to be divine, occasionally changing passages that
suggest that Christ was not all-knowing (Matt 24:36) or spiritually
perfect (Luke 2:40), and passages that suggest that he was purely
mortal (John 19:5) or susceptible to human temptations and sin (Heb
2:18; 10:29). |
Here are just a few examples of the changes
that were made to the text:
| Corrupt Text |
Original Text |
| Luke 2:33 And
Joseph and his mother
marveled at those things which were spoken of him. |
Luke 2:33 And
his father and mother
marveled at those things which were spoken of him. |
| Luke 2:43 And when they had fulfilled the days, as
they returned, the child Jesus stayed behind in Jerusalem; and
Joseph and his mother
knew not. |
Luke 2:43 And when they had fulfilled the days, as
they returned, the child Jesus stayed behind in Jerusalem; and
his parents knew not. |
| Luke 3:22 And the Holy Spirit descended in a bodily
shape like a dove upon him, and a voice came from heaven, which said,
You are my beloved Son; in you
I am well pleased. |
Luke 3:22 And the Holy Spirit descended in a bodily
shape like a dove upon him, and a voice came from heaven, which said,
You are my son. Today I have
begotten you. |
| John 1:34 And I saw, and bare record that this is
the Son of God. |
John 1:34 And I saw, and bare record that this is
the chosen of God. |
| Luke 9:35 And there came a voice out of the cloud,
saying, This is my beloved Son:
hear him. |
Luke 9:35 And there came a voice out of the cloud,
saying, This is my son, the
one who is chosen: hear him. |
| Mark 1:1 The beginning of the gospel of Jesus
Christ, the Son of God; |
Mark 1:1 The beginning of the gospel of Jesus
Christ; |
| 1 Timothy 3:16 And without controversy great is the
mystery of godliness: God was
manifest in the flesh, justified in the Spirit, seen of angels,
preached unto the Gentiles, believed on in the world, received up into
glory. |
1 Timothy 3:16 And without controversy great is the
mystery of godliness: who was
manifest in the flesh, justified in the Spirit, seen of angels,
preached unto the Gentiles, believed on in the world, received up into
glory. |

Click on cover for more information |
The
Orthodox
Corruption
of
Scripture
by Bart D. Ehrman |

Click on cover for more information |
One God
&
One
Lordby Graeser, Lynn, & Schoenheit |

Click on cover for more information |
The Doctrine of the Trinity:
Christianity's Self-Inflicted Wound
by Anthony Buzzard
& Charles Hunting |
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