Sure, it makes perfect sense. God appears and Abraham looks up and sees 3 men! But nevermind that appearing thing, had nothing to do with those guys.
Weak.
Um, what? I'm not sure what you mean or if that was a typo.
Anyway, verse 22, Abraham standing before YHVH again. Keep on swinging brother, you just keep digging deeper and deeper.
Shall we migrate over to Psalm 22 and talk about piercing or being like lions, next?
Stop it. Just stop. Why do you do this? Is it your game, or tactic, to go in circles to exhaust your competition due to your total lack of ability to make decent counter arguments?
You said God doesn't even come into the equation until verse 17. He was clearly there in verse 1 and 13, etc. What are YOU talking about?
You are blind. He's a historian and an authority on the text. It's his understanding of it. His credentials give him the authority to make such assertions.
I have made and inquiry about his position. I will let you know what he says, if he ever replies, that is.
In the meantime, you are aware that there is are authorities for certain positions, based on their research and academic work? You have to "cite" someone, afterall? Similarly how you regard Rashi, Kimchi, or others who support your theology. They are authorities because of their life's work. It's similar with Tabor and others like him. Why do I even have to explain this to you?
Rashi's commentary, from chabad.org:
You said no conjugation of ate appeared (you admit the mistake in your reply below). I said even Rashi acknowledges there was eating going on. I was just showing you how your esteemed Rashi even acknowledges the fact the verb is present, which refutes your positions (which you admitted was wrong). Nothing more. The relativity of "eating" nor the conjugation wasn't the point.
I recommend getting a clue and stepping down your level of haughtiness. Mincing words doesn't help your flimsy case.
He's a published, doctorate holding, authority on this field of study. He's just one such authority that I happened to cite, because he published something on the web that was easily accessible for both of us.
It isn't I who accepts without thinking, but rather, you. That's been my point since the beginning, even when we were dancing around Isaiah 9:5/6.
I recommend reading this before being so fast to throw out insults:
Psychological projection - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Of course tense
matters, but this is a moot point because tense was NOT the issue, the actual appearance of the verb, or any conjugation of it, was! Seriously, you gotta stop with trivialities, it makes you look silly.
Indeed, this is the point of conjecture. For each of us to decide. I was merely demonstrating how someone without obvious theological bias agrees with me, and not you.
Because it's on you to find someone not of your theological bias who actually disagrees with me, Tabor, or... the rest of the scholars in the world who can read, understand, parse, and otherwise handle Hebrew -- possibly better than even you.
See, that's what "sources" are for. You and I disagree on the understanding of this text. Authorities on said text can shed light on which might be more accurate.
Again. You're up.
It very could be such a common piece of information in his academic circle, he didn't feel the need to cite it. Ultimately, I await his reply.
His position of authority is simply his credentials and life's work. He's a biblical scholar. Perhaps, more of the greek than the hebrew, but alas, he does teach both at a very high level. Again, why do you trust Rashi, or Kimchi? Does the concept of authority on respective fields of study really elude you?
First, it was I who implied your text was edited, because I assume you are using the Masoretic (or derived) hebrew pertaining to Genesis 18. I asked you to provide your text, you still haven't answered. It's rather up to you to decide, because neither I nor Tabor know what you're reading.
Second, I didn't get the content wrong -- like you did with Tabor's article, if you misunderstand me, it doesn't change what the point really was. I explained it above, I'm not re-hashing on it. I cited what I read, and if what I communicated after came out wrong and was misunderstood by you, consider yourself now clarified.
Suffice it to say Tabor most likely also uses Hebrew also, otherwise, why would he make the assertion he did? Do you suppose one has his credentials and achievements by doing such things?
I'm tempted to find another authority on the topic, but it didn't work with Isaiah 9:5/6 (even citing a plethora of key figures in Judaism didn't budge you), so really... I think you are, at best, a waste of my time.
No sources, again, nothing other than "Well, what I read says..." Yes, yes. We know. I say you're wrong. I used a neutral third party to demonstrate your wrongness. Holding your eyes and ears shut saying "I'M RIGHT! I'M RIGHT!" does not, in fact, make you right.
EDIT: Fixed multiple quote tags.