Hellrider,
Touchy touchy. Use of words such as "amateurish" and "pathetic" show that the material has made you very uncomfortable.
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...the text tries to invalidate Jesus direct words, his direct claim to be (also) "the first and the last" by referring to his death, arguing that this death invalidates him as one who is "the first and the last (also)" (because he would then, at one point "not be" at all). This is ridiculous. Seriously, it is pathetic.
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Strawman. The text does not at all argue for what you claim. It argues that Jesus, in identifying himself as the first and the last, does not do so openly, but he is "the first and the last, who became dead and is alive forevermore." It is apparently that exegetically, you don't have a response, because the statements made in the article are true. The article does nothing to "invalidate" Jesus' words, it only recognizes the fact that Jesus makes the claim not openly, as with God, but in a specific way.
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First of all, at no time did Jesus stop existing. He went to Hades to preach to the incarcarated angels, prior to his ressurection.
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This is an absolute red herring, for the text's arguments have nothing to do with this. This is a completely different subject all together, which in another thread I'd be happy to address, but I don't want to take us off topic.
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This after-death-state (living, but dead) is typical of both jewish and early christian beliefs (later on, as we come to Revelation, the soul-doctrine becomes much clearer).
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The red herring continues....
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Second, the three days of death doesn`t even matter, not in the mind of the writer of the text! It is Jesus, the son of man himself, who places his hand on John, claiming, in his own words, and making a statement about himself (!!!) that he is "the first and the last". To claim that he is here speaking on behalf of God, is a ridiulous attempt at saving a non-trinitarian doctrine.
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Now we get a strawman. The text does not argue that Jesus is "speaking on behalf of God."
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LoL. No, it is not "extremely enlighting". The NT is full of referneces and parallels to the OT, in which things (for lack of a better word) attributed to Yahweh in the NT is attributed to Jesus Christ. This is the point! It is these things that led to the development of the trinity-doctrine in the first place.
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You apparently missed *why* it is extremely enlightening. Because within that text we see the arm of Jehovah (which is seen in the Messiah - Isa. 53:1) rules for him, while Jehovah himself (thus the Father, as the Messiah is seen next to him) is coming. It demonstrates that the Father is coming also in the end times. As Rev. 22:12 alludes to Isaiah 40:10, a reference to the Father, and a speaker change is indicated in Revelation 22:16 (a point that you did not address from the article), it is naturally a reference to the Father speaking in 22:12-13.
Mondo