See Exodus 7:1.Moses was never called the mighty God. That title belongs to God and God alone.
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See Exodus 7:1.Moses was never called the mighty God. That title belongs to God and God alone.
See Exodus 7:1.
Do we not see that same pattern with Christ? The Father puts Yeshua in the role of the divine god, and there will also be a prophet as a spokesman to pave the way for Yeshua, John the Baptist. God, Mediator, prophet; this was Moses’ situation, and this was Our Savior’s situation.
I did not say it did.The context of that verse doesn't support the little gods doctrine. Lesson 7 - Exodus 7
I did not say it did.
Calling Moses a mighty God would be putting him on the same level as God.
The text calls Moses god. Remember, there aren't any uppercase or lowercase letters in Hebrew.The context of Exodus 7:1 does not put Moses and God on the same level.
The text calls Moses god. Remember, there aren't any uppercase or lowercase letters in Hebrew.
Isn't it true that Moses murders a man the the street which caused the great exodus?
I see. So when you're comfortable with this interpretation of the word god, you'll use this, but when it doesn't fit with your understanding of the messiah, you won't use it. Gotcha.Psalm 82:6 says I have said, Ye are gods; and all of you are children of the most High.
God puts leaders in positions of leadership where they are considered gods by the people but that doesn't mean that that attitude is right.
I see. So when you're comfortable with this interpretation of the word god, you'll use this, but when it doesn't fit with your understanding of the messiah, you won't use it. Gotcha.
The whole point of Psalm 82 is that earthly judges must act with impartiality and true justice, because even judges must stand someday before the Judge. Verses 6 and 7 warn human magistrates that they, too, must be judged: “I said, `You are gods; you are all sons of the Most High.' But you will die like mere men; you will fall like every other ruler.” This passage is saying that God has appointed men to positions of authority in which they are considered as gods among the people. They are to remember that, even though they are representing God in this world, they are mortal and must eventually give an account to God for how they used that authority.
Murder is not a mistake, it is a violation of the law,Moses was not God. He was a human being who made mistakes like everyone else.
Murder is not a mistake, it is a violation of the law,
The Pharaoh recognized this and sought to punish Moses for the murder.
I would not call this as a "mistake"
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As usual, you are ignoring the original Hebrew. This is not helping your case.The context of Psalm 82:6 is not about putting people and God on the same level. To understand any verse of the Bible the full context matters. What does the Bible mean by “you are gods” / "ye are gods" in Psalm 82:6 and John 10:34? | GotQuestions.org
As usual, you are ignoring the original Hebrew. This is not helping your case.
Evidence?The Hebrew in Psalm 82:6 doesn't put humans and God on the same level.
Evidence?
I think I've mentioned this to you in the past. Merely differentiating between capitalized and uncapitalized words is not evidence in Hebrew, because that concept does not exist in Hebrew.Where does the Hebrew version of Psalm 82:6 say anything other than God appointing people into positions of authority where they are considered gods among the people? The Hebrew version of Psalm 82 6 doesn't support anything other than the mighty God in Isaiah 9:6 is the Messiah.
I think I've mentioned this to you in the past. Merely differentiating between capitalized and uncapitalized words is not evidence in Hebrew, because that concept does not exist in Hebrew.
So Moses and the people in Psalms are idols? Gotcha.The one true God is the uppercase of God. Lowercase God is idols that people make for themselves. Isaiah 9:6 uses the term mighty God, showing that the Messiah is God.
So Moses and the people in Psalms are idols? Gotcha.