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Mistakes or Attacks

Mexdeaf

New Member
Was Daniel ever referred to as the Son of Man?


If you want to read a version the calls Jesus the human one, be my guest, but I think it's a bad translation and just plain stupid.

You said

I'm human, but I'm sure not the Son of Man. Son of Man applies to Jesus, not mere humans.

"The" makes the difference.

We are all "sons of man"- meaning "sons of Adam (or Enos)". The original languages make this idea much clearer than it is expressed in English.
 

dwmoeller1

New Member
Was Daniel ever referred to as the Son of Man?


If you want to read a version the calls Jesus the human one, be my guest, but I think it's a bad translation and just plain stupid.

No, but then Jesus is not always called the Son of Man. Also, we simply wouldn't expect a definite article to be used when Daniel is being called "son of man". For example, while we might talk about "the" President among ourselves, and and while he might refer to himself and "the" President, if you were speaking directly to the President you would never call him "the" President. So, the lack of definite articles in Eze and Dan is totally expected and thus tells use little.
 

Amy.G

New Member
No, but then Jesus is not always called the Son of Man. Also, we simply wouldn't expect a definite article to be used when Daniel is being called "son of man". For example, while we might talk about "the" President among ourselves, and and while he might refer to himself and "the" President, if you were speaking directly to the President you would never call him "the" President. So, the lack of definite articles in Eze and Dan is totally expected and thus tells use little.

Can you site a verse in which Jesus is not called the Son of Man? I'm not trying to argue, just don't know of a place in scripture where He isn't referred to with "the".
 

stilllearning

Active Member
This is either illogical or heretical (or possibly both).
1. Illogical: It relies on a fallacy of composition as explained earlier. While it would be sound to say that any attack on Jesus is an attack on His nature, it is fallacious to say that any attack on Jesus is an attack on His deity. As I pointed out before, one can attack Jesus nature by focusing only on His deity. to call this an attack on His deity would be non-sensical.
2. Heretical: It appears you are making Christ' deity to be more important than His humanity. It is not His deity which is the heart of who Christ is, but BOTH His humanity and His deity. You can't emphasize one over the other w/o falling into heresy.

But more to the point, you still haven't explained why or how its an attack on Jesus at all (much less His deity). You keep saying its an attack on Christ, but haven't yet explained how. Can you address that? Ignore for now the dispute over whether its an attack on his deity and simply address how its an attack on Christ in any way whatsoever.



You say its an attack but you don't explain how or why. Please address that.



Thats a different issue. Lets deal with the above first.



I have already capitulated to most of what you are saying, except for........

"That's a different issue. Lets deal with the above first."

No it isn't; Remember the title of the OP?
 

dwmoeller1

New Member
I am a very simple man, therefore I stated my position in a very simply way to John.....

Simple is fine. Fallacious is not. Its the difference between lacking understanding and having a false understanding - between being ignorant and believing a falsehood.

It is true, that we can categorize the natures of Christ, and emphasize different parts of it.
But my contention is, that any attempt to change any part of who Christ is, is VERY DANGEROUS.

Everyone agrees with that here. What you haven't yet explained is HOW the rendering is an attack or an attempt to change part of Christ. Thats where the main question still lies.

As I said before(post #39), I might be making a mistake, by continuing to argue that what the Common English Bible does with Matthew 8:20 is an attack upon the Deity of Christ

I don't think there is much doubt of that at this point. BUT, I still want to be clear that the main question still remains unanswered. Even if would be a mistake to consider it an attack on His deity, it might still be an attack on some other aspect of His nature. That is the question that remains unaddressed.

(Some people don’t even see it as an attack upon the Humanity of Christ:)

Some people? So far you are the *only* one who does :) I am still hoping to hear why you think it is.

But the point I am making is, it attempts to change what the Bible says about Christ, by calling the Son of man, to the Human One.

Yes, I understand that to be your position. You still haven't explained how this is true. How is this rendering an attempt to change what the Bible says about Christ?

For sure, here Christ is talking about Himself, but “human one” could be applied to God’s daughter, or God’s second cousin.

And "son of man" can't be seen as referring to any human? It seems that every difficulty you raise about "Human One" equally applies to "Son of Man". If thats true, then calling the different rendering an attack or change to Christ nature doesn't make sense. Thats where I am having difficulty with your position.

You know, fallacious conclusions are not that hard to come to, because we are human beings and at any time can be incorrect in our reasoning.

True. But thats no less reason to avoid them and correct them when they are discovered. Iron sharpening iron and all that.

This is “almost” exactly what I have been saying:
An attack upon one, is an attack upon the other!

No, an attack on one is not necessarily an attack on the other. That a fallacious conclusion. A conclusion that hints at heresy as well. What would be correct to say is that an attack on either is an attack on Christ's nature.
 

dwmoeller1

New Member
Can you site a verse in which Jesus is not called the Son of Man? I'm not trying to argue, just don't know of a place in scripture where He isn't referred to with "the".

Another casualty of cross-posting :)

John 5:27, Rev. 1:13 and 14:14
 

dwmoeller1

New Member
I have already capitulated to most of what you are saying, except for........

I was more hoping for an explanation instead :)

No it isn't; Remember the title of the OP?

Ok, let's call it the secondary part of the issue - one that can't be dealt with until we have nailed down how you come to conclude that the rendering is an attack on Christ's nature.
 
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Deacon

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Gee dw, you are the patient one!
This thread is almost like watching a train wreck in slow motion, you know a tragedy is happening but you can't turn away. :tongue3:
Originally Posted by Amy G
Can you site a verse in which Jesus is not called the Son of Man? I'm not trying to argue, just don't know of a place in scripture where He isn't referred to with "the".
John 5:27, Rev. 1:13 and 14:14
Unfortunately the AV (and the textus receptus in John 5:27) fills in the blank.
You can only see this by looking at the Greek text or reading a modern version.

Rob
 

Baptist4life

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Jesus is referred to as the “Son of Man” 88 times in the New Testament. A first meaning of the phrase “Son of Man” is as a reference to the prophecy of Daniel 7:13-14, “In my vision at night I looked, and there before me was one like a son of man, coming with the clouds of heaven. He approached the Ancient of Days and was led into his presence. He was given authority, glory and sovereign power; all peoples, nations and men of every language worshiped him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion that will not pass away, and his kingdom is one that will never be destroyed.” The description “Son of Man” was a Messianic title. Jesus is the One who was given dominion and glory and a kingdom. When Jesus used this phrase, He was assigning the Son of Man prophecy to Himself. The Jews of that era would have been intimately familiar with the phrase and to whom it referred. Jesus was proclaiming Himself as the Messiah.

http://www.gotquestions.org/Jesus-Son-of-Man.html
 

Amy.G

New Member
Unfortunately the AV (and the textus receptus in John 5:27) fills in the blank.
You can only see this by looking at the Greek text or reading a modern version.

Rob

Ok. Here is a list of modern versions.

LINK

Only one says "a" son of man, the HNV. (not sure what that is)

Maybe you should find a better defense. :)

Are you saying the TR says "a" son of man instead of "the" Son of Man?
 

rbell

Active Member
Ok, let's call it the secondary part of the issue - one that can't be dealt with until we have nailed down how you come to conclude that the rendering is an attack on Christ's nature.

My point all along: stilllearning makes accusations, with no details or explanations.

Guess we're supposed to take his word for it.

Smells of intellectual dishonesty to me.
 

jbh28

Active Member
Was Daniel ever referred to as the Son of Man?


If you want to read a version the calls Jesus the human one, be my guest, but I think it's a bad translation and just plain stupid.

It's "the Human One" vs "the Son of Man"

Just like the Son of Man has "the" and capital letters, so does the Human One. I do prefer "the Son of Man" because of it's parallel with "the Son of God." But wanted to make sure we accurately quote the other version. We are all "a son of man" but not The Son of Man just like we are all a human one, but not "the Human One."
 

dwmoeller1

New Member
My point all along: stilllearning makes accusations, with no details or explanations.

Guess we're supposed to take his word for it.

Smells of intellectual dishonesty to me.

I am not seeing that yet. I get the impression that he thinks that he is giving sufficient explanation.
 

jbh28

Active Member
As I explained to John, I see ANY attack upon “Jesus”, as an attack upon His Deity, because this is at the heart of who Jesus is.
Of course this is illogical, but moving on from that...

The Human One vs the Son of Man is dealing with Jesus' humanity. I have seen quite a few posts so far, but haven't seen anyone be able to explain why saying "the Human One" is an attack on the humanity of Christ. Notice, both use the definite article "the" and both capitalize the words.

Therefore as I said in my last response to you, although I see what the Common English Bible does with Matthew 8:20 as simply an attack upon who Jesus is(& therefore an attack upon His Deity), this certainly isn’t the only place it attacks Jesus’ identity.

For instance, the Bible(THE KJV) says.....
Luke 2:33
“And Joseph and his mother marvelled at those things which were spoken of him.”

But the Common English Bible says.....
Luke 2:33
“His father and mother were amazed by what was said about him.”

--------------------------------------------------
Corrected it for you. The KJV says that. You are doing what's called begging the question by your post here. Now this is not an attack on the deity of Christ(in contrast to the humanity that is being dealt with in the other passage) any more than 15 verses later when the KJV refers to Joseph as Jesus' father. Joseph was not Jesus' biological father. The Bible is very clear about that. What is being referred to here(both the CEB and the KJV) is the role Joseph played. (I really don't think Mary was confused). This example(as the other one) is not an attack on Jesus, His deity nor His humanity. This example here is a textual difference. The passage about"the Human One" is a translational choice. While I prefer the rendering of "the Son of Man" you cannot say it's an attack on the humanity of Jesus nor the deity of Jesus by calling him "the Human One." Just because some translation team decides to translate it differently that what we are used to doesn't make it wrong. And just because it is different form the KJV doesn't make it wrong.


Now I know that some people have a problem with this word “attack”, but they shouldn’t.
We need to remember, that we are talking about changes being made to “The Bible”, not just some ordinary book.
We are talking about translational choices not changes. Nobody is changing "the Bible" Nobody is changing the KJV. Last I looked, the KJV still had "the Son of Man" so no change there. It's a different translational choice.
The Bible is mankind’s ONLY ACCESS, to what God has to say to us.
Therefore, we should take it very serious, when someone starts to monkey around with it.
Agree, we should be careful about which translational choices are made. I do think it's important. What is also important is to not say somebody is attacking the deity of Christ by using a different term to refer to his humanity.
 

robycop3

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
The KJV calls Ezekiel "son of man" 93 times. (I mighta have miscounted, but not by much.) and, "son of man" is used 109 times in the OT. (Again, my count might be off a little!)
So, let's not get worked up over a different wording in other versions in the NT.
 

stilllearning

Active Member
Hello robycop3

You said........
“So, let's not get worked up over a different wording in other versions in the NT.”
Why not?

The verse was originally translated into English.......
Matthew 8:20
“And Jesus saith unto him, The foxes have holes, and the birds of the air [have] nests; but the Son of man hath not where to lay [his] head.”

The word “Son”, is translated from the Greek word “hwee-os’”(male offspring);
And the word “man” comes from the Greek word “anth’-ro-pos”(a human being).

Yet in their Bible they changed it to “Human One”!

What other reason could their be for this change, but to try and take something away from Christ or our understanding of Him?
--------------------------------------------------
Now I am not “worked up” about this at all, because it’s par for the course, when it comes to the Modern English versions.

And although I am unsure exactly what kind of an "attack" this is, it is an attack, because it is so blatant, that it can’t be a simple "mistake".
 
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