Piggy
Unlicensed street skeptic
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2006
- Messages
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Ok, since some people appear interested....
What I'll do is just post some commentaries on Bible passages which are confusing to, or easily misinterpreted by, modern readers, in cases where Biblical scholarship can shed some light on significant and interesting aspects of ancient peoples and cultures.
First up...
Why did Jesus call himself the "Son of Man"?
This always seemed odd to me as a kid, and no one ever bothered to explain it.
The reference is to a vision of Daniel in Daniel 7:13-14:
Now the book of Daniel was only about a century old at the time of the writing of the first extant gospel, and it was written in Aramaic -- the common spoken language of the day -- with some passages in Hebrew, and was probably distributed in codex form if I remember correctly.
It is in large part an apocalyptic book, and was widely distributed and accepted by many Jewish communities as scriptural, so it would have been accessible to the Jesus movement, well known, and in line with much of their theology.
The term "son of man" is equivalent to "man" or "boy" (male human being) -- see its use in Ezekiel, for example -- but when Jesus refers to himself as "the Son of Man" he is echoing Daniel.
By declaring Jesus to be the Son of Man of Daniel's vision, the Jesus movement is actually doing something even more radical -- in terms of Jewish scripture -- than declaring him the son of God.
As I mentioned before, the "son of God" was a term used to describe the earthly king all the way back to David ("I shall be a father to him and he shall be a son to me", "You are my son; today I have begotten you"). And it was used by other sects to declare their leaders to be the true inheritor of righteousness.
So when Mark describes Jesus being baptised by John, and Jesus sees a vision of the Spirit descending like a dove and hears the voice of God saying "You are my son, the Beloved", this indicates that he is the true successor to David, the spiritual leader chosen by God to lead the righteous of Israel.
But when he is described as the Son of Man, this makes him not just any annointed religious leader of Israel, but the one who is to lead Israel when the Day of Wrath comes and the unrighteous are wiped out and Israel rules all nations of the earth.
After Jesus' death, tales of his resurrection and ascention circulated, and of course his assumption of the role of, well, king of the world was deferred to a later date when he would return to, in a sense, oversee the removal and judgment of the wicked and the establishment of the promised kingdom of Zion.
The earliest Xians would have been expecting the return of Jesus during their lives.
Perhaps next time I'll discuss the confrontation story of the question of marriage in the afterlife, and its implications for resurrection theology in the time of Jesus.
ETA: Other bits from this particular vision of Daniel are echoed in Matthew, Luke, and Revelation
What I'll do is just post some commentaries on Bible passages which are confusing to, or easily misinterpreted by, modern readers, in cases where Biblical scholarship can shed some light on significant and interesting aspects of ancient peoples and cultures.
First up...
Why did Jesus call himself the "Son of Man"?
This always seemed odd to me as a kid, and no one ever bothered to explain it.
The reference is to a vision of Daniel in Daniel 7:13-14:
I kept looking in the night visions,
And behold, with the clouds of heaven
One like a Son of Man was coming,
And He came up to the Ancient of Days
And was presented before Him.
And to Him was given dominion,
Glory and a kingdom,
That all the peoples, nations and men of every language
Might serve Him.
His dominion is an everlasting dominion
Which will not pass away;
And His kingdom is one
Which will not be destroyed.
Now the book of Daniel was only about a century old at the time of the writing of the first extant gospel, and it was written in Aramaic -- the common spoken language of the day -- with some passages in Hebrew, and was probably distributed in codex form if I remember correctly.
It is in large part an apocalyptic book, and was widely distributed and accepted by many Jewish communities as scriptural, so it would have been accessible to the Jesus movement, well known, and in line with much of their theology.
The term "son of man" is equivalent to "man" or "boy" (male human being) -- see its use in Ezekiel, for example -- but when Jesus refers to himself as "the Son of Man" he is echoing Daniel.
By declaring Jesus to be the Son of Man of Daniel's vision, the Jesus movement is actually doing something even more radical -- in terms of Jewish scripture -- than declaring him the son of God.
As I mentioned before, the "son of God" was a term used to describe the earthly king all the way back to David ("I shall be a father to him and he shall be a son to me", "You are my son; today I have begotten you"). And it was used by other sects to declare their leaders to be the true inheritor of righteousness.
So when Mark describes Jesus being baptised by John, and Jesus sees a vision of the Spirit descending like a dove and hears the voice of God saying "You are my son, the Beloved", this indicates that he is the true successor to David, the spiritual leader chosen by God to lead the righteous of Israel.
But when he is described as the Son of Man, this makes him not just any annointed religious leader of Israel, but the one who is to lead Israel when the Day of Wrath comes and the unrighteous are wiped out and Israel rules all nations of the earth.
After Jesus' death, tales of his resurrection and ascention circulated, and of course his assumption of the role of, well, king of the world was deferred to a later date when he would return to, in a sense, oversee the removal and judgment of the wicked and the establishment of the promised kingdom of Zion.
The earliest Xians would have been expecting the return of Jesus during their lives.
Perhaps next time I'll discuss the confrontation story of the question of marriage in the afterlife, and its implications for resurrection theology in the time of Jesus.
ETA: Other bits from this particular vision of Daniel are echoed in Matthew, Luke, and Revelation
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