Review of Mobile Ed: OT291, The Jewish Trinity

Introduction
Segment One
Segment Three
Segment Seven
Segment Nine
One of the learning objectives in this segment is to “demonstrate how the Shema presumes divine plurality.” The word “demonstrates” denotes some kind of evidence will be presented.
He covers Deuteronomy 4:19-20; 32:8-9, 17, and then quotes the core component of the Shema, “The Lord is our God, the Lord is one” and then without any exegetical proof states that the Shema allows plurality (a godhead). To comply with the doctrine of Trinity, Dr. Heiser re-tools the core teaching of the Shema —that there is one God (not two or more) and then adds Jesus Christ.
He states, “Now, the point of all this is that the Shema itself…. assumes and presumes divine plurality in its language. It is not a violation of the Shema or, as we saw earlier, a violation of monotheism to worship Jesus as God along with the God of Israel. These deities were real. They were over the nations, and they were put there by Yahweh.”
Without any proof, Dr. Heiser teaches that the Shema is elastic (it can include other Gods) and “…worship Jesus as God along with the God of Israel… does not void it.” Dr. Heiser allows the doctrine of the Trinity to be the engine that drives his biblical interpretation. Sadly, he is one of many Trinitarian scholars (who no doubt love God) that are driven by the extra biblical doctrine of the Trinity originated from the Roman Catholic Church.
Dr. Heiser continues to champion the erroneous teaching that because other deities exist that are real (both good and evil), then there is plurality of deities within the one God of the Shema. But this conclusion is not supported by the premise.
The premise that the Shema “presumes divine plurality in its language” is another unsupported premise. Most translations interpret the Hebrew word “e-had” as one (“The LORD our God, the LORD is one’’). An examination of the Septuagint (Old Testament Translation in Greek used by Jesus) confirms that the word means “one.” When Jesus quoted the Shema (Mark 12:28-34), He used the Greek word “heis” meaning one.No wonder most Jews reject Christianity. When the Bible is opened with the front-loaded presupposition that the Trinity is true, this requires dumping exegetical principles when necessary.
While Christians worship the Father and the Son, both are separate persons. Only the Father is included in the Shema. Please consider the words of Jesus:
“44 How can you believe, when you receive glory from one another and do not seek the glory that comes from the only God? Do not think that I will accuse you to the Father. There is one who accuses you: Moses, on whom you have set your hope. For if you believed Moses, you would believe me; for he wrote of me.” (John 5:44-46). The only God is the Father. Jesus said, “14 Let not your hearts be troubled. Believe in God; believe also in me” (John14:1). Jesus never claimed to be God (in the absolute sense, equal to the Father), but the Son of God.
Why is Jesus worshipped since He is not the one God of the Shema? The one God of the Shema has exalted and glorified His Son as LORD, because of what He did:
“8 And being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross. 9 Therefore [in light of what He did in verse 8] God has highly exalted him and bestowed on him the name that is above every name, 10 so that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, 11 and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.
“God has highly exalted him.” For additional verses that state why Jesus was exalted, see Hebrews 1:9, 2:9, etc.
He goes on to say, “But Jesus is not a separate god. As we are going to see in the rest of this course, Jesus is identified with Yahweh. So think about that: If Jesus is identified with Yahweh because of some things we are going to see in the ot, then worshiping Jesus is not worshiping a different god; it’s not worshiping another god; it’s worshiping Yahweh, the same way, even though we have two persons.”
This quote is riddled with contradictions. Trinitarians affirm that Jesus is God while being a separate person from God (the Father). But apparently, Dr. Heiser does not believe this (“But Jesus is not a separate god”). He ends this quote with an admission that the Father and Jesus are “two persons.” So how Jesus is a separate person who is God, but “not a separate god” is incomprehensible. Dr. Heiser doesn’t provide any biblical accreditation for this bazar identity of Jesus.
The statement that “Jesus is identified with Yahweh” is ambiguous. Here is a secret that many Trinitarians don’t know. Since Trinitarian scholars cannot (or shouldn’t) say that Jesus is the Father (heresy called Modalism or Oneness) they sometimes try to circumvent this heresy by not stating explicitly that Jesus is the Father while hoping their audience understand implicitly (“Jesus is identified with Yahweh”) that Jesus is the Father. This is again because the doctrine of the Trinity correctly forbids collapsing Jesus into the Father. Because if Jesus is the Father, then Jesus came from Himself (not the Father) and prayed to Himself (not the Father) and God wears different masks (Father, or Son, or Holy Spirit).
Consequently, his statement that “worshiping Jesus is not worshiping a different god …. it’s worshiping Yahweh…” is in error. He admits on one hand that they are separate persons, but on the other hand, collapses Jesus into Yahweh. While it brings honor to Yahweh when we worship His Son whom He exalted, they remain separate persons.
Jesus never included Himself in the Shema. Jesus called the Father the one true God: “3 And this is eternal life, that they know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent” (John 17:3). This verse has ministered to many former Trinitarians who are now Biblical Unitarians. Jesus states that the Father is the only true God. While there are many gods, Jesus understood that His Father alone was above all others, including Himself. While Jesus is not the true God, He is a divine person who is the only way to the true God (John 14:6).
Segment 13
Dr. Heiser states, “…and any being that is attached to—identified with—Yahweh is okay to worship, and this is why a Jew could become a Christian in the ancient world and worship Jesus. Because Jesus was, in the mind of the nt writer, identified with Yahweh.“
The Bible states why Jesus Christ should be worshipped. Dr. Heiser believes that this should happen because Jesus is identified with Yahweh. But collapsing Jesus Christ into the Shema is wrong. Jesus was steadfast that He was not the Father. When Jesus was called a “good teacher,” not wanting to take any credit away from His Father who was greater (John 10:29, 14:28), Jesus responds: ”18 And Jesus said to him, “Why do you call me good? No one is good except God alone” (Mark 10:18). Once again, the one God according to Jesus, was/is His Father. Jesus set Himself apart from His Father.
Dr. Heiser is partly correct to say, “and this is why a Jew could become a Christian in the ancient world and worship Jesus.” But the reason why early Jews worshipped Jesus was not because He taught a Trinity (doctrine inexistent until 4th century). We have already examined some passages on how Jesus identified Himself in relation to His Father. Another important passage for a critical, exegetical examination is found in Acts 2.
In Acts 2, Peter preached a sermon to monotheistic Jews gathered from all over the world. If the monotheistic Jews needed to believe a Trinity (or that Jesus is equal to the Father) to be saved, Peter had a prime opportunity because these were Jews and this new doctrine could spread throughout the world. Instead, Peter affirmed monotheism! While the following is a brief survey, please break out your Bible to examine it for yourself:
In verse 22, Jesus is called “a man” and “mighty works and wonders and signs” are credited to His Father. In verse 24, God is given credit for His resurrection. This is because Jesus was 100% dead when He died (respectfully). There are 27 verses in the NT that credit God for raising Jesus up. Dead human beings cannot raise themselves up on their own. In verse 32, God is given credit once more for raising Jesus from the dead. In verse 36, Peter declares that “God has made him both Lord and Christ, this Jesus whom you crucified.”
Segment 15
Dr. Heiser makes many good points. An objection is that he quotes 1 Corinthians 8:4-6 and doesn’t acknowledge something extremely important. Here is the verse:
“6 yet for us there is one God, the Father, from whom are all things and for whom we exist, and one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom are all things and through whom we exist.”
This New Testament passage from Paul confirms that the Old Testament Shema only includes the Father. While Jesus is mentioned, He is a separate person, apart from, and in addition to the one God. Secondly, everything originates and we exist directly “from” God (direct source). From Jesus, everything originates and we exist “through whom” (indirect source). This distinction is consistent with Jesus being a deity that worshiped the Father (John 4:22) and has God as His Father (John 20:17; Romans 15:6; Hebrews 1:9; Ephesians 1:17; Revelation 1:6, 12, etc.).
Segment 20
Segment 21
This module covers three passages. The first passage (Genesis 19:2) refers to Yahweh twice, but this verse leaves no opening for a Trinitarian godhead, or declares that there is a second Yahweh. The second passage (Amos 4:11) has Yahweh as the speaker refereeing back to himself in the third person. There is nothing unusual here that would circumvent the Shema or indicate the existence of a second Yahweh. The final passage is Genesis 22:11-12. In Genesis 22:1, God speaks to Abraham with instructions. So Abraham obeys God. In verses 11-12, an angel addresses Abraham. There is no support here for the doctrine of the Trinity or that there are multiple Yahweh’s that would contradict multiple Old Testament passages that explicitly declare that Yahweh is one Person or Being.
In the segment summary, he states, “…we’ve noticed that there are certain passages in the ot that sounded to the ear like the God of Israel was two.” But this conclusion was not achieved.
He continues, “Rabbis took note of this and referred to the idea as Two Powers being in Heaven.” While some isolated Rabbis may have reached this conclusion, there is nothing in the passages presented in this segment to reasonably conclude that any Jew believed this without exaggerating the text.
Segment 22
Note: most passages provided in this segment are not covered.
The first passage is Exodus 3:1-4. Here Abraham notices a burning bush that is not consumed and receives a message from Yahweh. This passage is interesting because at the beginning an angel of Yahweh speaks to Moses (v. 2). But in verse four, God calls out to Moses from the bush. Dr. Heiser indicates that there are two figures and that it’s not always clear who is speaking.
While it’s possible that Yahweh and His angel were present in the burning bush incident, it’s seems more likely that it was only Yahweh’s angel. This is because angels at times spoke for Yahweh in person. This practice in ancient Judaism is called law of agency (good subject for research).
The next passage is Exodus 23:20-22. God speaks to Moses. In verse 21, while speaking to Moses, God tells him, “do not rebel against him [the angel], for he will not pardon your transgression, for my name is in him” (v. 21).
Dr. Heiser points out that it’s “unusual” because God decides who is pardoned. But Dr. Heiser must forget that God at times delegates this authority to others. So there is nothing unusual about this passage.
The Father gave Jesus the authority to forgive sins (Matthew 9:1-8). Jesus delegates authority to His disciples to forgive sins (John 20:23). So while Dr. Heiser is correct that the forgiveness of sins “is really the province of God,” God can delegate authority to others.
A reason why God (the Father) can delegate forgiveness of sins is because “I am the Lord, and there is no other, besides me there is no God…” (Isaiah 45:5a). This passage includes hyperbole. This type of speech includes a purposeful exaggeration (“besides me there is no God”) to make a point. Because God is so awesome, and all other gods are out of His league, God highlights His greatness. Trinitarians regularly retract from Yahweh’s awesomeness by claiming that Jesus is ontologically equal. But there is no clear biblical exegetical accreditation for this teaching.
In Genesis 48:14-16, Jacob blesses his two sons. In doing so, he invokes God’s name twice (v. 15). Verse 16 says, “the angel who has redeemed me from all evil, bless the boys.” Here Dr. Heiser concludes, “Right there we have God and the angel set on equal status.” But such a conclusion is not an established fact. There are no angels (created being) that matches the awesomeness and magnitude of almighty Yahweh’s greatness. God has an army of angels that guard believers. God used one or more angels to protect Jacob.
Heiser continues and says, ‘”May the God who did this, the God who did that, the angel who did X-Y-Z …” And here’s the kicker: “ ‘May he bless these lads.’ ” It’s not “may they”; it’s “may he.” The verb in Hebrew there is actually singular. It’s grammatically singular. If the writer had wanted to distinguish, to separate God from this angel, this is an easy place to do it, but he doesn’t do it. They use a singular verb, “May he bless these boys.” It’s pretty dramatic for this to be in the ot.”
A reason the verb is singular is because the author likely wanted to distinguish the angel from the Father. Apparently, Dr. Heiser missed this possibility, or my interpretation is in error.
In the conclusion, Dr. Heiser claims that the Old Testament “contains clear suggestions of a Godhead, Yahweh as two figures—again, this two but yet one sort of feeling in certain passages.” But there is no evidence of this without overstating the text. The Old Testament affirms many, many times that there is only one God who is the Father: Deuteronomy 4:35, 39; 6:4; 32:39; 2 Samuel 7:22; 2 Samuel 22:32;1 Kings 8:60; 19:15; 1 Chronicles 17:20; Nehemiah 9:6; Psalm 18:31; Isaiah 37:20; 43:10; 44:8; 45; 45:14; 45:18; 45:21; 46:9; Zachariah 14:9 (there are more). This thread continuous throughout the New Testament (Mark 10:18; 12:29; Romans 3:30; 1 Corinthians 8:4-6; Galatians 3:20, etc.)
Yahweh can and did communicate at times through intermediaries. But when this occurred, it wasn’t a second Yahweh, but someone acting and speaking on behalf of Yahweh. Yahweh is one GOD —period.
Dr. Heiser writes, “The Name is another way of referring to Yahweh—again, as Jews still do to this day. The Name is within the Angel of Yahweh, and what that means is that this angel—that particular angel, the Angel of the Lord, the Angel of Yahweh—is therefore Yahweh in human form. Now this is not the incarnation, like we think of with Jesus, in the ot, but it is Yahweh appearing as a man, and, not only that, but in some instances those appearances seem to be Yahweh, and other times they are this other Yahweh—again, this two but yet one. Two but yet one; one but yet two, and think about this: one of them looks like a man.”
Just because some passages don’t clearly differentiate between Yahweh and His agent (one acting on Yahweh’s behalf) is not a reason to exaggerate a text into two possible Yahweh’s’.
Dr. Heiser is correct that when angels spoke for Yahweh as Yahweh, these were not incarnations.
You can learn about “agency” in the Jewish Encyclopedia sold by Logos Bible Software (or free online) or “Google” this topic. Jewish agency can be a fascinating study!
I respectfully disagree with Dr. Heiser’s final conclusion: “Again, you can see how this is the backdrop for the Christological language of the nt, the Godhead thinking of the early Christians and the nt writers as well.” While some Jews may have been (or were) confused by different appearances of Yahweh, there is no exegetical evidence in the Old Testament that there were two Yahweh’s.
Segment 23
This segment covers an angel of Yahweh who spoke for Yahweh.
The passage is Judges 6. In verse 11, the “angel of the LORD [Yahweh]” appears to Gideon and communicates a message from the LORD. But in verse 14, the angels speak as Yahweh Himself: “And the Lord turned to him and said, “Go in this might of yours and save Israel from the hand of Midian; do not I send you?” This passage illustrates well the practice of Jewish agency. Yahweh’s angel spoke as Yahweh Himself. But the angel was acting as an agent by representing Yahweh in human form.
Also, when Gideon speaks to Yahweh’s angel, he knows this angel is not Yahweh Himself. This is because Gideon addresses the angel as “Adani.” So when reading this account, Old Testament rabbis would have seen the distinction in Hebrew between Yahweh and Adani. They would have known that the angel was not Yahweh himself but speaking as His agent.
For verse 17, Dr. Heiser seems confused, “—we don’t know who Gideon is talking to; is it Yahweh or is it the angel? It’s ambiguous there…” But the scene is clear. In fact, in verse 22, Gideon states, “…For now I have seen the angel of the Lord face to face.” Gideon knows this was not Yahweh Himself. But because he had a personal encounter with an angel of Yahweh, he is frightened. But he is told not to fear (v. 23).
In the conclusion Dr. Heiser writes, “Now, by way of summary to this point, we have learned that the Hebrew Bible contains clear suggestions of a Godhead, Yahweh as two figures—again, this two but yet one sort of feeling in certain passages.” His concluding remarks states, “Again, you can see how this is the backdrop for the Christological language of the nt, the Godhead thinking of the early Christians and the nt writers as well.”
It’s unbelievable how Dr. Heiser jumps to conclusions from apparent mere speculation.
Segment 24
This segment is about “Yahweh and ‘The Word.’” Three passages are used: Genesis 15:1, 1 Samuel 3, and Jeremiah 1:4–9.
He writes, “The next one is the Word. Now, we are probably familiar with this as Christians because of John chapter 1, ‘The Word was made flesh,’ and so on and so forth. But that’s actually an ot idea that Yahweh is the Word.”
Dr. Heiser believes that “Yahweh is the Word.” It’s unfortunate that Dr. Heiser is teaching a course on the Trinity and misses a critical Trinitarian element. Yahweh and the pre-incarnate Word (Jesus) are separate Beings (Persons) who cannot be collapsed into each other based on the doctrine of the Trinity.
Segment 25
Segment 27
In this segment, Dr. Heiser examines non-biblical writings of the Second Temple period that contain exalted human beings.
When commenting on the writings of the Second Temple period, Dr. Heiser claims that “And in that body of literature, they were struggling to deal with the Second Yahweh idea, some of these Godhead passages, these odd angel passages, the Word, the Rider on the Clouds, all these things. They were trying to come to grips with what their Bible was saying, and they sort of parsed out their views in a couple different categories, as to who the Second Power was, who it might be.”
Dr. Heiser wants his students to read this view into the texts he covers. But front-loading texts with presuppositions is not objective scholarship. If these texts that he covers were written with the background that Dr. Heiser teaches, then evidence should be submitted. Sadly, this course contains significant speculations.
For example, he covers Adam and Jacob as second powers based on some quoted non-canonized texts. But there is no indication in the quotes that the authors believed in a plurality of Gods within Jewish monotheism (one God), or that these beings were co-equal to Yahweh.
Two passages of Enoch are covered. In 1 Enoch 71, there is a vision where Enoch becomes the “Son of Man” of Daniel 7. We covered this passage and the “Son of Man” is a subordinate being and there is nothing in the scene to equate Jesus with the Father or of two co-equal Yahweh figures. Dr. Heiser writes, “Enoch, in this text, becomes the son of man figure, the Second Yahweh figure, of Dan 7.” But this is a non-canonized, fictional writing. Enoch never became the “Son of Man.”
In 2 Enoch 22:4–10, Enoch appears before the Lord and is transfigured. Then he becomes, “…one of his Glorious Ones.” Dr. Heiser summarizes this account, “He becomes, again, at that level, the second power level.” But again, this is mere speculation and this none-canonized writing was not true.
In the account of Moses, to Heiser’s credit, after stating that the writer thought Moses was the second power, Dr. Heiser admits that he is speculating.
Segment 28
In this segment Dr. Heiser covers angels. For the angel Michael, Dr. Heiser writes, “Again, it was a little fuzzy in the mind of some, but Michael became a primary candidate for the Second Power in heaven.” But Dr. Heiser doesn’t provide quotes from the Second Temple period that claimed or suggested that Michael was a “second power in heaven” to form a godhead, etc.
He also covers a quote about an angel called Ya’el (Yahoel). But there is nothing in this account that teaches that the author or the Jews in this time period widely believed that Jewish monotheism consisted of multiple beings who made up the one God. He concludes this segment:
“So again you have disagreement between Jewish writers, Jewish thinkers at the time, but the major point here is to show that this isn’t sort of a convenient idea, this two-powers idea that Christians can sort of make up and use to say, “Hey, belief in Jesus as part of a Godhead is Jewish. It’s Old Testament, it’s consistent.” It is consistent, it is Jewish, not because it’s convenient for nt theology, but because Jews saw it and were thinking. And the evidence for that is right here in Jewish texts that were composed before the nt, that have nothing to do with the nt, that are never cited in or by the nt. This is part of Jewish thinking.”
Tragically, this segment contains significant speculation and is outside the scope of credible scholarship.
Segment 30
Dr. Heiser covers a few writings from a Jewish philosopher named Philo. He was born before Christ and lived to around 50 AD. He was well educated and heavily influenced by pagan philosophies. According to Wikipedia.org (accessed October 2017), in addition to Judaism, Philo was influenced by Platonism, Stoicism, and Hellenism.
Early in the segment Dr. Heiser introduces Philo and comments, “And in Philo’s writings, he as well as these other Jews that we’ve been talking about in terms of their religious thinking are again trying to articulate this idea of this second being beside God who was, but who wasn’t deity, was but wasn’t Yahweh, that sort of thing.”
Outside the realm of speculation, Dr. Heiser fails to provide explicit or implicit evidence from Philo’s writings that they mirror the thinking of most Jews living during the time of Christ, or that Jewish monotheism as understood during this timeframe allowed a plurality of Gods that formed one God.
This segment concludes Dr. Heiser’s examination of the Old Testament. The objective of the course as identified by the title (“How the OT Reveals the Christian Godhead”) was not met.
Segment 31
Continuing his speculation, Dr. Heiser transferred the alleged Old Testament belief that there were two Yahweh’s to New Testament authors.
But Dr. Heiser exaggerates that New Testament authors wrote inspired Scripture based on this understanding: “The nt writers, of course, were well aware of these ideas, and on occasion they used them very specifically to refer to Jesus.”
His speculation continues, “They’re [NT authors] going to see that Jesus is being identified with Yahweh, as Yahweh’s equal, not based on a new idea or a wish, but based on ot ideas.”
To summarize, without any evidence, Dr Heiser claims that NT authors believed in a second Yahweh, introduced this thinking into the NT text and thereby made Jesus equal to Yahweh. There is no exegetical evidence within speculation.
Dr. Heiser takes his students to John 1:1 and promotes Modalism: “So we have the Word here who was God, Yahweh was God, Yahweh is the Word.” Modalism is the Heresy that God operates in different modes and Jesus and God are the same person.
The Modalism hat is often worn by Trinitarians scholars who resort to double talk to shake off the Modalism label. He continues and takes back what he just stated, “So we have the Word now, not only is He God [Modalism] but He’s also distinct from God.” Hey, wait a minute. Jesus is God and now you are saying He is not God? Dr. Heiser apparently is aware that two distinct beings cannot be the same being. Similarly, two material objects that differ are not the same.
Because I have written in some detail on John 1:1 on my website, this passage won’t be further unpacked.
Dr. Heiser also discuss John 1:18. But this passage will be covered in a later segment.
Segment 32
A verse in Jude says, “5 Now I want to remind you, although you once fully knew it, that Jesus, who saved a people out of the land of Egypt, afterward destroyed those who did not believe” (Jude 5). Please observe that Jesus is credited here with saving the Jews who departed Egypt.
A verse in Deuteronomy says, “20 But the LORD [Yahweh] has taken you and brought you out of the iron furnace, out of Egypt, to be a people of his own inheritance, as you are this day” (Deuteronomy 4:20). Please observed that Yahweh is credited here with saving the Jews who departed Egypt.
In Exodus 23, Yahweh’s angel guards and leads God’s people.
Please note that Yahweh, His angel (doing Yahweh’s will) and Jesus were involved in the deliverance of the Jews from slavery. There is nothing unusual here. But Dr. Heiser concludes, “And the point is, yeah it’s all of them because all of those titles, all of those figures are Yahweh. They are this Second Yahweh figure as well; they’re all interchangeable is the point.”
No —all these figures are not Yahweh. While Jesus and angels were involved in the Old Testament, they are not to be confused with Yahweh, who is the only God. In fact, we just quoted a verse from Deuteronomy 4:20. Here is another verse in the same chapter: “To you it was shown, that you might know that the Lord is God; there is no other besides him” (Deuteronomy 4:35). Dr. Heiser, please know that Yahweh wants us to know that there is only one God who is far above all others. Not only did Jesus conclude that Yahweh was greater (Mark 10:18; John 10:29; 14:28), Paul also believed it (1 Corinthians 11:3, 15:27-28; Ephesians 4:6).
Segment 33
One of the learning objectives in this segment is, “Identify three nt verses that place Jesus within the context of the Godhead theology of the ot.” Before we examine what verse Dr. Heiser proposes, please think about this learning objective. Dr. Heiser believes that the one God is not Yahweh as the Bible teaches. He correctly believes the one God is not Jesus or the Holy Spirit. He believes a Triune Being is the one God —composed of Father, Son and Holy Spirit. So for a New Testament passage to describe this godhead, it would include all three members, forming the one God. This is a high charge when this belief is not found once in the entire Bible without dressing up the text with Trinitarian assumptions. But unbelievably, Dr. Heiser thinks his learning objective teaches this! He has not introduced one verse in his entire course that exegetically establishes that God is one person while simultaneously being a multi-person godhead.
The passage he submits is the High Priestly Prayer in John 17:6, 12, 26. Dr. Heiser starts off correct by acknowledging that Jesus was not the Father, but represented the Father before the people (divine agency): “So when He prays, “I have manifested your name to people whom you gave me out of the world,” He is basically saying, “I’ve shown them you. I am to them what God is like. This is what God is like, this is who He is: it’s me. I am what God is like.”
But regrettably, Dr. Heiser appears to take this back by making Jesus the same person as the Father: “He is God embodied. He is God in human form. He is God to them because He is; He is the name embodied, just like the angel was. He is God in visible human form.”
Jesus was never the Father. Jesus represented the Father to the people, but never claimed to be the Father. He claimed to be the Son of God, but not God Himself.
Segment 35
This segment contains three learning benchmarks. Here is the first: “Name one important nt chapter that connects Jesus to the Godhead theology of the ot.”
For this objective, Dr. Heiser chose Matthew 26:61-65. Before expositing this passage, Dr. Heiser did some preliminary mind conditioning. He reviewed Daniel 7:13-14. He writes, “I made a comment that this was a critical passage for the whole two-powers thinking because it was so obvious to anyone who knew their ot what was going on here.”
While we already covered this passage, it should be reviewed since Dr. Heiser claims that it promoted a “two powers thinking,” to those “who knew their ot.” So, let’s clear some smoke and allow the passage to speak: “13 “I saw in the night visions, and behold, with the clouds of heaven there came one like a son of man, and he came to the Ancient of Days and was presented before him. 14 And to him was given dominion and glory and a kingdom, that all peoples, nations, and languages should serve him; his dominion is an everlasting dominion, which shall not pass away, and his kingdom one that shall not be destroyed” (Daniel 7:13-14).
The one, all mighty Being in this passage is not Jesus Christ. It’s the “Ancient of Days [Yahweh].” It appears that Yahweh summons Jesus (“Ancient of Days”) to appear before His throne (“He came” & “was presented before Him”). Jesus is given what He does not posses “dominion”, “glory”, a “kingdom”, etc. People who knew their Old Testament well would not attribute this second person to Yahweh. Jesus is a distinct and subordinate being who is greatly promoted. So there is nothing in this passage that suggests that there are two Yahweh’s or a co-equal godhead.
The passage provided is Matthew 26:57-65. Here Jesus appears before Caiaphas and the Council. In verse 63, the high priest asks Jesus if He is the Son of God. In the next verse, Jesus agrees with this title: “Jesus said to him, “You have said so. But I tell you, from now on you will see the Son of Man seated at the right hand of Power and coming on the clouds of heaven” (v. 64).
Dr. Heiser claims that Jesus is quoting Daniel 7:13. But these passages are very different. Most theologians would disagree. Dr. Heiser writes “Jesus looks him right in the eye and He quotes Dan 7:13, I’m the second power. I am the bearer of this deity title, a title that belongs only to Yahweh. Is that clear enough for you, Caiaphas?” Once again, when the context of this passage in Daniel is analyzed, Jesus is not a second Yahweh. Dr. Heiser continues to make the text say more than it does. This practice is eisegesis 101.
Segment 36
Dr. Heiser wears the Modalism hat once again and claims that Jesus is Yahweh:
“They identified Jesus with the Second Yahweh figure of the ot and when they did that, they were expressing their own theology that Jesus was indeed Yahweh, the God of Israel incarnate, in human form. Jesus was therefore not just an angel, and He was not a different elohim other than Yahweh. So, worshiping Him did not violate the Shema. These are very important points.”
This kind of scholarship is prevalent in our day. God is a ventriloquist who sometimes appears as Jesus, other times as the Father.
Segment 38
[1] The only use in the New Testament where the immediate context (same verse) doesn’t describe sonship for the word “begotten” is found in John 1:18 (verse 14 involves sonship). In John 1:18, Jesus is called the “only [begotten] God.” In contrast to his Father, Jesus is a God who is begotten (came into existence).
This is also supported by verse 15 where Jesus “ranks” (ESV) before John the Baptist. The word “ranks” here is a bad translation. According to BDAG, this word can mean, “be born,” “be produced;” “be made,” “be created,” “be manufactured,” “be performed;” “arise,” “come about,” “develop;” “happen,” “turn out,” “take place;” “become;” “something” (197). As further evidence that Jesus was begotten (came into existence), the verb here is in the perfect tense. This means that Jesus came into existence at a point in time in the past, and this existence continued to be true up to the present time. So, “there was a time when Jesus was not” (John 5:26, Colossians 1:16-17; Revelation 3:14; Proverbs 8:23-26).
The remaining uses of “only begotten” (monogenēs) are attributed to Jesus. Early in the book of John, the Apostle John further introduces Jesus to His audience (1:14, 18). In verses 14, “Jesus is the only [begotten] Son from the Father.”
In verse 18, Jesus is “the only [begotten] God.” The modern Trinitarian modified definition for monogenēs (“only unique”) doesn’t fit the context of this verse, which further casts doubt on this definition. This is because Jesus would be the only unique God, in contrast to the Father.
In John 3:16, monogenēs means, “only begotten Son,” in John 3:18 it means “only [begotten] Son of God,” and in 1 John 4:9 it means “only [begotten] Son into the world.”
Some Trinitarians use Hebrews 11:17 as a loop hole to teach that the word “begotten” cannot mean only (first) begotten child. Dr. Heiser writes, “I think the best example is probably Heb 11:17, where Isaac is called the monogenēs of Abraham. But now if you think about it, Isaac was not the firstborn son of Abraham—that was Ishmael.”
Have you ever heard a sermon on Abraham offering up his only son to God where the preacher played down the significance of this offering because “Isaac was not the firstborn son of Abraham”? Of course not. The fact is, Isaac was Abraham’s firstborn son from Sarah. While Abraham did have a son from Hagar (already departed), God had promised him a Son from Sarah whose descendants would be like the stars that could not be numbered (Genesis 15:5). This “son of promise” was considered his only begotten son. In Genesis 22:12, the angel of Yahweh said to Abraham, “you have not withheld your son, your only son, from me.”Segment 39
This segment covers the definition of monogenēs using some resources within Logos. Mark Barnes is an excellent narrator. Towards the beginning, he states “to gather information about a word, so you can access the evidence for yourself.” Unfortunately, Mr. Barnes doesn’t present this information in neutral to encourage those taking the course to decide for themselves.
In this segment, I question BDAG’s (my favorite Greek lexicon) definition of monogenēs. Because this is a book review, my objections will be short.
BDAG stands for A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature. It was first published in 1957. Its editor was Frederick William (1920-2012).
BDAG provides two meanings for monogenēs. The first meaning is assigned to human beings, but it excludes Jesus who was fully human! The second category of meaning for (monogenēs) is for Jesus Christ, but no one else in the New Testament. The category assigned to Jesus from extra-biblical sources includes a bird, other humans, and many references that I don’t own. This decision by BDAG should question if Trinitarian pre-suppositions came into play.
The humanity of Jesus is an important topic of the Gospels. Two of the Gospels include genealogies for Jesus. Because the humanity of Jesus is agreed upon by all Christians, there is no point in exacerbation.
Since Jesus was fully human like you and I, why did BDAG create a special category for Jesus unless there are underlying motivations? Since all the people assigned to the first category where only sons, was not Jesus also the only Son in John 1:14, 3:16, 18 and 1 John 4:9?
Many Christians are unaware that all major Bible translations, Greek dictionaries and Lexicons are composed by Trinitarians. Biblical Unitarian scholars would not be allowed to take part in a translation committee because they would be accused of theological bias. But since Trinitarian scholars don’t have biases (right!), this is acceptable.
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Segment 45
In this segment Dr. Heiser concludes his teaching on Jesus appealing to the existence of divine beings (Psalm 82:6, John 10:34).
In his conclusion, he states, “And so His last sort of argument in the logic chain is, “I’m more than just divine. Yeah, we have those. We have other divine beings, but I’m even above them.” While Jesus is above other divine beings, He is in subordination to His Father. He continues, “I’m not only above humanity, I’m above other divine sons of God. I am the Father in flesh right here before you. I and the Father are one. The Father is in me, and I’m in the father.”
Jesus was not and is not the Father (“I am the Father in flesh right here before you”). These sorts of statements are a violation of the Trinity doctrine he is trying to uphold and are consistent with the Oneness doctrine or Modalism. While Jesus represented the Father in person, He remains a separate, distinct person.
Segment 46
This segment is titled, Seeds of a Christian Trinity in Isaiah 63 and Psalm 78. Dr. Heiser makes a case while majoring on assumptions. It’s impossible to make a case for the Trinity from Old Testament using any kind of credible hermeneutics because this fourth century Roman Catholic Church doctrine was non-existent.
Segment 47
It is titled, Seeds of a Christian Trinity in Ezekiel 8. This segment continues the previous stream of assumptive theological presuppositions.
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Segment 50
Dr. Heiser proceeds to address Jehovah’s Witnesses. He writes, “…because it’s just frankly incorrect to say that the ‘Word’ there in John 1:1 is properly understood as ‘a God,’ when the Word in the ot, as we’ve seen, was actually Yahweh Himself—not just any elohim, but Yahweh Himself. We’ve seen how the nt writers are repurposing, they’re drawing from this ot passages about the ‘Word’ being very explicitly Jehovah Himself, Yahweh.”
If the Word in John 1:1 was Yahweh as he teaches, then Yahweh was with Yahweh and was Yahweh. Co-mingling two persons or more as one makes God’s Word incoherent and contradictory.
He continues with passages that teach that Yahweh was the “Word.” But Genesis 15:1-6, 1 Samuel 3:1, and Jeremiah 1:1-9 don’t assign the title “Word” to Yahweh. In these passages, Dr. Heiser confuses Yahweh’s word with Yahweh Himself.
Segment 51
Conclusion
Copyright © 2017
I AGREE GOD IS ONE , CAN GOD NOT COUNT AS IN ONE TWO THREE,MY OPINION, IF I BELIEVE THE TRINITY, I REJECT THE PROMISE MADE TO EVE,THAT TROUGH HER SEED, SHE IS THE INCUBATOR , MANLY FLESH ,BUT MARY ASED NOT THE SEED OF ADAM OR MAN,BUT HER SEED, GOD INSIMINATED MARY BY HIS POWER,HOW CAN TRINITARIANS CLAIM ,JUST BELIEVE TRINITY,DO NOT UNDERSTAND IT,GOD SAID,I WILL MANIFEST MYSELF AND SPEAK TROUGH MY SON ,IN THE LATTER DAYS, GOD IS ONE THE SON IS THE GIFT BELIEVE GOD THROUGH THE SON JOHN 17 VS 3 SUMS IT UP FOR ME ,TO HAVE THE PROMISE OF HOPE TO BE COUNTED WORTHY. BIBLE FOR ME IS READ IT, BELIEVE IT LIVE IT MY OPINION GOD BLESS
The Trinity is a (semantic, logical, cosmological, theological, psychological, and philosophical) construct, a theological conjecture; created by flawed and fallible Homo sapiens who want to understand something no one really understands: the way God relates to God’s self. The word “Trinity” never appears in the Bible. God, Jesus, nor the silent Holy Spirit refers to themselves as a Trinity. The readers of scripture are never privy to discussions of substance and form between the members of the Godhead as we’ll later find in minutes of the historic councils of the church. Matters important to defining Christian orthodoxy seem to be of little matter to the deity, the deity’s son, or the spirit whom we debate or celebrate in art.
We, the Homo sapiens in question, came up with that word, developed something that sounded rational and applied to God. For something completely man made, built on a inferences and interpretations of a handful of scripture, we created Orthodoxy from nothing. From Jesus’ teachings about family, fathers, relationships and the spirit; we made hard and fast rules about heresies that still divide the church. Trinity Sunday, far from being something to be celebrated, looks to me to me to be a day for caution and prayer. This is what happens when we make up our own doctrines and start selling the fake news story to the church that God created a rigid hierarchy which really started on our own whiteboard. The truth is: God was nowhere to be found when we made up the Trinity and turned it into a tool to isolate, annoy, and explain God’s expansive love in terms of dysfunctional family.
Let’s be careful with what we’re celebrating and explaining on Trinity Sunday. Maybe, like Lucy coming home to Ricky, we still have some explaining to do. My gut tells me it doesn’t involve eggs, clovers, or anything about a doctrine we made up. I think we need to stop making new stuff up, reading stuff into the text, and even the fancy stuff we’ve inherited (that was made up) question it, because it may be not be all it’s cracked up to be. The Trinity works best when we remember it’s really a theory. Love is a doctrine. That’s something you can prove. Jesus wouldn’t let go of love. Nor should we. Dr. Dunamis Starr