Spurven Ten Sing wrote: Except we hate Gudbranddalingers.
Can't even find that word on Google. They do have some pics of Brangelina however.
Spurven Ten Sing wrote: Except we hate Gudbranddalingers.
Milesius wrote:Buffalo wrote:The sons of God are the son of El. El, the pagan father god of Canaan and later Israel, had 70 sons, all minor gods, each with the task of ruling over a nation on the earth. These gods had sex with mortal women and created the giants - that's what the Bible's saying, not the fluff that's in the manual. It'd be nice if the church hired academics to write their manuals instead of amateur theologians. They wouldn't be filled with these kinds of errors.
Sorry, hayseed, but sons of God in Genesis 6 most likely refers to angels.
Parley P. Pratt wrote:We must lie to support brother Joseph, it is our duty to do so.
B.R. McConkie, © Intellectual Reserve wrote:There are those who say that revealed religion and organic evolution can be harmonized. This is both false and devilish.
Milesius wrote:That is false.
"In Israel's early traditions, God was perceived as administering the cosmos with a retinue of divine assistants. The members of this divine council were identified generally as "*sons of God" and "morning stars" (Job 1.6; 38.7), "gods" (Ps. 82) or the host of heaven" (Neh. 9.6; cf. Rev 1.20), and they functioned as God's vicegerents and administrators in a hierarchical bureaucracy over the world (Deut. 32.8 [LXX]; cf. 4.19; 29.26). Where Israel's polytheistic neighbors perceived these beings as simply a part of the pantheon, the Bible depicts them as subordinate and in no way comparable to the God of Israel..." (Samuel A. Meier. "Angels." Oxford Companion to the Bible.)
I know you would like to use the Hebrew Scriptures to try to prop up your manifestly fraudulent religion but it just ain't happenin'. You'll only be able to impress rubes like Buffalo.
Parley P. Pratt wrote:We must lie to support brother Joseph, it is our duty to do so.
B.R. McConkie, © Intellectual Reserve wrote:There are those who say that revealed religion and organic evolution can be harmonized. This is both false and devilish.
maklelan wrote:Milesius wrote:and I believe many scholars place locate Job in that gap.
So? Job distinguishes quite clearly between the sons of God and the angels.
Buffalo wrote:Milesius wrote:That is false.
"In Israel's early traditions, God was perceived as administering the cosmos with a retinue of divine assistants. The members of this divine council were identified generally as "*sons of God" and "morning stars" (Job 1.6; 38.7), "gods" (Ps. 82) or the host of heaven" (Neh. 9.6; cf. Rev 1.20), and they functioned as God's vicegerents and administrators in a hierarchical bureaucracy over the world (Deut. 32.8 [LXX]; cf. 4.19; 29.26). Where Israel's polytheistic neighbors perceived these beings as simply a part of the pantheon, the Bible depicts them as subordinate and in no way comparable to the God of Israel..." (Samuel A. Meier. "Angels." Oxford Companion to the Bible.)
I know you would like to use the Hebrew Scriptures to try to prop up your manifestly fraudulent religion but it just ain't happenin'. You'll only be able to impress rubes like Buffalo.
"In the postexilic period, with the development of explicit monotheism, these divine beings—the 'sons of God' who were members of the divine council—were in effect demoted to what are now known as 'angels', understood as beings created by God, but immortal and thus superior to humans."
[Coogan, Michael D.; A Brief Introduction to the Old Testament (Oxford University Press, 2009)]
Milesius wrote:That's quaint, hayseed. It doesn't quiet substantiate the tired nonsense you are trying to peddle, though. Here is what Michael Heiser wrote on his blog in response to maklelan:
maklelan wrote:I would also point out that Michael acknowledges that mine is the consensus position.
Lastly, I would point out that this is, again, nothing more than an appeal to authority.
Milesius wrote:Then you should not have any problem pointing out exactly where in Job such a distinction is made.
And by the way, pillar figurines (maybe a couple exceptions here, not sure) don’t come with texts telling us what their users or viewers were thinking when using or viewing them. Same goes for cult stands and incense altars and standing stones. They are MUTE. It is modern scholars that propose (and presuppose) what these things meant on some sort of imagined religious thinking continuum.
Milesius wrote:That means nothing to me.
Milesius wrote:There are plenty of consensus positions in Biblical scholarship that are built on foundations of sand. (Dating John to the late first century and Q come immediately to mind.)
Milesius wrote:No, it is not. I did not write "Michael Heiser, PhD says maklelan is wrong, so he is." I posted his argument against you, which I think is the winning argument.
Thanks for the prompt response, Michael. I will have to sit down with it later, but a couple thoughts stuck in my head as I finished reading. First, I don’t think I’ve ever run across the notion that polytheism exclusively means deities can be interchangeably worshipped. There are numerous texts from Egypt to Mesopotamia that use rhetoric of incomparability perfectly analogous to the biblical version to describe a national deity or a high god over and against other deities of the pantheon, but I don’t think I’ve ever heard anyone argue that that indicates they were not polytheistic.
Second, I thought I was pretty clear on agreeing with you that I didn’t think there was anything related to polytheism taking place in the Hebrew Bible. On those last three points you made I only disagreed about the degree of antiquity of Yahweh’s species uniqueness, but I still don’t think that means polytheism.