Posts by aqwsed12345

  • slimboyfat
    152

    Do JWs believe Jesus is an angel?

    by slimboyfat in
    1. watchtower
    2. beliefs

    i would suggest:.

    the short answer is yes.. the longer answer is a qualified yes, with some caveats.

    the short answer is yes because jehovah’s witnesses teach that jesus is michael the archangel, their leader, eldest and most powerful, and have taught this since the very beginning of the religion.

    1. peacefulpete
    2. peacefulpete
    3. peacefulpete
  • aqwsed12345
    aqwsed12345

    @peacefulpete

    What I resist the most is the silly, Hislopian approach that automatically creates geneology from analogy. The fact that one concept resembles another does not mean that it originates from the other.

    Alexander Hislop's methodology involves drawing superficial parallels between Catholic practices and ancient pagan rituals. Whenever there is even a minor similarity, he concludes that the Catholic practice is pagan in origin. This approach falls prey to the genetic fallacy, which mistakenly assumes that the origin of an idea determines its current validity.

    For example, Hislop equates the Catholic practice of using round communion wafers with the sun-worship of ancient Egypt, solely based on the round shape of both objects. The fallacy of correlation = causation undermines Hislop's argument. He asserts that because pagan cultures practiced something similar to Christian rites, the Christian practices must have originated from paganism. This assumption fails to acknowledge the possibility of independent development

    This is what happens here too, some researcher outlines a similarity and then assumes without any concrete evidence that one concept is an adaptation of another. Well, this is fine for a conspiracy theorist with a tin foil hat, but we would expect more from a researcher.

    Here, too, what evidence was presented that this concept specifically influenced, or even caused, the Christology of the New Testament or the early church? Nothing. A similitude was drawn, the end result having to engage itself in the reader's brain.

    This approach is simply primitive and frivolous, not to mention it ignores what Justin Martyr already knew, see logos spermatikos.

  • slimboyfat
    152

    Do JWs believe Jesus is an angel?

    by slimboyfat in
    1. watchtower
    2. beliefs

    i would suggest:.

    the short answer is yes.. the longer answer is a qualified yes, with some caveats.

    the short answer is yes because jehovah’s witnesses teach that jesus is michael the archangel, their leader, eldest and most powerful, and have taught this since the very beginning of the religion.

    1. peacefulpete
    2. peacefulpete
    3. peacefulpete
  • aqwsed12345
    aqwsed12345

    @slimboyfat

    The argument based on Peter Schäfer's Two Gods in Heaven references Jewish thought suggesting a subordinate divine figure, but this idea is not a direct precursor to NT Christology. Schäfer indicates that Second Temple Judaism provided a conceptual foundation for later Christian theology. However, Alan F. Segal's Two Powers in Heaven traces this notion to rabbinic discussions of early Jewish-Christian and gnostic beliefs, making it speculative to assert that the NT Christology derives directly from this concept. Additionally, Philo’s Logos differs from John’s, showing diverse interpretations of divine intermediaries. All this is a mere assertion that the NT Christology originates from this, rather it is esoteric Jewish speculation that tried to explain the plurality of God in the Old Testament.

    The "Two Powers in Heaven" concept highlights that some early Jewish traditions that acknowledged a secondary divine figure, which some scholars argue contributed to later Christian theology, particularly regarding the status of Jesus. However, key differences exist. This Jewish notion was often more about an intermediary or vice-regent figure, such as angels or the Logos of Philo, rather than a fully divine being like Jesus in Christian theology.

    Alan F. Segal’s Two Powers in Heaven connects the idea to early Jewish responses to Christian beliefs, but it doesn't directly equate to Trinitarianism. Larry Hurtado and Richard Bauckham have demonstrated that Jesus' role in Christian worship—being directly worshiped as divine—represents a significant evolution beyond earlier Jewish traditions. Thus, while there are parallels, the New Testament presents Jesus as distinct, even surpassing these intermediary figures.

    In short, while the Two Powers theory shares conceptual similarities, it is not a direct precursor to the Christian understanding of the Trinity, which includes Jesus as fully divine and co-equal with God, something absent in earlier Jewish thought.

    In pure monotheism there is no place for such a partially divine demiurge, one is either fully God or not at all. Violation of this principle already means monolatristic henotheism, of which there were traces in the First Temple era OT books, but following the prophets, especially Isaiah, this was already clarified in the Second Temple era, there is only Yahweh, and there are no other gods at all.

    Regarding the claim that "Jesus is always distinct and subordinate to God in the NT," it holds when considering Christ's humanity, since the man Christ is indeed distinct and subordinate to God, who said He isn't? But why are you figthing an imaginary Trinitarian theology that does not acknowledge the Son's human nature as well? Yet, NT texts, especially in John, clearly present Jesus as fully divine, part of the Godhead, which exceeds the scope of a subordinate (ontologically inferior to the Father) or intermediary being. Therefore, the notion of subordination requires nuanced understanding of Christ's dual nature in the NT context.