Rereading
your first few posts, and, now the last few on this page, I get the
feeling that the idea you started this thread was to try to
discredited JWs for their stance that there is only one Almighty God
and that Jesus is also “God”.
You
totally misunderstand the usage of monotheism and polytheism. You
seem to understand that both words relate to worship of God(s)
You
made the following point
The
point I want to make is that a second divine figure is not
monotheistic. This
is plainly, polytheistic.
You are
correct in that the Bible
is a polytheistic
book. It discusses the
existence of many
gods. That is all polytheism means - it is the belief in more than
one god. The
Bible advocates the WORSHIP of only one God.
The
Israelites were easily persuaded by their neighbors to follow other
“gods”. They did often get things mixed up. However what (who)
the Bible reports on as being “God” is a completely different
“god” to the nations and to the ones that the Israelites at times
served. The distinctions are very clear and marked.
The
main problem there again is your failure to not understand the
original wordings. If you insist on putting it in modern terms the
second “God” should be written as “god”.
Your
assumption is both right and wrong. JWs are both monotheistic and
polytheistic.
How
are JWs monotheistic? In they they believe that of all the gods that
exists there is only ONE supreme God that is deserving of religious
worship.
Biblically
it is NOT wrong to say that Jesus was “a god”. It is Biblically
wrong to say that Jesus was “God”
It
is NOT as trinitarinas try to say that JWs are wrong because they say
Jesus is “a god”. To teach that Jesus is “a god” does not
make JWs worshipers of more that one god.
Again
I came back to the point that all the material you are discussing is
looking at the meaning of the
words
from a MODERN point of view and NOT from the perspective of the
original writers
“god” ( “el” ) from the wrong perspective. The ancient
word “el” is NOT a limited word that is used to identify a “god”.
It
is because of the misunderstanding of the original words that
confusion has arisen.
Boyarin
talks about the Canaanite
and Phonetician object of worship known as Baal (Ba'l ).
The word "baal" merely means “master” or “lord”. Just like
the “el”, it is generally NOT a name – just a little.
The
Canaanites
made an idol to their “lord” or “master” that they served
They
also had a mighty one (a god in
modern language)
that they served that had the title “el” that was aptly
represented by a bull, because of the mighty
strength
of a bull. The Israelites had also, at one time made a golden
statute of a calf ( a you bull - a mighty one) to serve when they
were in the wilderness
The
Isrealites had an Almighty (Shad·daiʹ)
God (El). (Almighty mighty one) This one had a name YHWH from a verb in the causative case
meaning “he who causes to become” (or similar). It is this one
that Daniel describes as the “the
Ancient of Days” who
was able to assign authority to a subordinate
The
problem is in the Biblical sense, is that the word god does not appear in the Hebrew writings. It simply means a mighty one. The
Bible therefore speaks of many “mighty ones” Most bad, some
good and only one ALMIGHTY might one.
You
made the assumption that “All we know for sure is that likely in
the second century BCE, an unknown (probable) Jew wrote a story about
a divine figure.....”
There
is more evidence that the book of Daniel was writtenat the time of tghe accounts and not the second century The existence of portions of Daniel in the Dead Sea Scrolls helps to dispel the notion by skeptics that it was written some time in tye
second century
http://www.biblearchaeology.org/post/2012/07/31/New-Light-on-the-Book-of-Daniel-from-the-Dead-Sea-Scrolls.aspx
Daniels
vision of a superior (higher) “God” (mighty one) over a lessor
(lower) god (mighty one) does not support a trinity doctrine nor does
it suggest that the Israelites were to serve (perform religious
worship) to the lessor (lower) mighty one. Only the Almighty mighty
one was to served in a religious way
That
is the same concept carried through to the 1st century Christians. They served (in a religious way) only one “God” (the
Almighty). They did not, and were not taught to serve the lessor
(lower) mighty one, as that one had the obligation of serving only
the Almighty.
So
no the hypothesis of Boyarin
that you have fallen pray to, the
false
idea that Daniel is speaking of two “Gods” is wrong
You
said in your last post
It
is being argued that one 'God' is higher, than the other 'God,' and
therefore it is not polytheism. That must be a failed argument.
The
main problem there again is your failure to not understand the
original wordings.
I will
rewrite the argument as it relates to Daniel
7:9,10, 13, 14
It is
being argued that one 'God' is higher then the other 'god' and is not
worshiped, therefore even though it is the belief that there are
more than one gods in the universe it does not contradict the idea
that only one GOD is worshiped.