After the Dreams: Day 7 Thru Seth

Posted on:

Modified on:

  1. Day 7
    1. The Sabbath
    2. Calendars
    3. The Host
  2. The garden
    1. Chapter 2 outline
    2. The garden’s function
  3. The temptation
    1. The serpent
    2. Satan or satans
    3. The banishment
  4. Adam’s children
    1. Cain and Abel
    2. Cain’s descendants
    3. Seth
  5. Coming next

In Genesis 1:1–5, Day 1 and a number of earlier posts I presented a case for Old Earth Creationism and why I believe that Genesis 1 can only be interpreted as a visionary prophetic revelation, not a historical account.

In my most recent post, Moshe’s Week of Dreams, I presented a hypothesis as to why Genesis 1 reads as it does, presenting a 6-day creation process, beginning with light, and building to a description of the cosmos that matches what ancient peoples imagined it to be, a flat, floating island earth protected from the ocean above by a dome, under which reside the sun, moon and stars. All of us would agree that this description doesn’t match what we observe today.

Yet another ancient cosmos diagram. I have posted at least a half dozen versions of this, because each ancient culture had a similar conception, differing mostly in small detail. This one matches the Genesis 1 description. ©Logos Bible Software

Interpreting Genesis 1 as visionary and not literally descriptive begs the question: What about the rest of prehistoric Genesis, i.e., Genesis 2:1–11:9?

Well, in my view it is all prophetically revealed, but it is not clear to me that any of it is visionary, or that much of it is even non-literal. Prophecy can reveal truth in subtle and symbolic ways, or it can show truth directly.

My own interpretations of prophecy make use of the so-called “Golden Rule of Biblical Interpretation”:

“When the plain sense of Scripture makes common sense, seek no other sense; therefore, take every word at its primary, ordinary, usual, literal meaning unless the facts of the immediate context, studied in the light of related passages and axiomatic and fundamental truths, indicate clearly otherwise.”
–Dr. David L. Cooper (1886-1965),
founder of The Biblical Research Society

If you aren’t a theology buff like me, you may not have heard of this particular Golden Rule outside of my blogs. Something very similar that you probably have heard of in high school science classes is called Occam’s Razor. Its actual wording is, “entities should not be multiplied beyond necessity”, meaning that, if you are faced with several alternative solutions to a problem, always start out with the simplest; or, alternatively, the one requiring the fewest assumptions.

Genesis 1 does not make “common sense” in the context of the universe as we can plainly see it today, so I choose to look for truth revealed more abstractly there.

The rest of the “prehistoric” material, though, is easier for me to accept literally. To a quite large extent, much of it does in fact meet the commonsense test for me. In this post and hopefully the next, I’m going to walk you through that material, starting in Eden and ending in the world after Babel.

There is actually a lot of material here, and since I’m confident that there is a lot of misunderstanding in Christian traditions about the era, I’m going to cover only the things I don’t think you are likely to have been taught… or taught correctly!

In this post, we’ll walk through the next three chapters of Genesis, where I’ll point out some more interpretations that you may not have heard before, regarding creation day 7, the Garden of Eden, the Temptation, and Adam’s most prominent children.

I’m sure you’ve noticed that my writing tends to get a bit deep occasionally, and what follows is no exception.

The reason for that is because I present a lot of interpretations (even occasionally one of my own) that veer from the “strictly orthodox“. When I challenge church traditions that have no, or in my view insufficient, textual backing, then I think I have to provide some solid evidence. If some of it goes over your head, then at least I hope you’ll try to skim through it for the gist. Whether I’m right or wrong, I don’t want you to think I’m making things up!

Day 7

Genesis 2:1–3

This “seventh day of creation” is appropriately split off into Chapter 2 in modern translations of Genesis because it is fundamentally different from the other six days. While this may be a continuation of the dream series I postulated for Genesis 1, the “evening and morning” motif is conspicuously missing.

The Sabbath

No creation is done on this day. Instead, it is used to set a spiritual principle for the importance of rest and renewal. More importantly, it is also a celebration of Creation, in particular for the Creator Himself, Yahweh.

The suggestion that God needed a day to rest from His labors is of course a literary device, not a serious concern. God is a spirit (רוּחַ, ruach), physically encompassing and controlling the entire universe. He has no nutritional requirements, and evidently His activities expend no energy that would require replenishment.

He is, however, the ultimate source of order on earth and in the universe at large! Much of what follows is about God maintaining and, when necessary, reestablishing order in Creation as evil spreads on earth, and even in the celestial realm.

Calendars

The concept of weeks as a calendar-ordering system predates Moses. The earliest archaeological evidence for the grouping of solar days into weeks (usually, but not always, 7-day cycles) appears in the era of Nimrod, about 2300 BC. The practice of assigning ceremonial purpose to one or more days each week may go back almost as far.

The Hebrews were apparently first to sever the cycle of weeks from the monthly and annual cycles—meaning, for example, that a calendar week for most of the modern world is always exactly seven days, irrespective of how many days may constitute a month or a year.

The Host

One very important factor that’s usually missed in studies of these three short verses is the word “host.” Ignoring here the modern “host and hostess” concept, “host” is the Hebrew: צָבָא (tsaba) meaning a large number of something, an army, or war.

[2:1] Thus the heavens and the earth were finished, and all the host of them.
—Genesis 2:1 (ESV)

In modern English, we think of “host” in generic terms, for example, “a host of reasons.” ESV, NKJV and YLT, like KJV, have left further interpretation of the term, as it appears in verse 2:1, up to the reader, but many modern translations go further and assume that it is speaking of a large number of created “things”, like stars, planets, etc. Examples of such translations include:

  • “Everything in them”, CJB, HCSB
  • “All that filled them”, NCV
  • “In all their vast array”, NIV
  • “In all their multitude”, NRSV
  • “All their inhabitants”, AMP
  • “All their heavenly lights”, NASB

A Biblical lexicon or a concordance lists the various ways that a word has been translated, without passing judgement on how it should have been translated. I believe that the term “host” in Genesis 2:1 and other passages with a similar context is speaking not of inanimate or miscellaneous things, but specifically of the angelic armies that God created to manage the cosmos. Translators have mostly missed this connection because angelology is so poorly understood and under-appreciated by most theologians.

Note that God is often referred to in Scripture as Adonai Sabaoth, “The Lord of Hosts/Armies.” Angelic beings are not just an afterthought, pets, slaves, or “gofers” of any kind. They are important residents of the created universe, members of God’s heavenly family.

I believe that this verse sets the time of their creation: At or near the beginning of the 13+ billion-year life of the universe.

Of course, that also fits with the concept that the Host was created to do for the universe what humankind was to do for the inhabitable earth: To subdue it and maintain it.

The garden

Genesis 2:4–24

I discussed Genesis 2 and 3 in detail in Exploring the Garden of Eden. Briefly, I believe that they were real people living in a real Garden of Eden, and their temptation and failure were real events. Beyond that, as explained there I do have some issues with traditional interpretations:

Chapter 2 outline
  1. Gen 2:4 is a toledah, a genealogy marker, separating the previous text from what follows, which I believe is a separate creation story, not a retelling of any part of chapter 1. Gen 1:26 describes the creation of early man, before Adam and Eve were added to their number to perform a specific function.
  2. Gen 2:5–6 describes conditions, not over the entire earth, but just over the land (אֶרֶץ, eretz) that would become the holy Garden. Eden was too arid to support any “bush of the field” (wild vegetation) and it was not as yet inhabited, or under cultivation.
  3. In Gen 2:7, Adam was formed (יָצַר, yatsar) by God, not created ex nihilo (בָּרָא, bara’) as in Gen 1:26. “Dust of the ground” refers simply to the chemical elements occurring on earth, perhaps specifically in the soil of the Garden. The “breath of life” is something that I don’t believe can happen spontaneously through any “Biopoiesis” process, i.e., “a supposed origination of living organisms from lifeless matter” as assumed by all non-theistic evolutionary theories. Note: “Panspermia” theories (life seeded on earth from extraterrestrial sources) don’t solve the ultimate question: How did the first life arise? It has never been shown how non-life can become life, aside from creation.
  4. In Gen 2:8–9, God then (after forming Adam) planted (נָטַע, nata, not a creative act, though no doubt done with a supernatural boost) a garden (גַּן, gan, an enclosed area, normally in those days planted with trees) “eastward in Eden“. This garden was not Eden itself but was an area evidently on the eastern side of a region by that name.
  5. In Gen 2:10–14, “A river flowed out of Eden to water the garden…”. The river flowed out of Eden and into the Garden. “There [presumably in Eden, upstream of the Garden!] it divided and became four…” Not simply “rivers” or “streams” as most translations state, but רֹאשׁ (ro’sh), meaning in this case “headwaters“, that is, the source waters that filled the river running into the Garden. In my Garden of Eden post, I explain why rivers that divide running downstream are unstable and quickly either recombine, divert into a single channel or dissipate altogether. I then use this information to firmly establish the location of the Garden in present-day southern Iraq—from information contained in the Biblical account.
  6. In Gen 2:15–17, there is no prohibition of eating from the Tree of Life. Gen 3:22 implies that it was in the Garden in order to give Adam and Eve a semblance of immortality, which further suggests that they were not created immortal to begin with. See Romans 5:12 and Death Before the Fall.
  7. In Gen 2:18–24, once God announced (surely to His Divine Council) that He intended to make a suitable helper for Adam, He first allowed the man to observe what that concept meant to other creatures. Animals had already been created (bara’, ex nihilo) outside the Garden. Rather than resume the creation (bara’) process discussed in Gen 1, He chose now to form (yatsar) new animals from the elemental “dust”, in the same way He had formed Adam. From the context, these were male/female pairs. Whether they were existing species or freshly designed for the Garden is unspecified. My own assumption is that Adam’s task was to become familiar with them to the extent that he gave them personal names, like Mickie and Minnie, for instance, rather than “male and female deer mouse” (Peromyscus maniculatus). Once Adam understood the picture, God made him an appropriate human companion.
The garden’s function

Over the years I’ve heard several suggestions that the Garden of Eden, in addition to being an idyllic home for Adam and his family, was actually a prototypical tabernacle for worship of Yahweh.

This is fodder for a future full article on its own, but for now I’ll just say that I agree! All of the necessary elements are in place, and the Garden as Temple/Tabernacle fits nicely with my knowledge of the way God typically does business. When you study the history of such facilities, you see that the Temple serves as a “home” for Yahweh in the midst of His people. We know that God is omnipresent in the universe, but as long as His people are obedient, He delights in maintaining an “interface” with them, as for example, His sh’kinah presence hovering over the Ark of the Covenant in the Holy of Holies.

In this verse, the picture is not one of God dwelling in heaven and periodically visiting in the Temple. It is one of God remaining in the Temple where He is accessible. For example, among the blessings of keeping His commandments, God promises:

[11] I will put my tabernacle among you, and I will not reject you, [12] but I will walk among you and be your God, and you will be my people.
—Leviticus 26:11–12 (CJB)

When King David offered to build a permanent Temple in Jerusalem, God replied:

[6] Since the day I brought the people of Isra’el out of Egypt until today, I never lived in a house; rather, I traveled in a tent and a tabernacle. [7] Everywhere I traveled with all the people of Isra’el, did I ever speak a word to any of the tribes of Isra’el, whom I ordered to shepherd my people Isra’el, asking, “Why haven’t you built me a cedar-wood house?”’
—2 Samuel 7:6–7 (CJB)

The concept of God “tabernacling” with His people is so important that, out of the seven feasts that Israel was ordered to observe every year in perpetuity, it is celebrated by the most joyous and anticipated feast of all. The Feast of Tabernacles is celebrated in Jerusalem and around the world beginning on Tishri 15 every year. In fact, it is such an important occasion that Tishri 15 of the Gregorian year 4 BC was the date that Yahweh chose for the Son to be born in Bethlehem (see The Jewish Feasts: Part 14, Tabernacles)!

Jesus’ birth date, the first day of the 8-day Feast of Tabernacles in AD 4. His circumcision was on the final day of the Feast. Among other functions, all the Leviticus 23 feasts prophesied events in Jesus’ two advents. ©Ron Thompson

Given the above, God’s activities in verse 8, below, are explained very well:

[8] They heard the voice of ADONAI, God, walking in the garden at the time of the evening breeze, so the man and his wife hid themselves from the presence of ADONAI, God, among the trees in the garden.
—Genesis 3:8 (CJB) emphasis mine

The temptation

Genesis 3

This is a vitally important passage of Scripture, and I am 100% convinced that the essential lesson—that the very real Satan tempted the very real Adam and Eve and brought about very real and horrendous curses that still afflict this planet—is absolutely true.

I would refer you to Exploring the Garden of Eden for a fairly comprehensive exposition of this chapter. I do, however, have a lot more to say here about one of the principal characters of the story:

The serpent

I have read somewhere that the serpent, prior to its curse, was a quadruped and the most beautiful of all the animals on earth. How could anyone know that? Obviously, the idea is pure fantasy!

As a matter of fact—don’t hang up on me here—by today’s literary standards the serpent story is a fable, along the lines of Rudyard Kipling’s famous tales like How the Camel Got its Hump, or How the Leopard Got its spots. But read on before you judge me too harshly…

In the ancient world of the fertile crescent, the genre of “fable” was a common and respected way of transmitting real history. What made a story a fable was not that it was necessarily fiction, but that it contained a moral lesson. In mid-2024 I wrote a short (believe it or not) article titled Religion vs. Mythology in which I quoted Egyptologist Bob Brier: “Mythology contains stories [set in the primordial past] that are not [necessarily] to be taken literally but answer basic questions about the nature of the universe.”

In other words, mythology usually contains at least some metaphorical historical content but always seeks to teach a useful lesson about reality. The question here becomes, “What part of the Serpent story, if any, is metaphorical? I’ll answer that with a brief analysis framed as a Q&A:

  • First, was the serpent really Satan, as we’ve all been taught?

    Absolutely! That point is clarified several times in Scripture, including:

[20:1] Then I saw an angel coming down from heaven, holding in his hand the key to the bottomless pit and a great chain. [2] And he seized the dragon, that ancient serpent, who is the devil and Satan, and bound him for a thousand years,
—Revelation 20:1 (ESV)

  • Was Satan really a snake?

No, that’s the metaphor part. To unbelievers, everything supernatural in the Bible is by definition metaphorical. That is no reason for believers to dismiss the possibility that God used metaphor at times when the cultural context made metaphor the best way to dramatize a truth.

King Tut’s Mask. Note the two snakes, symbolizing the two kingdoms, Upper and Lower Egypt.

If you find slithering snakes to be creepy, well, so did the ancients. Not only are their appearance and habits unsettling and their nests often hidden and/or in the wilderness, which is where all matter of evil spirits were known to reside, but they are of course potentially very deadly.

Snakes were plentiful in the Ancient Near East (ANE), and they were of course the subject of much supernatural dread. Snake images were associated with a number of the pagan gods and were appropriated by pagan human rulers to demonstrate their association with those gods.

  • If Satan wasn’t a snake, what was he?

Satan was a corrupt, high-ranking angelic being, a spirit with the ability to take on corporeal form, like a human or, in this case, a reptile. Specifically, he was a cherub:

[14] You were a keruv [cherub], protecting a large region;
I placed you on God’s holy mountain.
You walked back and forth
among stones of fire.
—Ezekiel 28:14 (CJB)

Cherubim and Seraphim (while not technically “angels”) are spirit beings created to guard God’s throne and other sacred objects. The terms “garden of God” and “mountain of God” refer to any location where Yahweh is “officially” in residence. The “stones of fire” are the spirits present: Yahweh, His guardians, and the “sons of God” on His “Divine Council.

I won’t document those definitions here, except to point out that God didn’t “come down” to visit with Adam and Eve; He was coresident with them in Eden, along with His spirit retinue. Satan was present, as a matter of course. He violated the trust given him by God. The verses following the passage last quoted tell the consequences:

[15] You were perfect in your ways
from the day you were created,
until unrighteousness
was found in you.
[16] “‘When your commerce grew,
you became filled with violence;
and in this way you sinned.
Therefore I have thrown you out, defiled,
from the mountain of God;
I have destroyed you, protecting keruv,
from among the stones of fire.
[17] Your heart grew proud because of your beauty,
you corrupted your wisdom for the sake of your splendor.
But I have thrown you on the ground;
before kings I have made you a spectacle.
—Ezekiel 28:15–17 (CJB)

  • Did Adam and Eve see a snake, or something else?

Yes… Okay, my guess is that they saw a snake, but whatever they saw or sensed, they recognized him as one of the resident cherubim. There is no mention of fear, or of surprise at a talking snake.

  • If Satan wasn’t really a snake, then why did God curse snakes?

Good question! The answer is, He didn’t!

A Coast garter snake. ©Steve Jurvetson

It sounds like He did, but remember that I’m billing this as “mythologized” history. Real history, told in the dramatized way that history was frequently taught in antiquity. Snakes weren’t beautiful quadrupeds before the fall, they were beautiful… snakes! God designed snakes to “crawl on [their] belly” because that is what best suited them for their ecological niche. As for “eating dust”, that isn’t a snake function, but I imagine it does happen from time to time, given their proximity to the ground. I’m confident that snakes are quite happy in their own niche! And many of them are still quite beautiful.

  • But why would a Cherub be given a snake’s punishment?

What God actually cursed was the being that was impersonating a snake: Satan, a.k.a., the Serpent. The persona that Satan chose to adopt, or that Moses chose to assign to him, was that of a Serpent, and Satan’s curse was worded accordingly.

That curse is given in Genesis 3 and is explained in the Ezekiel passage quoted above and in Isaiah:

[11] Your pride has been brought down to Sh’ol
with the music of your lyres,
under you a mattress of maggots,
over you a blanket of worms.’
[12] “How did you come to fall from the heavens,
morning star, son of the dawn [Lucifer, son of the morning in KJV]?
How did you come to be cut to the ground,
conqueror of nations?
[13] You thought to yourself, ‘I will scale the heavens,
I will raise my throne above God’s stars.
I will sit on the Mount of Assembly
far away in the north.
[14] I will rise past the tops of the clouds,
I will make myself like the Most High.’
[15] “Instead you are brought down to Sh’ol,
to the uttermost depths of the pit.
—Isaiah 14:11–15 (CJB)

It takes some context to understand it:

[14] ADONAI, God, said to the serpent, “Because you have done this, you are cursed more than all livestock and wild animals. You will crawl on your belly and eat dust as long as you live.
—Genesis 3:14 (CJB)

  • In Biblical imagery, the celestial “angels” are compared to stars in heaven. The highest ranking of these beings are called the “sons of God,” and are likened to the “morning stars“, stars that are bright enough to shine even as the sky lightens near sunup.
  • Ezekiel says that “When your commerce grew, you became filled with violence”, and Isaiah calls him a “conqueror of nations.”Growth of commerce” means increase in power and renown. Just like humans, spirit beings have free will and thus a propensity for pride, arrogance, and envy. I don’t know what, specifically, the prophets had in mind here, but evidently at some point in his 13-billion-year life, he became involved in battles involving either other angelic beings, or humans, or both.
  • Genesis 3 marks the last straw for God. Satan’s lies to Eve and contradiction of God rose to open rebellion, which the Most High could no longer tolerate. [Note: this is the first of three angelic rebellions in Scripture; the other two will be covered in my next post.]
  • Because of the context in which it was uttered, “You will crawl on your belly and eat dust as long as you live” does indeed sound like perhaps a quadruped is being cursed to lose its four legs and instead slither from place to place. But what are we left with if we remove the mysterious quadruped from the snake story?

In Ezekiel 28:17, we read “But I have thrown you on the ground” and in Isaiah 14:15, we have “Instead you are brought down to Sh’ol, to the uttermost depths of the pit.”

In Ezekiel, the Hebrew word translated ground is אֶרֶץ (eretz). Eretz can, in some instances, be translated country, earth, field, ground, nations, way, and a few more alternatives. In the NAS Exhaustive Concordance, the word is most commonly (1,581 times) translated as “land.” In such cases the application is almost always to holy land, usually to the Land of Israel (eretz Yisrael), but also to the Garden of Eden, Mt. Sinai, the Tabernacle and other places marked for worship of Yahweh.

Key here, though, is that eretz is often used, especially in ancient Hebrew extrabiblical writings, as a euphemism for Sh’ol, a.k.a., the underworld, the pit, or the place of the dead. This immediately brings Ezekiel 28:17 into alignment with Isaiah 14:15, where Sh’ol is mentioned explicitly.

I have no doubt whatsoever that this is the Serpent’s curse, stated pictorially in accordance with the fable genre.

Satan or satans

With Satan kicked out of heaven as early as the Garden of Eden, you may wonder how it is that he is apparently welcomed back to have cordial chit-chats with God over things like Job’s faith…

A lot of my material in this post comes from the books of the late Michael S. Heiser: The Unseen Realm, Demons, Angels, Reversing Herman, etc. Also, books and papers that he cites. Most of what he teaches strikes me as solid exegesis, and makes good, common sense. With respect to his angelology and demonology, and his Old Testament theology and ANE history, I’m pretty much fully onboard with him. But though I am a Trinitarian, his arguments in support of that doctrine seem weak to me, and I leave his train altogether when he talks about the Church now being “the true Israel.”

With respect to this particular section, I’m firmly onboard with him, but many scholars are not. This is perhaps a good place to remind you that, while I think my principal spiritual gift is theological discernment, you are free to disagree. Please remember that I don’t believe that inspired prophets still exist among men, and I have no illusions that my posts are “inspired.” Neither are Heiser’s books.

As with so many other “fringe” doctrines that we’ve grown up believing, the idea that the Serpent of the Garden, the “archenemy“, is the “satan” of Job is an assumption made long ago that can’t be proven from Scripture.

I’m way past caring about “orthodoxy”; my desire is to understand the Person and Word of God to the best of my ability. If I’m wrong, I’m wrong…

Heiser points out that the Hebrew noun, שָׂטָן (satan), occurs only a couple times in the Old Testament without a definite article. Every other occurrence is in the form הַשָּׂטָ֖ן (hasatan), meaning “the satan“, i.e., “the adversary“, or “the accuser.” This is probably not the same guy!

The grammatical rules for Hebrew match English in this respect: When prefixed by an article (“a”, “an”, or “the”), a noun is meant to be used as a common noun. “Satan” is a name for one particular being. “The satan” describes Satan and other beings, presumably of much lower rank than the Serpent.

As Heiser says, you can call him “Mike”, but it isn’t grammatically correct to address him as “the Mike.”

Considering the satan in Job:

[6] It happened one day that the sons of God came to serve ADONAI, and among them came the Adversary [the satan, Hebrew: hasatan]. [7] ADONAI asked the Adversary, “Where are you coming from?” The Adversary answered ADONAI, “From roaming through the earth, wandering here and there.” [8] ADONAI asked the Adversary, “Did you notice my servant Iyov [Job], that there’s no one like him on earth, a blameless and upright man who fears God and shuns evil?” [9] The Adversary answered ADONAI, “Is it for nothing that Iyov fears God? [10] You’ve put a protective hedge around him, his house and everything he has. You’ve prospered his work, and his livestock are spread out all over the land. [11] But if you reach out your hand and touch whatever he has, without doubt he’ll curse you to your face!” [12] ADONAI said to the Adversary, “Here! Everything he has is in your hands, except that you are not to lay a finger on his person.” Then the Adversary went out from the presence of ADONAI.
—Job 1:6–12 (CJB)

The occasion is a standard gathering of the Divine Council. The “sons of God” were created for the purpose of assisting God in the administration and governance of the vast universe. Their duties included advice and council, which was the function of this assembly. Does God need any of this help? I assume not (He’s God!), but they are His created family, and He values their fellowship and assistance. Just as we believe God values the fellowship and assistance of His earthly family—us!

Ranking below the sons of God in the Heavenly Host are a group of “satans”, whose function is to “roam through the earth, wandering here and there” (Job 1:7), keeping tabs and reporting back. Heiser compares them to a prosecutorial staff. Or, as I think of it, a “Heavenly OSHA.” In this passage, the satan is just doing his assigned task. He’s not behaving in an evil fashion at all, and there is no hint of rancor in the conversation.

If you think that is a fanciful interpretation of Job, consider the following Divine Council example from 1 Kings: This is the prophet Micaiah describing his vision of a meeting of the Council in which Yahweh has asked for advice on how best to entice the evil King Ahab into a hopeless battle:

[19] And Micaiah said, “Therefore hear the word of the LORD: I saw the LORD sitting on his throne, and all the host of heaven standing beside him on his right hand and on his left; [20] and the LORD said, ‘Who will entice Ahab, that he may go up and fall at Ramoth-gilead?’ And one said one thing, and another said another. [21] Then a spirit came forward and stood before the LORD, saying, ‘I will entice him.’ [22] And the LORD said to him, ‘By what means?’ And he said, ‘I will go out, and will be a lying spirit in the mouth of all his prophets.’ And he said, ‘You are to entice him, and you shall succeed; go out and do so.’ [23] Now therefore behold, the LORD has put a lying spirit in the mouth of all these your prophets; the LORD has declared disaster for you.”
—1 Kings 22:19–23 (ESV)

One of God’s spirit advisors has suggested a plan. Yahweh approves it, and Yahweh assures that it succeeds.

Don’t misunderstand… Satan, the Serpent, is real and malevolent, the Archfiend. This is Paul’s “roaring lion”, and the Dragon of Revelation.

Nevertheless… I’m saying that not all mentions translated “Satan” in the Old Testament are about Satan, the Serpent of the Garden. Most of them are random satans (small “s”), including the satan of Job. Jesus Himself was functioning as “a satan” (an adversary) when He cleansed the Temple.

The banishment

A few observations from verses 20–24:

  • What Adam actually named his wife, in Hebrew, was חַוָּ֑ה (Chavah). I know, it’s impossibly idealistic, but if someone goes by José, it seems to me to be insulting to call him Joe. Unfortunately, the Hebrew “ch” sound is a very difficult guttural for English speakers to pronounce.
  • I’ve seen many suggestions that the animal-skin garments that God made for Adam and Eve (sorry, Chavah!) were from animals sacrificed as a blood atonement. No. They got what God promised they would get for eating the forbidden fruit! But let’s examine the rationale for the view:

The verse most often quoted is:

[22] And almost all things are by the law purged with blood; and without shedding of blood is no remission.
—Hebrews 9:22 (KJV)

But this is a general statement about the use of blood in cleansing rituals of all kinds, and the immediate context is more about the purification of objects than of people. The Hebrews author is using an Old Testament scripture midrashically.

Midrashically refers to the method of interpreting biblical texts through midrash, which involves exploring deeper meanings, filling in narrative gaps, and providing ethical or theological insights. This approach allows for creative and expansive readings of scripture beyond the literal text. myjewishlearning.com

A midrash is by nature a secondary source that applies the primary source in ways that were not necessarily intended in that original. This is done frequently in the NT, particularly by Paul. It would be much more to the point here to quote the OT text being referenced by the Hebrews passage:

[11] For the life of a creature is in the blood, and I have given it to you on the altar to make atonement for yourselves; for it is the blood that makes atonement because of the life.
—Leviticus 17:11 (CJB)

The context here is that God, through Moses, is giving two reasons that consuming blood, or meat with the blood still in it, is prohibited to Jews under the Covenant: (1) because blood is necessary for life, it is considered to be virtually the same as that life; and (2) God has sanctified blood that is shed on the altar as a means of atonement.

But even that has to be analyzed further:

  1. Some primitive forms of animal life do not in fact, require blood for life, which doesn’t negate the point of the prohibition.
  2. Not all animal blood is efficacious for atonement, only the blood of ritually clean animals. Again, the prohibition stands.
  3. Every sacrifice, to be effective, must be done in accordance with the rules set down in the Covenant.
  4. Though sacrificial offerings were made as early as Cain and Abel, we know of no specific cultus yet available to govern them, nor of any specific rationale for doing them.

I contend that it is a misappropriation to assume from either passage that Yahweh has made a “blood sacrifice” on behalf of Adam and Eve. Animal skins are more durable and provide better insulation and padding than plant leaves. It’s enough for me to know that God was compassionate with respect to the physical and emotional needs of the freshly cursed humans.

  • “Behold, the man…” הָֽאָדָם֙ (haadam). The same interpretive principal applies here as for Satan/hasatan: where the article is absent, a proper noun is intended; where it is present, expect a common noun. Adam (ah DAHM) is a name; haadam (hah ah DAHM) is a noun meaning “man”, “mankind”, or “human.” The latter is in view in verse 22.
  • “…eat, and live for ever.” See above for the implication of the Tree of Life in the Garden.
  • “…to till the ground from whence he was taken.” This is a bit ambiguous on its own and might give you pause. “The ground” is הָ֣אֲדָמָ֔ה (haadama). “Adam” comes from a Hebrew root meaning “red.” As does the related word adamah, meaning “earth” but referring not to the planet, but rather to the ground, especially (over 200 times in the Old Testament) to tilled land, productive soil, or Israel’s productive land in particular. The “ground” here refers not to the acreage within Eden, but rather more specifically to the “dust” from which he was formed.
  • “…the east of the garden…”. Given the presumed nature of the Garden as a tabernacle, it’s no surprise that its access was on the east side. The same is true of all correctly built temples and synagogues. Prayer is directed towards Jerusalem’s Temple Mount, wherever you might be, but access to the “holy space” is always from the east, where the sun rises.
  • “Cherubims” I’ve been quoting KJV in this list, and this word is grammatically incorrect, at least in this century. The Hebrew is הַכְּרֻבִ֗ים (hakerubim). “The cherubim” is plural without a trailing “s.” The singular of “cherubim” is “cherub“, which is an Anglicized transliteration of the Hebrew “kerub.” Cherubim, along with Seraphim, are heavenly “throne guardians.” Satan is a cherub. You probably picture just one cherub guarding the gate with a big sword in his fist, but there is a team of cherubim on hand here.
  • “…a flaming sword…” I don’t know if this is a literal sword or some other device, and whether it is handheld, mechanized, or animated. Evidently there is only one, so if handheld, only one of the cherubim would be armed with one.
  • What finally happened to Eden? My guess is that it was probably guarded until either it was finally destroyed, or until the Tree of Life was moved somewhere else. If it (the Garden) didn’t survive the centuries, it may have been swept away by the receding waters of the Great Flood.

Adam’s children

Genesis 4

Cain and Abel

Why was Cain’s veggie offering unacceptable? Maybe it included cauliflower or beets… That would do it for me!

Many will tell you that Cain’s offering was refused because it was not a blood sacrifice. Maybe, but I seriously doubt that interpretation. The Mosaic Covenant was still well over a thousand years in the future, so there was no standardized command for offerings that we know about. Abraham was over a thousand years in the future, too, so it wasn’t a Jewish thing.

(He did finally make a blood sacrifice, by the way… his brother!… that was refused, too.)

It has been suggested that God gave Adam a sneak preview of what offerings He was going to require in the future. Maybe.

In any case, they both made offerings from their own “sweat of the brow”, which would seem to be a good thing. With no information to the contrary, I would have to think that it had something to do with their respective motivations, or maybe he stole the veggies from Eve.

Other passages shed additional light:

[4] By faith Abel offered to God a more acceptable sacrifice than Cain, through which he was commended as righteous, God commending him by accepting his gifts. And through his faith, though he died, he still speaks.
—Hebrews 11:4 (ESV)

[24] and to Jesus, the mediator of a new covenant, and to the sprinkled blood that speaks a better word than the blood of Abel.
—Hebrews 12:24 (ESV)

[12] We should not be like Cain, who was of the evil one and murdered his brother. And why did he murder him? Because his own deeds were evil and his brother’s righteous.
—1 John 3:12 (ESV)

Aha! That last one is the answer. Cain’s rejection was not because of the form of his offering at all. Any offering he brought would have been rejected because God knew his heart!

Moving on, what was “the mark of Cain?” Don’t know, can’t know, so don’t care.

Where is the Land of Nod, to which Cain fled? The Bible says, “east of Eden,” which makes me think maybe Elam, or farther east than that. “Nod” is from the Hebrew נוּד (nuwd, pronounced “nude”), meaning to move to and fro, wander, flutter, or show grief.

Cain’s descendants

Genesis 4:17–24

As I explained above, I regard Genesis 2:4 as, in essence, a toledah (singular), or genealogical “spacer” to separate the various historical threads that Moses wrote about in the book.

Technically, the toledoth (plural) are genealogies, the “begats” of KJV. The beginning of Gen 2:4 is translated by KJV and ESV as “These are the generations of the heavens and the earth…”, where “generations” is in fact the Hebrew תוֹלְד֧וֹת (toledoth). Other popular translations render it as, for example, “Here is the history…” (CJB) or “This is the account…” (NAS), which are paraphrases and not necessarily incorrect. But presence of the Hebrew term makes it officially a toledah and that strengthens my opinion that the forming of Adam and Eve is a different event than the creation of mankind in general.

Gen 4:17–22 is a genealogy of Cain, and it separates Cain’s part of the history from Seth’s, so technically the passage is a toledah, but because that term doesn’t appear in the text, it isn’t generally included in lists of the toledoth. The reason may be that if you remove verses 23 and 24, the entire passage, Gen 4:17–5:32 is a single long toledah. Alternatively, 4:17–22, are also about Cain’s extended family, so it could perhaps be included as part of the toledah.

©biblestudy.org

My first reaction to verses 23 and 24 was to think, “well, they don’t conform to the way small bits of biographical information are inserted into some genealogies (see Genesis 10, which is itself one long toledah), but that must be what they are”, but looking at it today, it dawns on me that they seem out of place here, but they would fit perfectly in Chapter 6, which I will cover in a sequel to this post, under the heading “Corruption.” If this snippet wasn’t misplaced by scribal error, then it is simply an issue of author’s choice. Not a big deal.

I have just one more observation about Cain, until the next post.

Everyone wants to know… Where did Cain find a wife? Young Earth Creationists would say he took a sister with him to Nod. Possible, but creepy, so I’d rather it not be so. In any case, to me it is more likely that she was a member of one of the pre-Adamic races descended from the humans created in Genesis 1:26.

Seth

Genesis 4:25–26

[25] And Adam knew his wife again, and she bore a son and called his name Seth, for she said, “God has appointed for me another offspring instead of Abel, for Cain killed him.”
—Genesis 4:25–26 (ESV)

Seth’s name in Hebrew is שֵׁ֑ת (Sheth, pronounced “shayth”). It is a play on the similar word שִׁית (shiyth, pronounced “sheeth”), a verb meaning, “to place.” Both of these words appear in verse 25. The latter is translated as “appointed” in the KJV and ESV, and that is close enough. Interestingly, it is the same word as used in Genesis 3:15, “I will place (shiyth) enmity between [Eve’s and the Serpent’s seeds].”

Verse 26 mentions Seth’s son, Enosh, a name which I’ll point out in the next post is a mildly derogatory word denoting a man but connoting one who is not quite top-drawer. Perhaps he is mortal or not a gibbor, or hero.

Not much is reported about Enosh, but the verse states that during his lifetime, “…people began to call on the name of Yahweh.” All that this means to me is that it wasn’t until the time of Adam’s grandchildren that humans from the family of the Garden began to appreciate the power of God and to seek His favor.

Many scholars, though, quote this verse in order to advance the theory that the “sons of God” in Genesis 6 are humans from the “godly lineage of Seth,” which I consider to be a ridiculous interpretation. I will address that issue in that next post.

Coming next

Usually, I don’t pick my next topic until I’ve had a week or two to recover from the last. This time, I’m well into the next one already, because it is third in a sequential trio.

In the third, I am focusing on the last chapters of what I’ve called my survey of Moses’ prehistoric account of the days before Abraham.

I’ll start with a section titled “Corruption“, which covers the period from Cain and Seth until Noah. The core of that material is from the first five verses of Genesis 6. Everyone is familiar with the words of that passage, but because it is so bizarre, it is rarely taught, and from the days of Augustine of Hippo (who was the first patristic father to butcher it), understanding has been almost non-existent.

Yet, despite the intervening flood, its effects reverberate through both the Old and New Testament, to the last verses of Revelation.

I’ll gloss through the Flood story, because I have already covered that thoroughly in several posts.

Then I’ll spend some time with Babel and the scattering. You will probably be surprised at my commentary on Nimrod.

The time span of this triptych of articles covers all three major angelic rebellions, and the three combined (not just the Temptation) account for the horrible state of the current world and the need for Jesus’ hopefully imminent return.


Prophetic Visions: Through a Glass Darkly

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  1. Introduction
    1. The mirror analogy
    2. The purpose of prophecy
    3. Prophetic Applicability
    4. The role of visions
    5. The office of Prophet
  2. Interpretive challenges
    1. Throne visions
      1. Common elements of the throne visions
      2. The 24 elders
      3. The Divine Council
    2. The suffering servant
    3. Ezekiel
      1. Ezekiel 10 – 11 (God Leaves the Most Holy)
      2. Ezekiel 38 – 39 (Gog and Magog)
      3. Ezekiel 40 – 42 (The Millennial Temple)
      4. Ezekiel 43:1–12 (God Returns to the Most Holy)
    4. Revelation
      1. Chapter 8–9 (trumpets)
      2. Chapter 10 (the angel with the little scroll)
      3. Chapter 12 (a woman and a war)
      4. Chapter 13–14 (the two beasts)
  3. A pair of Dreams
    1. Joseph and the sheaves
    2. Peter and the sheet
  4. Conclusions

Introduction

The mirror analogy

Chances are you’re familiar with the following verse:

[12] For now we see through a glass [mirror], darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.
—1 Corinthians 13:12 (KJV)

This is part of an extended passage in which Paul is discussing the interrelationships between believers in the church, including the interplay between their various natural abilities and spiritual gifts. He then stresses that what is most important is their mutual love—ἀγάπη (agapé), affection, good-will, benevolence, or (KJV) charity, all in an atmosphere of mutual preference for one another.

The “glass”, or “mirror” of verse 12 is the Greek ἔσοπτρον (esoptron), a noun that technically denotes any smooth, reflective surface that can function as a mirror. Undoubtably, what Paul had in mind was the polished brass, copper, or occasionally iron, silver or gold mirrors used in his time. Back in my camping days, I carried an unbreakable polished aluminum mirror, which works better than brass, but still reflects much less efficiently than a modern silvered glass mirror. These metals are all more or less prone to tarnish, and the polishing technology of the Roman Empire was unable to achieve the fine finish possible now.

Roman silver mirror, 1st century. Public domain. This, of course, is the back side of the mirror. The front is polished smooth, and this particular specimen has a maker’s mark etched at the bottom front.

By the frequent (but unfortunate) Christian custom of basing doctrine on individual verses pulled out of context, many Christians are taught that Paul is promising here that when we get to heaven, we will all instantly recognize everyone we see. That may or may not be a part of our glorification, but in his analogy, Paul is conveying a more general picture of how weak our knowledge is now compared to what we will know and understand after our imperfect lives end and we come face to face with God.

The same analogy serves well to illustrate how little we can learn from prophecy compared to a face-to-face encounter with the real thing. The point I pursue below is that prophecy should never be dogmatically relied on to tell us, literally, exactly what we can expect in the future.

The purpose of prophecy

It seems to me that Biblical prophecy, in the main, performs three primary functions:

  1. It warns God’s people of coming judgement, either impending or far in the future. For example, the “blessings and curses” of the Mosaic Covenant (Deut. 28ff) warn of the consequences of disobeying the precepts of the Covenant and contrast those consequences with the blessings they could expect for keeping the Covenant. Virtually all of the prophets predicted Israel’s failure to keep the Covenant and forecast the terrible price they will pay for their disobedience.
  2. It provides comfort in times of woe. The prophetic books that forecast terrible judgement on Israel almost always end with promises that, despite their failure and subsequent punishment, God will ultimately bring them back to Himself and give them final bliss in their own land.
  3. It also forecasts events in the future that, though usually at least partly unclear in the telling, will become obvious in the fulfillment. It is this forecasting role that I will emphasize below.

Prophetic Applicability

What most Christians fail to realize is that all of the Old Testament prophesies and promises, beginning with the Abrahamic Covenant, were for Israel—the Jews. Humanity in general was already condemned. Only eight humans escaped The Flood. The descendants of those eight, the second chance for humanity, immediately returned to a state of rebellion that God quickly dealt with in Shinar, at Babel:

since they did not see fit to acknowledge God, God gave them up to a debased mind to do what ought not to be done.
— Romans 1:28 (ESV)

I view the Church as a Jewish “family” with gentile children “fostered in.” Those of us who are gentiles in the Church are excused from most of God’s requirements for genetic Israel (see Acts 15), so shouldn’t expect all of their blessings and promises either. But that doesn’t mean we are second class in God’s eyes, and it doesn’t mean we don’t go along on the ride when God comes for His own.

The role of visions

1 In days gone by, God spoke in many and varied ways to the Fathers through the prophets. 2 But now, in the acharit-hayamim*, he has spoken to us through his Son, to whom he has given ownership of everything and through whom he created the universe.
— Hebrews 1:1-2 (CJB)

*[a•cha•rit-ha•ya•mim—Literally, “the end of the days”, i.e., The End Times or “latter days,” when the ‘olam hazeh (the present age) is coming to a close and the ‘olam haba (the age to come) is about to begin.]

While some prophecy was delivered to the prophets verbally by God or angels, and some was no doubt simply an idea placed the prophet’s head or perhaps even a subtle guiding of the pen, the most striking prophecies often came through dreams or visions. Visions were apparently all in the mind of the prophet, while dreams were sometimes imparted to others, to be interpreted by the prophet.

For the purpose of this post, I’m going to lump dreams with visions. Both are highly symbolic—often obscure, surreal, distorted, or iconographic. Both involve subjective imagery that is typically suggestive rather than immediately definitive.

The office of Prophet

The office of Prophet, like that of Apostle, has ceased!

The Apostles were a specific group of twelve men who were individually selected and trained by Jesus and then instructed to act as His official agents to begin the mission of evangelizing the world. Eleven were His closest disciples, who accompanied Him during the 3-1/2 years of His earthly ministry, remained faithful to the end, and were verbally commissioned by Him at His Ascension. The twelfth was Saul of Tarsus, who was selected and commissioned on the road, trained in Damascus and Arabia, and, like the others, served to the end of his life.

The Prophets were also selected by God. I reject the idea that modern preachers are “prophets.” The prophets preached and wrote, but their message was supernaturally imparted to them and therefore infallible, in the same sense that we regard the canonical books of the Bible as infallible.

Literally hundreds of times I’ve heard preachers and evangelists say, “God placed this message in my heart,” or “I was going to teach on … but God told me to do this instead“.

Sorry, no! I don’t for an instant deny that God calls some people into a preaching ministry and gives them appropriate spiritual gifts and a general inclination and wisdom to minister in a Godly fashion. But I have no Biblical or observational reason to believe that God, in this age, speaks directly and with total clarity to any human. No mere preacher, no matter how devout or scripturally knowledgeable, is inspired in the Biblical sense. If that were the case, then the first time he repeats a flawed interpretation he is revealed to be a false prophet. Verses that differentiate between true and false prophets include: 1Ki 22:8; Jer 14:14; 23:16; 28:9; Ez 13:3; Mat 7:15-20; 24:24; 1Jn 4:1; Pet 2:1.

Interpretive challenges

All visionary prophecy is, by its nature, difficult to interpret until its fulfillment, and sometimes even then its fulfillment might be obscure to most. Was it already fulfilled in the past? Is it completely fulfilled now? Is there more fulfillment to come? And if dreamlike imagery isn’t explained, how do we read the mind of the prophet? Did even the prophet himself know the interpretation? I suspect that the answer to that final question was often a negative.

While prophecy derived from visions and dreams is most difficult to interpret, there are challenges in interpreting prophecy derived by other means, too. End-times prophecy, no matter its source, is going to use terminology appropriate to ancient peoples at the time of writing. For example, 21st century vehicles might be described in prophecy as “horses”, aircraft as “clouds” or some flying creature, rifles as “swords”, etc. We can make that interpretation, but we might be completely wrong.

In the rest of this article, I’ll mention some mistakes that I think people—even theologians—make in their attempts to interpret prophecy and prophetic visions. Because some of the passages discussed are lengthy, I’ll usually provide only the Biblical references.

Throne visions

The Bible reports several very explicit prophetic visions of God seated on a throne in heaven: Isaiah 6, Ezekiel 1 and 10, Daniel 7, and Revelation 4 being most striking.

Ezekiel 1 vision of God’s heavenly throne, aka, His Chariot Throne. By rive6-d7dtasm1. This is one of many hundreds of attempts by various artists to depict Ezekiel’s vision.

I previously wrote about these visions in Monotheism and the Trinity:

don’t think that these visions [as described] can be reconciled with God as an omnipresent spirit. Instead, I think that what the prophets are “seeing” are representations of preconceptions popularly held by ancient peoples. [Allegory], not reality! This is more or less how the pagan deities would have been visualized in contemporary surrounding cultures. If 21st century American Christians can’t visualize the Christian Trinity, how much less would primitive denizens of the Ancient Near East be able to set aside their ingrained preconceptions? And how important could it have been to ask them to do so? In my opinion, not very!

In other words, what I believe that these visions have in common is that God is giving each of the prophets a sense of His grandeur in heaven as He rules in and through His Divine Council (see below). But because God and the angels are all spirit beings, they are in reality not visible to a human eye and can’t be described in human terms. For that reason, God left the prophets with mental impressions that could be roughly described in human-like terms, rather than accurate visual representations of something fundamentally alien to human conceptions.

Common elements of the throne visions

What the throne prophecies depict is the presence of the following:

  • An omnipresent, invisible, Almighty God. See Implications of God’s Omnipresence and Eternity in Space-Time.
  • He is revealing Himself at a specific point in space and time—what physicists call an “event in spacetime”.
  • He is metaphorically seated on a grand throne, reminiscent of kings and the pagan gods who rule the kings.
  • He is surrounded by “24 elders” (see below).
  • They are metaphorically seated on lesser thrones.
  • God is metaphorically protected by a few (usually 4) guardian seraphim/cherubim.

Not all of those elements are included in all of the descriptions. The perceptions of the different prophets were similar to each other, but not totally the same.

My advice when reading the throne prophecies and other baffling prophetic descriptions is to forget about the detail, like the “wheels within wheels”, because all of that is just the prophet’s abstract impressions of things that can’t actually be seen with the eye.

The 24 elders

John, in particular, speaks of “24 elders” seated at “lesser thrones.” The identity of these elders is not revealed:

2 At once I was in the Spirit, and behold, a throne stood in heaven, with one seated on the throne. 3 And he who sat there had the appearance of jasper and carnelian, and around the throne was a rainbow that had the appearance of an emerald. 4 Around the throne were twenty-four thrones, and seated on the thrones were twenty-four elders, clothed in white garments, with golden crowns on their heads.
— Revelation 4:2-4 (ESV) emphasis mine

In verse 4, the “twenty-four elders” are usually interpreted to be the twelve sons of Jacob and the twelve apostles. That is flat-out guesswork, because the Bible offers no clarification. Another guess often heard is that they are representatives from the twenty-four divisions of priests who served in the Temple.

A third guess is that they are angels. Since this is a vision, not an absolute reality, any of these guesses is possible, but this one is the one that I would go with, without reservation, because it is what John’s contemporaries would have immediately assumed. Specifically, these elders would be angelic members of God’s Divine Council, discussed in the next section.

This view is borne out by

8 And when he had taken the scroll, the four living creatures and the twenty-four elders fell down before the Lamb, each holding a harp, and golden bowls full of incense, which are the prayers of the saints.
9 And they sang a new song, saying,
“Worthy are you to take the scroll
and to open its seals,
for you were slain, and by your blood you ransomed people for God
from every tribe and language and people and nation,
10 and you have made them a kingdom and priests to our God,
and they shall reign on the earth.

— Revelation 5:8-10 (ESV)

“They”? If any of the elders are humans, then why are they excluding themselves here?

The Divine Council

Chances are, you’ve never even heard of the Divine Council, but it is well-attested in Scripture. I believe that God created the host of angels when He created the universe. In general, their function was to tend and monitor the cosmos, in much the same way as humans were told to have dominion over the earth. God governs this host by means of a council of senior angels.

God doesn’t need angels or humans to tend earth or the cosmos, but because of His divine love, he chose to share and delegate responsibility. For further explanation of the nature and purpose of angels in general and the Divine Council in particular, see Gods and Demons.

The suffering servant

How you treat Isaiah 53 depends on your presuppositions (as does a lot of Biblical interpretation).

Most Christians reading Isaiah 53 will be astounded that Jews of the Centuries following Jesus‘ life, death and resurrection didn’t immediately recognize that it was speaking of Him. How could they have missed the obvious prophetic connection?

Well, it isn’t that simple. The Jews of those days were looking for the Messiah, most famously predicted by Daniel, and best described by:

13 “I kept watching the night visions,
when I saw, coming with the clouds of heaven,
someone like a son of man.
He approached the Ancient One
and was led into his presence.
14 To him was given rulership,
glory and a kingdom,
so that all peoples, nations and languages
should serve him.

His rulership is an eternal rulership
that will not pass away;
and his kingdom is one
that will never be destroyed.

— Daniel 7:13-14 (CJB) emphasis mine

During His ministry, Jesus consistently spoke of Himself as “the Son of Man,” which under the circumstances was an unmistakable claim to be Daniel’s “someone like a son of man,” that is, someone who appeared to be a human being and who would be given an eternal Kingdom. Most (but not all) of the Jewish Scribes interpreting Daniel missed the implication in verse 13 that “like a human” might mean “more than a mere human,” so what they were looking for then and now was a human Messiah, who in order to become king over “all peoples, nations and languages,” would obviously have to first be a great conqueror.

Therefore, when they looked at Isaiah 53, it wasn’t at all obvious that the Suffering Servant would be that same Son of Man, the Messiah. Because we Christians insist that the two are one and the same, some Rabbis over the last two millennia have chosen to simply remove Isaiah 53 from their scrolls, but for the most part Jews since as early as the Babylonian captivity have speculated that the Servant was either another human (the Yahad peoples of Qumran and the Dead Sea Scrolls, possibly a splinter group of Essenes, took this approach) or, more frequently a symbolic reference to Israel as a whole under the many persecutions they have suffered over the ages.

Acts 1 shows us the “progressive revelation” of the dual advents as the are unfolding:

9 After saying this, he was taken up before their eyes; and a cloud hid him from their sight. 10 As they were staring into the sky after him, suddenly they saw two men dressed in white standing next to them. 11 The men said, “You Galileans! Why are you standing, staring into space? This Yeshua, who has been taken away from you into heaven, will come back to you in just the same way as you saw him go into heaven.”
— Acts 1:9-11 (CJB) emphasis mine

Ezekiel

Ezekiel, Michelangelo painting in the Sistine Chapel

Ezekiel is possibly my favorite book of the Bible because of the richness of the prophecy. Virtually the entire book is prophetic, presented sometimes as poetry, sometimes as prose, and sometimes acted out in front of his audience, at God’s direction.

I have enough of an affinity for Ezekiel’s writing that I feel I have as good an understanding of the man and his prophecy as one can have at this distance. I have already commented on his (and others’) throne visions, above. I have also written about several of his prophecies in previous articles, which I’ll link below.

Ezekiel’s prophecies are apparently written chronologically, in the order of their future fulfillment, though not necessarily in the order he experienced them.

Timeline of Ezekiel, showing the date of the prophecy, not the fulfillment. ©Biblehub

Christian tradition contains a number of misconceptions that are taught by pastors who aren’t necessarily theologians and don’t necessarily have a good grasp on Bible history. Some of those misconceptions are propagated by Israeli tour guides, and the tour sponsors (often pastors) who learn from them. The tour guides are mostly Jewish Israeli citizens, who have learned what they know from manuals prepared and taught at trade schools, not necessarily by folks with religious backgrounds.

Ezekiel 10 – 11 (God Leaves the Most Holy)

One of the common misconceptions about Ezekiel concerns his prophesies about the Glory of the Lord departing the temple, discussed in this section. Much of the following is reproduced from Opening the Golden Gate, which I first posted on May 12, 2022. In that article I presented a brief history of the Temple and its Eastern Gate and then discussed some of the common misconceptions about that gate.

Then the glory of the LORD went out from the threshold of the house, and stood over the cherubim.
And the cherubim lifted up their wings and mounted up from the earth before my eyes as they went out, with the wheels beside them. And they stood at the entrance of the east gate of the house of the LORD, and the glory of the God of Israel was over them.
—Ezekiel 10:18–19 ESV

Then the cherubim lifted up their wings, with the wheels beside them, and the glory of the God of Israel was over them.
And the glory of the LORD went up from the midst of the city and stood on the mountain that is on the east side of the city.
—Ezekiel 11:22–23 ESV

God is omnipresent, both in space and in time. As our infinite, Almighty God, He can’t be contained in a tent or a building. But because He chose to deal with humanity, as represented by the primitive Israelites, He picked a form in which to appear to them. An “interface”, so to speak. In the desert, it was “a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night.” In the Tabernacle, and later the Temple, His “Divine Presence,” in whatever visible form it appeared, was in the Holy of Holies, above the Mercy Seat of the Ark.

Chapters 8 through 11 of Ezekiel record a vision that came to him while he was sitting in his house with “the leaders of Judah”. In the vision, he was taken to the Temple in Jerusalem and shown men in leadership positions performing “disgusting” idolatrous religious rites in the Temple precincts. God then ordered a scribe to pass through the city and put a seal on the foreheads of innocents, while six other presumably angelic beings followed him and executed anyone not so sealed. The six beings were then told to set fire to the city. After the return of the scribe, God’s Sh’kinah Presence left the Temple, rose above its threshold, paused for a bit over the “east gate of the Lord’s house” (this could be the gate of an interior courtyard, or it could be the Shushan Gate overlooking the Kidron Valley), and then “stood” over the mountain on the east side of the city (no doubt the Mount of Olives).

Most visitors to Jerusalem who have read Ezekiel or have taken the tour guide’s explanation as Gospel truth, are certain that God lived in the Holy of Holies and that He moved out through the Golden Gate. That’s very sloppy theology!

Also, the part about Jerusalemites being “sealed” and those without seals being executed most likely did not happen. I take it as a homiletic description of “sinners in the hands of an angry God,” so to speak.

Ezekiel described an allegory, not reality. Yet it was a prophecy of something that was very real, which came very soon thereafter. Because of corruption reaching even into the Temple, God withdrew His protection from the city and the Temple, and both were sacked and burned by Nebuchadrezzar’s army, with many people killed.

Ezekiel 38 – 39 (Gog and Magog)

Beginning around Ezekiel 34, the prophet begins to shift from prediction of judgement to prediction of restoration. Chapter 37 is the famous “dry bones” prophecy, which I have to think brings us to our own age and the return of Jews to Israel starting in the late 19th century, and culminating with a declaration of independence in May 1947. The next event on Ezekiel’s calendar is the Gog and Magog War, which I believe will occur before the Tribulation period, and possibly before the Rapture.

I wrote a compete article about this prophecy in 2015, in The Coming World War: Gog and Magog. There is no indication whether this prophecy originated from a vision or by some other means, but I think it is appropriate to include it here to demonstrate that even prophecies that were not delivered as visions or dreams can be tricky to understand if you want to insist that every word must be taken in a literal sense.

Players in the Gog & Magog War. Base map annotated by Ron Thompson

I stand by that article as amended from time to time, though I may have taken the participant nations too literally. Populations move around over the centuries, and today’s nations may not occupy the same territories as those of Ezekiel’s day.

Also, my view on the motivations for the attack have changed a bit since the October 7 terror attack in Israel. In a November 2023 update, Did Ezekiel Prophesy the October 2023 Israel/Gaza War?, I stated that the Gog/Magog war would “of course” be precipitated by Iran’s proxies. That cause appears to be pretty much off the table for a while, but I went on to speculate that Russia might take the initiative in an effort to bolster Putin’s waning reputation.

And now President Trump, NATO, and new trade and defensive alliances are backing Putin into a very tight and embarrassing corner. Very interesting!

It frequently happens that prophecy has to be reevaluated when conditions change!

Ezekiel 40 – 42 (The Millennial Temple)

In 573 BC, Ezekiel was given a vision of a new Temple to be built in Jerusalem. He records that vision in great detail in chapters 40 and following of his prophetic book. In an excellent 20th century book entitled Messiah’s Coming Temple, John W. Schmitt and J. Carl Laney analyzed both the design of this temple and the use to which it will be put. It bears a superficial resemblance to previous Temples, but is by far the largest, and in even some of the “essential characteristics”, it differs from them in ways that do not correspond to Jewish law. This is because its purpose will be different in many respects, as outlined in the Schmitt/Laney book.

Model of the Millennial Temple, ©John W. Schmitt

The lesson here is less about sloppy reading than it is about neglect.

Judaism mainly ignores this passage because the design of this Temple differs from the Mosaic instructions in several key elements. They claim it can’t possibly be a legitimate design since it doesn’t match the required specs for the Tabernacle and Solomon’s Temple. Of course, the reason for the differences is that Jesus’ death and resurrection changed significant parts of the cultic practice, as mentioned in the book of Hebrews.

Christians, however, neglect it for the opposite reason: they can’t see any use at all during the Millennium for a Temple with an alter and other features needed for any part of the Mosaic Covenant observance.

Both sides are wrong, but I wonder how many of my readers have been even slightly curious about this portion of Scripture. It is God’s Word, so it is important to me!

Ezekiel 43:1–12 (God Returns to the Most Holy)

Then he led me to the gate, the gate facing east.
And behold, the glory of the God of Israel was coming from the east. And the sound of his coming was like the sound of many waters, and the earth shone with his glory.
And the vision I saw was just like the vision that I had seen when he came to destroy the city, and just like the vision that I had seen by the Chebar canal. And I fell on my face.
As the glory of the LORD entered the temple by the gate facing east,
the Spirit lifted me up and brought me into the inner court; and behold, the glory of the LORD filled the temple.
—Ezekiel 43:1–5 ESV

Again, see Opening the Golden Gate.

Beginning in chapter 40, Ezekiel has been once again taken to Jerusalem in a vision, but this was to show him events far in the future, during the Millennial Reign. The vision shows him a new Temple (see the previous section), to be built presumably at the start of the Reign. In chapter 43, suddenly God’s Glory returns to the Temple, but this time through the gate facing east, not above it. The assumption that many people make is that “God’s Glory” here refers to Jesus. The parallels between this and the earlier vision indicate it is God’s Sh’kinah returning—the Father, not the son.

The sequence in chapter 43 is as follows: God’s Glory returns, through the “gate facing east.” God goes into the Temple itself and fills it with His Glory. Ezekiel is standing outside the Temple with the angel who has been showing him around. God calls out from inside, saying that He will now dwell with His people forever, and never again will they defile His house.

So, if it wasn’t Messiah entering through the eastern gate, is Jesus “the prince“, who is mentioned several times in the prophecy? Clearly, He is not! This prince, whoever he is and whatever his function, has sins to atone for, and evidently, he has children. I surmise that he is to be a senior Zadokite priest, over the other priests but reporting to the new permanent High Priest, Messiah.

We know from other prophecies that Jesus will reign from Zion. But nowhere does scripture say that it was Jesus who entered through the eastern gate! And incidentally, there does not seem to be a throne room in Ezekiel’s Temple.

Once again, sloppy reading makes sloppy theology. It is the visible, localized sh’kinah Glory of God, the Father, entering the Temple. But He is entering through a new Eastern Gate, not the Golden Gate, which will no longer exist.

Jesus does return in clouds to Mt. Olivet, but nowhere does scripture say that He enters the Temple to reign. Most likely He’ll reign from a Palace.

Revelation

Of course, most of Revelation is prophetic imagery. I’m only going to hit some high points here. I need to mention that I am not a Dispensationalist, but I am premillennial, and in general, I pretty much agree with the Dispensational interpretation of Revelation. But not everything…

Chapter 8–9 (trumpets)

First, there are no trumpets in this passage! I plan to show in a future post that shofarim (animal horns used for blowing) are in view here. A shofar is blown like a trumpet, but it is not a trumpet, and the two have different functions in the Bible. In reality, therefore, this chapter is about the Seven Shofar Judgements!

Two shofarim. The large one on the top shelf is a traditional Yemenite shofar, made from a Kudu horn. The small shofar on the lower left is made from a ram’s horn. ©Ron Thompson

In verse 8:1, the Lamb opens the 7th Seal, which releases “thunder, lightning, [sounds or voices] and an earthquake“, 8:5. The “sounds or voices”, (translated “rumblings” in ESV) are part of the vision, and unexplained. The Seal sets the context for the 8 shofarim to follow, and suggests that the judgements are connected in some way to powerful tectonic and atmospheric forces on earth.

The first shofar judgement is hail and fire, mixed with blood, resulting in “a third of the earth … burned up, and a third of the trees … burned up, and all green grass … burned up” , 8:7. Using the hermeneutic principle of taking the plain sense of the verse if it “makes common sense,” we might then opine that the storms of verse 5 will produce the hail, and the lightning will set the fires. The third of the “earth” burned up might simply be a reference to the location of the burned portion of the vegetation. The blood mixed with the hail is harder to explain.

The second shofar judgement is “something like a great mountain burning with fire” causing the death of sea creatures and destruction of ships. That much is easy to explain as a large asteroid hit, but once again there is unexplained blood that casts doubt on the interpretation.

The third shofar judgement would appear to be a comet rather than another asteroid. Asteroids mostly originate in the Asteroid Belt, between Mars and Jupiter, and have compositions similar to those of the inner planets. Comets usually come from the Keiper Belt outside the orbits of the planets, and some “long-period” comets don’t originate in the solar system at all. A naturalistic explanation of “Wormwood” would be such a comet containing an unfamiliar compound that scatters in the wind and turns water sources bitter.

The fourth shofar judgement would seem to follow naturally from either or both of the “falling stars”.

While the first four shofar judgements, chapter 8, may possibly have a more or less naturalistic mechanism, judgements 5 and 6, chapter 9, are clearly supernatural from start to finish. I won’t attempt to explain them here, except to speculate that they should probably be taken at face value.

Note, however, that the “star” of 8:10 is no doubt an inanimate orbiting body (as opposed to a literal star), but the star of 9:1 is angelic. Angels are frequently referred to metaphorically in Hebrew literature as stars.

The 7th shofar, like the 7th Seal, is introductory for what follows it.

Like the shofar judgements, many Biblical prophecies can be interpreted naturalistically, while others can’t. It’s not always possible to know which is the case. Unfortunately for those of us who crave to understand every word spoken by God, both naturalistic and supernaturalistic prophecies can have an ultimate meaning that is either literal or metaphorical, or even both!

Chapter 10 (the angel with the little scroll)

This angel is also described, in verses 2 and 5 as the angel with his right foot on the sea and his left foot on the land.

Most scholars will tell you that prophetic references to the sea are speaking of chaos. The sea is chaotic. The land is not or is relatively free of chaos. I totally disagree with this interpretation!

All Bible prophecy is at its core Jewish. To the ancient and classical Jews, “the land,” when used metaphorically in prophecy, almost always refers to Eretz-Yisra’el, the Land of Israel, and “the sea” refers to all other lands on earth. Thus, the angel and the little scroll are going to effect both Jews and gentiles in some way.

At least portions of some Biblical prophesies can be interpreted with a high degree (though less than 100%) of certainty if certain key words or phrases are detected. Conversely, missing these keys may lead to completely erroneous conclusions.

Chapter 12 (a woman and a war)

This is a hotly contested passage that I will not say much about here. I believe it is partly a flashback to Jesus’ birth, and partly a discussion of Israel’s disposition going into the second half of the Tribulation.

Verses 1–5 are seen by some of the more radical (in my view) prophecy teachers to be signs that will appear in the zodiac at the close of the Trumpet Judgements. There are whole books written on this interpretation. There have always been Jewish and gentile Christian teachers who dabble in astrology, but that, in my opinion, is a pagan practice that has no place in God’s prophetic scheme.

What the passage is to me, is a highly figurative description of Messiah’s birth, not to Mary, but to Israel in general, and of His death and ascension into heaven.

Verses 7–12 is description of an angel-versus-angel war in heaven following the incarnation of The Son. A large number of disgruntled angels, led by Satan (Lucifer, if you will), enraged by this affront to the power they had gained on earth since the dispersal from Babel, waged war in heaven with the faithful angels, led by Mikha’el (Michael, see Daniel 10:21), the champion of Israel.

Prior to this outright war, the first recorded angelic rebellion was when Satan contradicted Elohim in the Garden. Subsequently, there were several angelic rebellions, but the “bad guys” were still given access to God at His Divine Council in heaven. This war marked the end of that access:

7 Now war arose in heaven, Michael and his angels fighting against the dragon. And the dragon and his angels fought back, 8 but he was defeated, and there was no longer any place for them in heaven.
— Revelation 12:7-8 (ESV) emphasis mine

Chapter 13–14 (the two beasts)

Once again, I will not try to dig for everything in these chapters, but I do want to mention a few points about Antichrist and his realm.

The “Beast from the Sea”

Jerry Falwell, Sr. famously stated that the Antichrist will “definitely be Jewish.” On the contrary, Antichrist’s origin in “the sea” unmistakably marks him as gentile (see the previous section).

Naming the Antichrist can’t be done using only this passage. Other passages in Revelation, Matthew, and elsewhere in the NT must be considered, along with various OT prophecies, especially in Daniel and the Minor Prophets. Still only guesswork is possible.

Counterfeit Christ?

Many commentators and pastors describe Antichrist as “a counterfeit Christ,” and that may be a big part of why Falwell decided he is Jewish. That is a misunderstanding of Antichrist’s role. Without question there are some parallels between the Trinity and the realm that Satan tries to establish here, but I see Antichrist as simply a false God, a pagan deity opposed to Jesus.

“Anti-Christ” means “opposed to the Messiah”, not a fake or a negative image of Messiah.

Antimatter is not counterfeit matter. A positron is an antielectron, meaning it is an electron with a positive, rather than negative, charge. If an electron and a positron come into contact with each other, both are instantly annihilated.

Fatal wound

Verse 13:3, speaking of Antichrist, says:

One of its heads seemed to have a mortal wound, but its mortal wound was healed, and the whole earth marveled as they followed the beast.
— Revelation 13:3 (ESV)

“Seemed to have a mortal wound” translates the Greek phrase, ὡς ἐσφαγμένην ἐσφαγμένην θάνατον, literally, “[was] as having been slain to death.” Similarly, “mortal wound” is πληγὴ τοῦ θανάτου, literally, “wound of death.” The phrasing here convinces me that this is not saying Antichrist was killed, but merely that he had a wound that at least briefly seemed to have been fatal. The timing of the event is also not addressed. He could have survived a wound as a child and the press coverage later flaunted as he gained power. Or he could have survived an assassination attempt during his rise in power.

The “Beast from the Land”

The “Beast from the Land”, aka, the “Second Beast”, aka, the “False Prophet” will more nearly take on the role of a false Messiah. And by the way, his origin in “the Land” identifies him as Jewish.

Horns and Heads

Revelation 13 and Daniel 7 both speak of the Antichrist as having ten horns (each with a diadem) and seven heads. Rev. 12 and 17 also speak of Satan (the Red Dragon, identified as the Serpent) as likewise having 10 horns and seven heads, so the two (Dragon and Satan) are connected in some way, presumably master and servant. No surprise.

Dan. 7:24 and Rev. 17:12 identify the horns as “kingdoms” from which the Antichrist will rise. In Rev. 17:9, the seven heads are identified as “seven mountains on which the woman is seated”, and at the same time, “seven kings.”

Despite numerous attempts that I have personally read going back at least to Hal Lindsey’s Late, Great Planet Earth and Satan is Alive and Well on Planet Earth, nobody has ever done better than guess as to the identities of those 10 “kingdoms.” Back then it was the Common Market, but that quickly outgrew ten nations. Tim LaHaye’s Left Behind books, Biblically dubious in so many ways, picked the United Nations.

My own guess is that the Gog and Magog War, which God Himself will end, will leave both sides hugely weakened but will not quell the centuries of compounded hatred in the region. A powerful world leader will then gather a group of ten heads of state around a table to produce the peace treaty that guarantees Israel’s safety going forward—and sets The Tribulation in motion. More or less in the pattern of President Trump’s August 2025 initiative to stop the Russia/Ukraine War.

In other words, the 10 horns need only be powerful entities. It would make sense to me if they were ten individual members of the larger European Union or NATO, a political or economic cartel, perhaps even huge corporations, or megarich Oligarchs. I suppose we’ll know them when they become obvious.

A Revived Roman Empire?

News Flash: The Roman Empire is dead! It ain’t coming back! I’m not ruling out that Antichrist’s empire could have similar characteristics, similar membership, or even the same general location (which might be around Rome, Istanbul, or Even Aachen, Charlemagne’s medieval capital in the Holy Roman Empire.

The notion of a “Revived Roman Empire” comes from a modern view of Daniel’s interpretation of Nebuchadrezzar’s statue dream in Daniel 2. I agree that we are correct in seeing the gold, silver, bronze and iron segments of the statue as Babylon, Medo-Persia, Greece, and Rome, respectively (many Christians have other views). But where others see a Revived Roman Empire, I see the feet and toes made of iron mixed with clay as merely the fragmented post-Roman world from the Middle Ages on through the present:

Daniel 2:43 (CJB)
[43] You saw the iron mixed with clay; that means that they will cement their alliances by intermarriages; but they won’t stick together any more than iron blends with clay.

A pair of Dreams

Since this post is now becoming insufferably long, I’m going to close with just two more examples…

Joseph and the sheaves

Behold, we were binding sheaves in the field, and behold, my sheaf arose and stood upright. And behold, your sheaves gathered around it and bowed down to my sheaf.”
— Genesis 37:7 (ESV)

Everyone is familiar with Joseph’s older brothers’ hatred for him because of the favoritism shown to him by their father. The intricate (from פַס, pahs, a difficult to pronounce guttural adjective if your language is English) robe given him by Jacob, probably “long-sleeved” rather than “multicolored”, greatly exacerbated the problem. When he then naively repeated his dream to the brothers, it was certainly a (forgive me) last [bundle of] straw.

Nobody needed to interpret that dream! Clearly, they recognized that it was a metaphorical picture of them, bowing down abjectly to their snotty young brother.

There is a tendency among Christian interpreters of Jewish Scripture to read literal meanings into visions and dreams even when it is clearly the symbolism that is vital. In this case, we understand that the brothers are right—the dream is indeed picturing them bowing to their brother.

Because of the absurdity of the dream itself, we understand that it is an allegory for Joseph’s relationship with his brothers, not a prediction that their crops will worship his!

Peter and the sheet

Here is another Biblical dream that uses an allegory to illustrate a Jewish premise. In this case, though, most gentile Christians (which today means most Christians) have a very weak understanding of Judaism and the Mosaic Covenant, so they take both the allegory and its premise literally.

10 [Peter] became hungry and wanted something to eat, but while they were preparing it, he fell into a trance 11 and saw the heavens opened and something like a great sheet descending, being let down by its four corners upon the earth. 12 In it were all kinds of animals and reptiles and birds of the air. 13 And there came a voice to him: “Rise, Peter; kill and eat.” 14 But Peter said, “By no means, Lord; for I have never eaten anything that is common or unclean.” 15 And the voice came to him again a second time, “What God has made clean, do not call common.” 16 This happened three times, and the thing was taken up at once to heaven.
— Acts 10:10-16 (ESV)

When Peter woke from his trance, did he immediately run to the kitchen and shout, “Halleluiah, hold the falafel and hummus on pita and bring me a ham and cheese sandwich!”? No, he “was inwardly perplexed as to what the vision that he had seen might mean.” He knew that his God would not tell him to violate Kashrut (the dietary laws under Covenant), so he thought that it made absolutely no sense.

But by the time he met with Cornelius, he’d figured it out:

And he said to them, “You yourselves know how unlawful it is for a Jew to associate with or to visit anyone of another nation, but God has shown me that I should not call any person common or unclean.
— Acts 10:28 (ESV) emphasis mine

As with Joseph’s sheaves, the sheet here is a picture, not the actual subject under discussion. I’ve stated in other articles that I believe the Mosaic Covenant, including its dietary laws, is still in force for Godly Jews. This passage by itself cannot prove me wrong (or right), because it is not about food, it’s about people.

Conclusions

Dogmatic interpretations of visions and dreams is seldom, if ever, possible unless corroboration is provided elsewhere—by means, for example of:

  1. Interpretation by the prophet himself, if provided.
  2. Direct interpretation by statements elsewhere in Scripture.
  3. Clear fulfillment elsewhere in Scripture.
  4. Parallelism, where two or more passages each contribute information.
  5. Ancient Jewish thought from Hebrew literary sources.
  6. Ancient Near Eastern (ANE) thought from ANE literary sources.
  7. Ancient history.
  8. Post-Biblical History.
  9. Current events.

Prophetic understanding sometimes comes slowly, and sometimes in bits and pieces. The Old Testament alone was not clear on the fact that the Messiah would come twice, with different agendas.

Prophecy has to be reevaluated when conditions change. Which goes along with my main purpose in writing this article—to urge against being too dogmatic about prophetic interpretation.

Over-interpretation by modern-day Christians is risky, though it may be entertaining!


Son of Man, Son of God

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Modified on:

  1. Introduction
  2. “Son of God” in the New Testament
    1. In the Synoptic Gospels
    2. In John’s Gospel
  3. “Sons of God” in the Old Testament
  4. “Son of Man” in the Old Testament
  5. “Son of Man” in the New Testament
  6. The bottom line

Introduction

I love, and have a very large library of, DVD sets from The Great Courses, which I first learned of from their advertisements in World Magazine and other Christian periodicals. I have learned over the years, though, that their many theological courses are useless except as a guide for understanding the modernist opposition. Professor Bart D. Ehrman, a graduate of the Princeton Theological Seminary, has recorded one such course, 24 half-hour lectures titled “How Jesus Became God.” Ehrman is a prolific author, boasting many published books with provocative titles, all based on a common theme, that the Christianity taught by Conservative Evangelicals like me is a lie, based on faulty, unprovable history and a completely unreliable Bible.

Skeptical scholars often make a big deal of the fact that “Jesus never called Himself the Son of God”, only the “Son of Man”, that is, a “human being.” This, they say, means that He never meant to present Himself as such, and it was only later that Christians “deified” Him.

But is that true?

“Son of God” in the New Testament


“Son of God” in Greek is υἱός θεός (huios theos). As a Trinitarian title, I don’t think there is anything about that that I need to explain here.

The term is used freely in reference to Jesus in Acts; in Paul’s letters to Rome, Corinth, Galatia, and Ephesus; in Hebrews; in John’s letters; and in Revelation. The confusion arises from its appearance or absence in the Gospels.

In the Gospels, Jesus is addressed as Son of God by others: the Angel who announced Mary’s pregnancy; John the Baptist at and after Jesus’ baptism; the Tempter in the Wilderness; various demons; His disciples in periods of particular awe; Martha after Lazarus was resurrected; some Sanhedrin members and other witnesses of His crucifixion (mostly in sarcasm); and by Roman soldiers who felt the earthquake as He died.

When appearing in plural form (υἱοὶ θεός), Sons of God in the New Testament always refers to Christians. Galatians 3:26 explains that we are “sons of God through faith.” A clue to why we share the title with the heavenly host (see Gods and Demons) is found in Jesus’ answer to a scribe who tried to trip Him up with a loaded question about marriage in heaven:

Luke 20:35 (CJB) emphasis mine
[35] but those judged worthy of the age to come, and of resurrection from the dead, do not get married, [36] because they can no longer die. Being children of the Resurrection, they are like angels; indeed, they are children of God.

In the Synoptic Gospels

It is certainly true that Jesus Himself avoided the terminology right up until His trial, but there was a practical reason for that. Although there was a strain of Hebrew theology that speculated on the Messiah as deity, that was a minority view. Most of the sages were expecting a human Messiah who would defeat the Roman oppressors and usher in an age of spiritual renewal, prophecy and miracles. To openly claim deity would have, and indeed ultimately did, lead to Jesus’ arrest by the Sanhedrin for blasphemy. Pilate was evidently not overly concerned about a political threat from Jesus and His followers, but to openly claim Messiahship could nevertheless lead to arrest by the Romans as a potential revolutionary. In fact, under duress from the Judeans, that was the charge that Pilate used to justify His execution.

Not only did Jesus avoid using the terminology Himself, He also frequently told others not to speak of it. For example, in Capernaum:

Luke 4:40–41 (CJB)
[40] After sunset, all those who had people sick with various diseases brought them to Yeshua, and he put his hands on each one of them and healed them; [41] also demons came out of many, crying, “You are the Son of God!” But, rebuking them, he did not permit them to say that they knew he was the Messiah.

There were a number of occasions when Jesus’ exhortation for silence was ignored, and there were a few where He commanded someone to go ahead and speak freely. Notably, in Gadara, after chasing the legion of demons into a herd of pigs:

Mark 5:18–20 (ESV)
[18] As he was getting into the boat, the man who had been possessed with demons begged him that he might be with him. [19] And he did not permit him but said to him, “Go home to your friends and tell them how much the Lord has done for you, and how he has had mercy on you.” [20] And he went away and began to proclaim in the Decapolis how much Jesus had done for him, and everyone marveled.

Jesus and the Demoniac, copyright unknown

The difference on this occasion was that the Gadarene people were chasing Him out of the country, but He wanted to come back later. They were scared of the Jew who could heal so effectively and cause the suicidal stampede of their swine herds. And of course, angry at the economic consequences of the latter. But this was Decapolis, a pagan territory outside of Judean jurisdiction where the risk of arrest was low. Since Jesus was planning to return to the region very soon, He wanted the healed “demoniac” to prepare the way for His return. Which the man evidently did very effectively! Attitudes in the Gadarene region had completely changed when He returned. “Multitudes” of the Gadarenes turned out eagerly to hear Him preach. That could only be due to the tireless work of the dedicated new convert.

Note: Parallel versions of this story mention not one, but two possessed Gadarenes healed by Jesus. As is frequently the case in the Gospels, the authors mentioned only what they individually found important in the circumstances. Just as in the story of the ten healed lepers, I think that only one reacted with gratitude. Mark ignored the one who proved inconsequential. In the case of the lepers, both the gratitude of the one and the ingratitude of the nine were integral to the moral lesson.

Despite what I have said above, I think that Jesus most likely did speak freely about His sonship when there were no hostile spies present (see my article about the Pharisees). After the crucifixion, Jesus was “gone”, but His followers were no doubt considered heretics by the Sanhedrin. Since the Synoptic Gospels were written and circulated while the Sanhedrin still existed, I think their authors remained circumspect about reporting His use of the term.

In John’s Gospel

John, however, wrote his Gospel after AD 70. The Temple, the Sadducees, and the Sanhedrin were gone, and the Jewish resistance temporarily suppressed. Jesus was gone and His disciples largely scattered. Caution was no longer necessary. John recorded several instances where Jesus, at least by clear implication, claimed to be the Son of God:

John 3:18 (CJB)
[18] Those who trust in him are not judged; those who do not trust have been judged already, in that they have not trusted in the one who is God’s only and unique Son.

John 5:25–27 (CJB)
[25] Yes, indeed! I tell you that there is coming a time—in fact, it’s already here—when the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God, and those who listen will come to life. [26] For just as the Father has life in himself, so he has given the Son life to have in himself. [27] Also he has given him authority to execute judgment, because he is the Son of Man [the Messiah].

John 10:36–38 (ESV)
[36] do you say of him whom the Father consecrated and sent into the world, ‘You are blaspheming,’ because I said, ‘I am the Son of God’? [37] If I am not doing the works of my Father, then do not believe me; [38] but if I do them, even though you do not believe me, believe the works, that you may know and understand that the Father is in me and I am in the Father.”

John 11:3–4 (ESV)
[3] So the sisters sent to him, saying, “Lord, he whom you love is ill.” [4] But when Jesus heard it he said, “This illness does not lead to death. It is for the glory of God, so that the Son of God may be glorified through it.”

All of the above are “red letter” references. Those who say that Jesus never claimed to be the Son of God are either biblically illiterate, or disingenuous.

“Sons of God” in the Old Testament

This term appears only 6 times in the English Standard version of the Old Testament, and each time as a plural, בְנֵי־הָֽאֱלֹהִים֙ (Bənē hāʾĔlōhīm, “the Sons of God”). In all cases it refers to higher-ranking members of the Heavenly Host (messenger “angels” are the lowest rank):

  • In Genesis 6, two verses refer to “Watchers” (a class named only in Daniel and a number of extrabiblical works), who take on human flesh and rebelliously mate with human women.
  • Deuteronomy 32:8–9 refers to rebellious beings who God exiled to earth and gave oversight of the pagan nations (some English translations incorrectly render the Hebrew, Bene haElohim, as “the sons of Israel”, because their grasp of angelology is deficient).
  • Three passages in Job speak of God’s Divine Council, where The Accuser appears at the throne to report on conditions on earth and is challenged to find fault in Job.

“Son of Man” in the Old Testament

The Hebrew term, בֶּן־אָדָם֙ (ben adam), or its Aramaic equivalent, בַּר־אֱנָשׁ (bar ‘enash), both meaning “son of man”, is used many times in Job, Psalms, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and in Daniel 8 to mean, simply, a human being. That’s the default meaning, certainly. But in Daniel 7:13, the prophet is given the following vision:

Daniel 7:13–14 (CJB) emphasis mine
[13] “I kept watching the night visions,
when I saw, coming with the clouds of heaven,
someone like a son of man.
He approached the Ancient One
and was led into his presence.
[14] To him was given rulership,
glory and a kingdom,
so that all peoples, nations and languages
should serve him.
His rulership is an eternal rulership
that will not pass away;
and his kingdom is one
that will never be destroyed.

Someone who looks like a human is led into God’s presence and is given an eternal rulership over the entire world. This is the definitive prophecy of the coming Messiah, and it is the reason the Jews were expecting a warrior-Messiah. Other prophetic writings and traditions filled in detail, but this was considered the formal and most clear announcement. For understanding both the Old and New Testaments, I consider this to be perhaps the most important Christological passage in the Bible.

“Son of Man” in the New Testament

In all of human history, I seriously doubt that there are many humans who have gone around referring to themselves as “the son of man” or as “the human” on a regular basis. I, for one, only use the term “human” for myself when speaking to my cat. Jesus spoke frequently of “the Son of Man”, and when He did so, all of His hearers would have immediately realized that He was talking about Daniel’s expected Messiah, even if a few might have been slow to catch on that He was adopting that persona for Himself.

Messiahship claims were frequent in Judea, so one of the tasks that the Sanhedrin took on was to evaluate anyone who seemed to be making the claim or who they thought might eventually do so. That’s why a contingent of scribes and Pharisees were assigned to follow Jesus around. He knew that when He eventually made an explicit claim, He would have to “put up or shut up.” Consequently, He waited until the time of His own choosing and did it in a way as to leave no doubt in anyone’s mind that He was doing so. That was at His trial.

The bottom line

By speaking of the Son of Man in the third person, Jesus avoided unambiguously declaring Himself to be Messiah, but it would have been obvious to any practicing Jew that He was referring to Himself. His signs and miracles reinforced the unspoken claim. Therefore, it is ignorant to say that Jesus never claimed to be God!

Liberal colleges and seminaries teach a simplistic and biased theology that ignores the cultural realities of life in ancient (prehistory through Persian) and classical (Greko-Roman, i.e., Second Temple era through early Rabbinic) Judaism. Unfortunately, the traditions emerging from these institutions are not being adequately debated because, though more benignly biased, conservative educations also tend to be simplistic, and often bound to unwarranted medieval traditions.


Genesis 1:1–5, Day 1

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  1. Before I begin…
  2. Moving on…
  3. Hermeneutics and the Golden Rule of Biblical Interpretation
  4. Limitations of Science
  5. Proving the Bible
  6. Moses was a prophet!
  7. Previous posts in this series on the topic of creation
  8. Revisiting Genesis 1
  9. Prologue: Gen 1:1–5
  10. The overwhelming problem with Light on Day 1:
    1. The definition of light
    2. The source of light
    3. sh’kinah
    4. “Let there be light…”
  11. Interpreting verses 1:3–2:3
  12. A better idea
    1. What was the cultural background?
    2. So, what are my views?
    3. What point was God then making?
  13. Bibliography

Before I begin…

Before getting into this, I’ve been asked why I keep alienating my friends by harping on a version of Creationism that most of them consider to be unbiblical. I can respond to that in several ways:

  • First, I’m not really “harping” on it at all. This is a multipart series that I’ve planned for quite a while, to replace something I did years ago. I’ve still got two or three chapters to write before I’m finished with it. I did the same thing with my series on The Jewish Feasts.
  • I’ve been vitally interested in both theology and astrophysics since, literally, my pre-teen years. I write about what interests me most.
  • I don’t consider that one’s interpretation of Genesis 1 is a “fundamental of the faith“, but many of my friends do, and I am convinced that the currently mandatory “Genesis Flood Theory” is an unnecessary stumbling block for many lost souls.
  • Although many wonderful Christians would refuse to fellowship with me because I’m not a Young Earth Creationist, I don’t feel the same about them; but I suppose I’d like to convince them that I’m “righter than they are.”

As stated below, “With respect to the question of Creation, the central, foundational Truth of all Scripture is that the One, True, Eternal, Triune God, by His own power, created and sustains all else that exists in the cosmos.

Moving on…

My views are driven by several axioms:

  • God is both omnipotent and sovereign, so He can do whatever He wants to do, however He wants to do it!
  • The Bible, as originally written, is the inerrant, irrevocable, Word of God.
  • The Bible we now possess (at least insofar as the accepted canonical books are concerned) is substantially the same holy Word as the originals, but subject to a very limited extent to human error in translation and interpretation.
  • Correct interpretation (exegesis) of Scripture requires a consistent hermeneutic, which among other factors, includes recognition that some scripture is not meant to be taken literally, as discussed in the next section in relation to The Golden Rule of Biblical Interpretation.
  • A consistent hermeneutic also must require recognition of the cultural background of both the writer and the ancient reader.
  • Though Holy Scripture is as valid and vital today as it ever was, correct interpretation demands unequivocally that modern culture and tradition not be anachronistically imposed on the writers and readers of the day in which they were written.
  • Because God is not a liar or an author of confusion, we must recognize that the testimony of God’s Word cannot conflict with the testimony of His Created World when both are rightly understood.

Hermeneutics and the Golden Rule of Biblical Interpretation

“When the plain sense of Scripture makes common sense, seek no other sense; therefore, take every word at its primary, ordinary, usual, literal meaning unless the facts of the immediate context, studied in the light of related passages and axiomatic and fundamental truths, indicate clearly otherwise.”–Dr. David L. Cooper (1886-1965),
founder of The Biblical Research Society

The above quote is known by many expositors as “The Golden Rule of Biblical Interpretation.” I read somewhere that this has often been shortened to “When the plain sense of Scripture makes common sense, seek no other sense, lest it result in nonsense.”

Implicit in the above is the assumption that the “plain sense of Scripture” sometimes does not seem to make sense. Certainly, when that is the case, you must first question your own common sense, but that doesn’t always solve the problem.

Few conservative Bible scholars believe that every word of Scripture is meant to be understood literally.

That is troubling to many, because the alternative opens the door to subjectivism and arbitrary conclusions. Yet almost all the great conservative Bible commentators practice a hermeneutic (a set of formal principles for Biblical interpretation) that allow for non-literal text, including parables, figures of speech, anthropomorphism, poetic exaggeration, and a host of other confusing factors. Not to mention translational difficulties.

None of that subtracts from the central truth that “all Scripture is God-breathed.” It is axiomatic to me that the Bible is inerrant in its original language and the original manuscripts. Yet some folks read my opinions, especially respecting emotional themes like creation, and make snide comments like, “So you believe it’s inerrant except when it isn’t!”

So, to clarify, I don’t think there are any substantive problems with corruption of our Scriptures over the millennia. There are, however, problems with translation, but few of those are impossible to unravel, with sufficient attention to the linguistic and cultural background of the inspired humans who penned the words, and those to whom the words were written.

There are also “mysteries.” Most Evangelicals are happy to admit that Paul revealed things hidden within Scripture that were mysteries with respect to the New Testament Church. The Church itself being one of the chief mysteries! The dual advents of Messiah are another mystery now revealed. Yet many seem unwilling to consider that some things are still mysterious.

What I consider to be the biggest factor of all that contributes to doctrinal confusion and infighting in the Church is that some misinterpretations are imbedded into a nearly impenetrable wall of tradition.

Unfortunately, the reason there are so many Christian denominations in the world, and the reason they often have so much trouble getting along, is that each has its own particular list of what constitutes “axiomatic and fundamental truths.” For example, I was brought up in a “fundamentalist” sub-denomination of Baptists that teaches there is no such thing as a universal Church of all believers; only local churches are Biblical. To them this is an axiomatic and non-negotiable Truth, based in part on the simple fact that the Greek word translated “church” is ecclesia, which literally means “assembly.” After all, how can people scattered across the world and across many ages possibly assemble together?

With respect to the question of Creation, the central, foundational Truth of all Scripture is that the One, True, Eternal, Triune God, by His own power, created and sustains all else that exists in the cosmos.

That fact is stated clearly and concisely in just one verse: Genesis 1:1.

As for what that process looked like and how we should interpret Genesis 1:2–2:3, I regard that as still a mystery.

A 6,000-year-old universe and the Genesis Flood Theory of today’s Young Earth Creationists does not meet the commonsense test, not because God can’t do whatever He wants, but because the clear evidence of centuries of careful observation and analysis by very smart and dedicated professionals, both Christians and otherwise, can’t be ignored. God is not the Author of Confusion. He doesn’t plant lies in front of our face to test our faith.

Moreover, the universe is demonstrably dynamic, changing over time even as we observe. That isn’t “evolution”, it’s simply the application of forces and interactions decreed by God. We understand the physics of supernovae (the implosion of giant stars) and we observe them happening. We understand the process of star formation, and we see examples of every stage of that process. We can’t see the movement of stars and galaxies, but we can measure their movements using Doppler shift, similar to the clocking of a speeding car.

Limitations of Science

When I was young, scientific method was viewed as a simple, 3-step process:

  1. State a hypothesis.
  2. Form a tentative theory.
  3. “Prove” the theory, which then becomes a law.

But so many of the “laws” found under that paradigm have been subsequently found to be limited in scope (for example, Newton’s laws of motion are now known to be invalid for very large and very small masses), that the paradigm has changed:

Now, hypotheses still become tentative theories, but once a theory has become so well proved that it is accepted as true by most authorities on the subject, it still doesn’t get promoted to “law”. That is why it is utterly meaningless to say that “The Big Bang Theory” is just a theory!

Scientists now look for certain characteristics of a theory to judge how “well established” it is:

  • Obviously, the more evidence supports a theory, and the less that appears to contradict it, the stronger it becomes. This evidence may be experimental, or it may be observational. If it is statistical in nature, then the results must be well within a recognized margin of error.
  • To be considered a truly “scientific“, a theory must be judged to be “falsifiable.” That means that for all practical purposes, if there is no conceivable way that a theory can ever be proven false, then it must remain speculative in the minds of those who are not predisposed to take it on faith. This principle is the tool of choice for those who wish to exclude all discussion of religion, or “Intelligent Design“, as an alternative explanation.
  • For a theory to become intrenched as factual, it is also necessary for it to successfully produce demonstrably true predictions, by means either of observation, logical arguments, or mathematics.
  • The strongest theories are those that can be expressed by mathematics, because mathematics is the only truly “exact science“. Two plus two always equals four in our base 10 number system. The circumference of a circle divided by its diameter always equals pi (3.1415926…) in a Euclidean frame of reference.

Proving the Bible

Something I see online over and over again online is well-meaning Christians exclaiming over interesting archaeological finds that, “They prove that the Bible is correct.” No, they don’t! Science will never prove Scripture, and that is by God’s design, because He wants us to live by faith, not by sight. The most that science can do for us is to confirm the faith that God has already supplied to us.

At the same time, if we are worried that science will contradict our faith, then our faith is weak to begin with!

God has written of Himself in both Scripture and creation. The purpose of science is to help us understand creation. Embrace it!

Moses was a prophet!

According to Scripture, Moses was the greatest prophet of all times, other than Jesus. He didn’t personally see any of the events of Genesis, so how did he know what to write? Both the Old and New Testament contain numerous references to non-canonical source writings. Moses himself references The Book of the Wars of the Lord (no longer extant) in Numbers 21:14, which recorded some contemporary events, but I know of no sources that he could have used for events prior to the invention of writing. He could have gotten his information only from God. After-the-fact prophecy, so to speak.

How was that information communicated to him? Perhaps verbally, because we know that he and God talked to each other directly. Having nothing concrete to go by, I personally assume that from Genesis 11:10 forward, Moses’ inspiration was primarily verbal.

Verses 10–32 of chapter 11 constitute one of eleven so-called toledoth in Genesis. These primarily genealogical blocks of Scripture were included by Moses and are believed to be intended as section dividers.

Because the first 11+ chapters of Genesis consist of abbreviated, flowery accounts of earthshaking historical events, I see them as poetic discourse, a different genre from what follows. For that reason, I suspect that these chapters were conveyed, at least in part, via visions or dreams. There is a theological label for prophetic visions of past events: Preterism. A “full preterist” believes that all prophecy describes the past, in effect dismissing the possibility that prophets could foretell the future. I am far, far from that position! I am a “partial preterist” in that I refuse to dismiss the possibility that God can also reveal the unseen past to his prophets.

Typically, prophets preached and reported the content of visions and dreams, but not necessarily their interpretations.

Previous posts in this series on the topic of creation

In The Hijacking of Creationism, I laid out several of the views that Evangelical scholars have historically held in order to account for the apparent ancient age (13.8 billion years) of the universe. In particular, I focused on The Genesis Flood Theory, and its popularizer, Henry M. Morris. Today, 1/10/2024, I expanded on my bio of Dr. Morris. Yes, I am a little bit brutal with him, but his writings were frequently brutal towards those who disagreed with him.

In Does Science Trump Theology? I explore the intellectual domains covered by the two disciplines, similarities in the two, and how they should work together in Bible interpretation.

In Fountains of the Deep I draw on my own geological engineering background to present what I believe to be the most likely mechanism of the Genesis Flood. This mechanism is unlikely to have caused the distortion of the earth’s surface that followers of Morris demand. Incidentally, the 13.8-billion-year age of the universe is as firmly rooted in astrophysics and cosmology as the 4.54-billion-year age of earth is in geology. One of these days I’d like to hear a Young Earth Creationist explain how the Genesis Flood accounts for the cosmologic appearance of age.

In Geology a Flood Cannot Explain I randomly describe, from my own professional knowledge, a number of well-known geological features on earth that absolutely could not have been affected by a flood of any magnitude.

Fluid Mechanics courses for civil engineers are mostly irrelevant to understanding of the Genesis Flood, because they focus primarily on hydrostatics (forces exerted by water pressure on fixed structures like dams and canal locks), and laminar flow in engineered open channels and pipes. To the extent that they cover turbulent flow in natural channels like riverbeds, the primary interest is erosion of friable soils, sands and gravels. Before erosion can occur in solid rock, weathering must first break the rock down into smaller pieces, which is a process which usually takes years, if not centuries or longer. [I explore this fact in a post, Geology and the Saudi Sinai, part of a series on false evidence for believing that “the real Mt. Sinai” is in Saudi Arabia.]

Revisiting Genesis 1

I would like to take another look at the first few verses of Genesis 1 to present some ideas that you may not have considered before.

Prologue: Gen 1:1–5

Below, I present three very legitimate translations. The first is from an Evangelical favorite, the English Standard Version (ESV). The second is from the Jewish Publication Society (JPS). The third is from a new work, The Hebrew Bible, translated by Robert Alter over a 30-year period. Alter is a modernist, and not someone I would look to for dogma or Christian commentary, but from reading his books, I am convinced that he is, to his core, a top authority on Biblical Hebrew and Ancient Near Eastern literature. I don’t believe that his translations are colored by any sectarian presuppositions, and that makes him my top comparator while trying to separate what the Hebrew Bible says from what tradition claims that it says.

1 In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth. 2 The earth was without form and void, and darkness was over the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God was hovering over the face of the waters.

3 And God said, “Let there be light,” and there was light. 4 And God saw that the light was good. And God separated the light from the darkness. 5 God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night. And there was evening and there was morning, the first day.
— Genesis 1:1-5 (ESV)

1 When God began to create heaven and earth— 2 the earth being unformed and void, with darkness over the surface of the deep and a wind from God sweeping over the water— 3 God said, “Let there be light”; and there was light. 4 God saw that the light was good, and God separated the light from the darkness. 5 God called the light Day, and the darkness He called Night. And there was evening and there was morning, a first day.
— Genesis 1:1-5 (JPS)

1 When God began to create heaven and earth,
2 and the earth then was welter and waste and darkness over the deep and
God’s breath hovering over the waters, 3 God said, “Let there be light.” And
there was light. 4 And God saw the light, that it was good, and God divided
the light from the darkness. 5 And God called the light Day, and the darkness
He Called Night. And it was evening and it was morning, first day.
— Genesis 1:1-5 (Alter)

Before considering the difficulties posed by creation of light on “Day 1” (verses 3–5), we first need to consider verses 1 and 2.

Verse 1: I think that the ESV Study Bible, with a couple amendments, states the interpretive problem in verse 1 fairly well:

[Verse 1] can be taken as a summary, introducing the whole passage; or it can be read as the first event, the origin of the heavens and the earth (sometime [on or] before the first day), including the creation of matter[, energy], space, and time. This second view (the origin of the heavens and the earth) is confirmed by the NT writers’ affirmation that creation was from nothing (Heb. 11:3; Rev. 4:11).

Heavens and the earth here means “everything.” This means, then, that “In the beginning” refers to the beginning of everything. The text indicates that God created everything in the universe, which thus affirms that he did in fact create it ex nihilo (Latin “out of nothing”). The effect of the opening words of the Bible is to establish that God, in his inscrutable wisdom, sovereign power, and majesty, is the Creator of all things that exist.
— Dennis, Lane T. and Wayne Grudem, eds., The ESV Study Bible. Accordance electronic edition, version 2.0. Wheaton: Crossway Bibles, 2008 (emphasis added, my additions are in brackets).

Probably half of the sources I use assume that verse 1 is a summary for what follows, ignoring the fact that none of what follows explicitly mentions the origins of the earth as a rocky planet covered by water. This view necessarily assumes that God created the individual building blocks (sub-atomic particles, atoms and molecules, and the forces that bind them) concurrently with forming them into the finished product. This is not outrageous but leads to a crucial contradiction which I will discuss below—namely that light is produced by matter, and is a manifestation of electromagnetism, which is an essential binding force.

The other half of my sources take the “first event” approach. Most of those place verse 1 on day 1. If you take it prior to day 1, then you more or less put yourself potentially in the “Gap Theory” camp, which I have occupied, but which is anathema to Young Earth Creationists because it can imply death before The Fall. I’ll save my comments on that objection for another post in this series. Unfortunately, this view is subject to the same contradiction regarding electromagnetic binding.

The ESVSB contention that “[the] Heavens and the earth … means ‘everything’” assumes that the wording of the Scripture is a merism, a figure of speech that encompasses the first element, the last element, and everything in between. This assumption is not provable, but rather can only be taken on faith—which I do. It is a figure of speech used frequently in the Bible.

The term “the heavens” is hashamayim in Hebrew. It is a plural form and is usually rendered as such in translations. Up to seven heavens were recognized in ancient literature, but most scholars today differentiate between just three heavens:

  1. The atmosphere around and above us.
  2. The cosmos beyond earth’s atmosphere.
  3. The heavenly realm inhabited by God and his host.

I would rather prefer a more general statement that the term “heavens” means everything above the surface of earth: As explained below, Moses and his readers would have envisioned several elements:

  1. The sky of air and birds.
  2. A solid dome (the “firmament“) from which hang the suspended sun, moon and stars.
  3. An ocean above, connected at the edges to the ocean below, and held up by the dome, (KJV, “firmament”).
  4. The home of God and His Divine Host.

The first event view is supported in particular by the JPS and Alter translations above (“began to create”), which place verse 1 at the beginning of what might be interpreted as a string of creation events, those described in the remainder of the chapter, and anything subsequent.

Verse 2: In verse 2, there are actually four separate interpretive issues, which I will gloss over here:

  1. Without form (or formless) and void” and other translations, such as Alter’s “welter and waste.” The Hebrew, tohu wabohu, is linguistically of limited use to our understanding, because its usage in literary history is insufficient to allow a definite interpretation. Guesses range from “total chaos” to “undeveloped and unpopulated.” Halter deliberately chose his alliterative nouns to emulate the poetic language of the Hebrew rather than to take a position on precise meaning. Whatever the meaning here, I have generally pictured the state of the planet as an earth totally covered by water and shrouded in mist, which works very well with a Gap Theory and a flooded earth. However, I’ll mention another (better?) view below.
  2. Darkness.” The Hebrew choshek can mean things like darkness (perhaps because light is absent), or obscurity because light has been masked or reflected away. Again, obscurity works best with Gap Theories, but see below.
  3. The Deep.” The Hebrew tehom means either the deep sea, or the deep source waters of terrestrial springs which were viewed as interconnected with each other and with the sea (see Fountains of the Deep, where I discuss this in some detail).
  4. The Spirit of God“, “a wind from God”, or “God’s breath.” The Hebrew ruach, can mean any of these things, and probably means all of them here. See God with the Wind for an in-depth discussion.

The overwhelming problem with Light on Day 1:

The definition of light

Just what is “light”, anyway? If you think of it as simply, “the absence of dark”, then you are way off base—it’s the other way around. As a noun, “dark” denotes a concept (the absence of light), rather than a tangible thing. “Light” is something very real and specific. I suspect that all of my readers have had enough education to realize that light is electromagnetic energy. All of you will no doubt have seen some version of a spectrum diagram:

The problem is that most folks have a tendency to think of visible light as something that is fundamentally different from the rest of the spectrum, because our vision only detects wavelengths in a narrow band between about 400 and 700 nanometers. But the wavelength of electromagnetic energy is really an expression of how energetic the wave is. X-rays and gamma rays are fundamentally the same thing as visible light, just more energetic. Radio waves, radar, and microwaves are fundamentally the same thing as visible light, just less energetic. All of these things are emitted by matter, travel at roughly 186,000 mps as waves, and are detected in the form of massless particles called photons.

So, if God literally created light on a literal Day 1, did He create just visible light, or the entire spectrum? If He just created visible light, then I have to ask, “visible to whom?” Humans all differ slightly in their light sensitivity. Bats, most amphibians, and many fish and insects see well into the infrared. Many species of insects, fish, and even mammals (including dogs and cats) can see into the ultraviolet. Using instrumentation, humans can now “see” all wavelengths of electromagnetism.

And what do we even count as visible to a normal human? Sunlight reaching Earth’s surface on a sunny day is around 52 to 55 percent infrared, 42 to 43 percent visible light, and 3 to 5 percent ultraviolet. A biologist might say that “visible” means detectable using only our eyes, but we also detect longer and shorter wavelengths with other organs.

On the long-wave side of the spectrum, infrared (“below red”) is felt as heat on our skin; microwaves can penetrate skin, and if powerful enough, could even boil the water in blood and cells near the surface; and even longer UHF and VHF radio waves have been documented to set up resonant vibrations in structures like teeth with metallic fillings.

On the short-wave side of the spectrum, ultraviolet (“above violet”), which can cause sunburn and later melanoma; x-rays penetrate completely through our bodies and can cause damage to inner organs over time or can cause or kill cancers; unshielded gamma rays can cause catastrophic damage to human bodies.

Contrary to the diagram above, cosmic rays are not primarily light or even electromagnetic energy in any sense, but rather are characterized by alpha and beta particles (helium nuclei and protons) traveling at close to the speed of light, and thus possessing some of the same quantum properties as light.

The source of light

Light that reaches us from the sun is largely in the range of visible and near-visible light, but it starts out in the sun’s reactive core as gamma rays, high energy (short wavelength) byproducts of nuclear fusion. These gamma rays begin a “random walk” out of the sun’s core and through its conduction zone, repeatedly colliding with particles in the dense surrounding soup of hydrogen and helium ions, changing directions randomly, over and over again, and gradually losing energy (thus shifting to more benign longer wavelengths). Eventually, after something like 100,000 to a million years, they reach the sun’s surface and fly off in all directions at the speed of light, 186,282 miles per second.

Structure of the sun, from theuniverse-michael-lawson.weebly.com

An even more important consideration (mentioned above) is that, in the universe God created, electromagnetic energy (let me just call it “light” here, for brevity) is always associated with matter. There are a number of ways that light can be generated, but it always begins with matter. I’ll mention a possible exception below, under the heading “sh’kinah“, but for now, I’m talking about the light that all of us experience.

It is worth mentioning that all light is invisible until it strikes a detector. If you are in an empty, dark place and someone shines a flashlight past you, you may see the glowing source, but you will not see any trace of the beam, which consists only of a jiggling electromagnetic field, unless it strikes an air or dust molecule and reflects into your eye.

Most light in the universe is generated by stars like our sun, but all matter generates light, usually much less energetic than stellar gamma rays but still light, even if it is well below our range of sight. The human retina is populated by several types of light receptor: “cones” for detecting color when the light intensity is strong enough, and “rods” for detecting black and white in low light situations. My cat, Anna, can see me very well in a darkened (but not totally dark) room, because her retinas are mostly populated by “rods”.

Matter that is not heated to a glow, still generates heat, and that heat energy is radiated as light in the infrared region. If raised to a high enough temperature, the energy of the radiated light will eventually climb into the visible region, first red, and when hot enough, all the way to the blue side of the spectrum.

[Note: This is why the red and blue markings on faucets and automobile heater controls are so confusing and counterintuitive to me. To any scientist and most engineers, it should be red for cold and blue for hot, in spectral order.]

I took the photo of Anna, below, using an infrared sensor. The color isn’t real. The sensor’s pixels map the wavelengths of the infrared light in the scene and use an algorithm to determine the temperature that the pixel is “seeing”. False color is then added to encode it, as per the scale on the left. The warmest parts of the photo are her eyes, about 96°F. Next warmest is her face, followed by her tummy and legs. Her cold nose and the thick fur on her back and tail matches the cooler temperatures of the table she’s lounging on and the room to the right. The blue areas, our front door and glazed side panels, are quite cold. It was winter, and the windows here are single-glazed and very poor insulators.


In this photo, the small amount of heat registered from the window is a combination of heat from Anna and the room itself, being reflected back towards my sensor, heat generated by the window glass itself, and heat from outside conducted (see below) through the glass and woodwork.

All matter generates heat provided that its temperature is above absolute zero (−459.67°F). In the presence of any heat at all, the sub-atomic particles in atoms and molecules vibrate. The quantum mechanical mechanism causing this is beyond my scope here, but that vibration causes a release of energy in the form of heat. Heat energy is propagated in one or more of three ways:

  • Conduction – If two objects are touching each other, then the heat stored in the hotter will flow to the cooler (that’s the “first law of thermodynamics”).
  • Convection – In a gas or liquid, heat energy from a hot container will flow to the fluid by conduction and then the heated fluid will rise, setting up a convection current in the liquid.
  • Radiation – Whether or not either of the above occur, there will always be some heat flow in the form of electromagnetic radiation. To me, that is light, whether I can see it or not!

Absolute zero is theoretically unobtainable, because an object at absolute zero would cease all motion, including vibrations within the nucleus and movement of the electrons. All liquids and gasses (including the atmosphere) at this temperature would immediately solidify and collapse to a dense, inert lump, which I don’t believe describes the condition of earth in Genesis 1:2.

This is why I think that it would make no sense for light to have been created subsequent to the creation of matter in Genesis 1:1, whether you interpret that as a summary or a first event.

Since light is so intimately connected with matter, it is unthinkable to me that light would have come first.

Verses 4 and 5 are also difficult for me to accept in a literal sense. “Day and night” are conceptual nouns, and night simply refers to the shadow caused on one side of earth as it rotates away from the sun. But the sun isn’t created until Day 4. Some would say that this verse is where God created time. But time, as now understood by physicists, is part of the fabric of the universe itself (see Implications of God’s Omnipresence and Eternity in Space-Time).

sh’kinah

God’s own sh’kinah is also a light source, and one not connected with matter. It is the light source that led the Israelites out of Egypt, that lit up the top of Mt. Sinai, that resided in the Holy of Holies in the Tabernacle and later the Temple, and that was described in the visions of several of the prophets.

Some commentators have suggested that God’s sh’kinah is the source of the light that God “created” on Day 1. This is absolutely a possibility, but if true, even if it functioned in exactly the same way as the light that we are familiar with, is it meaningful to say that God “created light” on Day 1 if the light he created was fundamentally different from the light that we know? On Day 4, God assigned the responsibility for light-bearing to the sun, moon and stars. In any case, I think the sh’kinah is one of God’s native characteristics, not a later creation.

“Let there be light…”

The Hebrew for this phase is yehi or. With its many linguistic modifiers, Yehi appears 3,561 times in scripture, so it is well understood. To my knowledge, there is complete agreement on the translation here, “let there be“. I am not aware of any context in which it clearly denotes a creative act. It is like saying, “Hey bub, flip on the light, will ya’?”

Interpreting verses 1:3–2:3

As for me, I don’t think that Genesis 1:3–2:3 can be a literal description of how God created the cosmos, because these verses do not describe the immensely complex universe in which we live!

In The Hijacking of Creationism, I mentioned a number of alternative theories proposed by conservatives to explain this passage, as listed in Millard Erickson’s Christian Theology. Another such list is presented below:

Concordist and Non-Concordist Interpretations of Genesis 1, from an article at biologos.com, “Comparing Interpretations of Genesis 1“, by Deborah Haarsma and Loren Haarsma

The authors of the above table define “concordism” as follows:

In concordist interpretations, God made the earth using the sequence of events described in Genesis 1. In non-concordist interpretations, God created the earth using a different timing and order of events than those described Genesis 1.

According to 19th century theologian, minister and writer, C.I. Schofield, Genesis 1 describes God’s miraculous 6-day rebuilding of an ancient earth after a previous judgement (of earlier humans and/or angelic beings) by inundation. This is a Gap interpretation, from the left side of the table.

What has long intrigued me about Schofield’s Gap Theory is that in the sequence listed, Genesis 1 describes precisely how earth would most likely have recovered from a general flood like that of Noah’s day. If that is true, then both floods were miraculous inundations of the entire planet, and the unnaturally rapid recovery in both cases was also miraculous. This is why I have for years called myself a “gap guy“, or more recently, a “two-flood” guy.

Still, I am no longer adamant about Gap Theory, because it can’t be proven one way or the other, and I don’t share Schofield’s opinion that the judgement leading to the earlier flood was connected to angelic corruption on earth. There is no Biblical evidence of angelic rebellion before Satan appears in the Garden of Eden.

More importantly, after doing extensive study during the last several years in the course of thinking about this series on Creation and another post on Gods and Demons, I feel drawn to a different interpretation that would be much more comprehensible to the people in Moses’ day and well beyond.

A better idea

What was the cultural background?

Regarding the culture of Moses’ day, it is inconceivable that he or his readers would have had the intellectual tools needed to process concepts like mass, energy, the nature of light, or even cosmically vast distances and time scales or a spherical earth.

We tend to think of ancient civilization as a scattering of isolated small city states like Sumer, Akkad, Elam, and even Egypt on the far end of the Fertile Crescent, but they all had a common heritage going back to Babel and even to the Flood.

And even in the distant past there were frequent interactions among peoples. Both war and peace brought people together, either in conquest or in trade. Consequently, there were many similarities between regions, in culture and religion. Though the names and functions of the pagan gods differed somewhat from region to region, there was general agreement about the nature of the world and the duties of the godhead in maintaining its order.

Ancient Near East before Moses. http://www.hyperhistory.com 2016

The region that became Israel was part of this milieu. The Israelites were descended from Abraham, who was Mesopotamian. Their later heritage was Canaanite and then Egyptian. The Torah (“Teachings“, the “Five Books of Moses”) that God delivered to His people, had the singular purpose of revealing Himself and His Divine Will to humankind.

In Moses’ day, as in Noah’s and even Jesus’ and beyond, the Israelites shared the beliefs of their Ancient Near Eastern (ANE) neighbors about cosmology (the nature of the heavens and the earth). Though their concept was, of course, deeply flawed, it was functionally adequate for millennia, and it diminished God’s role only in that it ascribed His creation to false creators. The following diagram shows the essence of what was universally accepted as true cosmology in the ANE.

Note that this is also clearly the cosmology described in Genesis 1!

Composite artist’s conception of the Ancient Near Eastern view of cosmology. Source unlisted.

The earth was a roughly disk-shaped island floating on the sea (possibly supported on “the pillars of earth”) and covered with a dome, the “firmament” of KJV. The sea was not only below the earth and feeding its springs (the “fountains of the deep”), but also covered the dome above (the “waters above the firmament”). In some versions the dome was supported at its rim by a ring of mountains (the “pillars of heaven”). The sun and moon traveled across the sky below the dome, sinking into the sea or through doors in the west, and traveling back east through the underworld to rise again. The stars and planets followed fixed grooves beneath the dome. Rain occurred when windows in the dome (the “windows of heaven”) were opened by the gods.

No matter how one interprets Genesis 1, the central issue that had to be addressed by God was that each element in the above diagram was believed to either be a god or goddess, or to be governed by one. And, of course, it was believed that all owed its existence to one or more chief creator gods. Rather than “nothingness” before creation, the cosmos existed, but was in a state of chaos (formlessness, or tohu wabohu, as defined above); thus, creation amounted to bringing order out of disorder.

So, what are my views?

A Genesis 1 alternative that makes total sense to me now is related to historical observations that the Israelites shared the culture and cosmology of the surrounding peoples. The Genesis account and the Bible as a whole condemns the pagan polytheistic connection, but does nothing to dispel the cosmological misconceptions, which were still believed by most cultures, including Israel’s, well into the Christian era.

The chart below displays relationships recognized by many conservative theologians who hold to a literal, Concordist, interpretation of Genesis 1; however, rather than interpreting the chart as an account of literally how God created the physical cosmos, I think it is better understood as a very abbreviated poetic description of the finished product.

From Origins: Christian Perspectives on Creation, Evolution, and Intelligent Design,
by Deborah B. Haarsma and Loren D. Haarsma 

Understood in that way, it becomes one version of a Creation Poem Interpretation of Genesis 1. As such, it is essentially a polemic (a statement argumentatively refuting an opinion or doctrine held by others) against the creation myths of pagan cultures who credit their false gods, who most certainly did not create or rule the cosmos!

The ANE held no conception of infinite time or eternity. They thought no farther back than the initial chaos (compare Genesis 1:2), out of which arose the creator god, who then began to assemble the cosmos from the chaos. Only Yahweh claimed to be eternal and uncreated, and to create ex nihilo.

Whereas modern man sees existence as material in nature, with tangible substance and physical properties, it wasn’t enough for the ancients that something was visible and occupied space—as stated by John H. Walton in Ancient Near Eastern Thought and the Old Testament, it had to first “come into existence” metaphysically by being “separated out as a distinct entity, given a function, and given a name.”

A key insight that I have gleaned from Walton and others who have professionally studied the ANE is that the ancients viewed the ontological nature of the cosmos, i.e., “the nature of that which exists” in terms of function, whereas moderns view it in terms of substance. In other words, when a Big Bang Creationist like me thinks of God’s handiwork, I see mass and energy, bosons and fermions, stars and planets, rocks and trees, etc. A Young Earth Creationist similarly sees a universe of substance. To the ancients, in contrast, the substance of things is only incidental to their functions.

Consequently, I’m beginning to understand that God’s purpose in Genesis 1 was to ignore the misconceptions of the ANE regarding the physical nature of the cosmos, since that was a triviality to pretty much 100% of the population, and to say, in ways they would understand, “I, Yahweh, brought it into being [verse 1] and gave it function [the rest of Genesis 1].”

In this way of thinking,

  • Days 1 and 4 were about time, seasons, and the cosmic objects that differentiate them;
  • Days 2 and 5 were about the waters below and above, and about their denizens; and
  • Days 3 and 6 were about the land and its fecundity.

What point was God then making?

According to Walton, “The records of events in the ancient world were not given so that the reader could reconstruct the event. They were given so that the reader could understand the significance of the past for the present. In that sense, outcomes were more important than the events themselves.”

The pagan creation myth most familiar to modern scholars today is the Enuma Elish, from the Assyrian Library of Ashurbanipal at Nineveh. I’ll close this post with a comparison of Genesis 1 with this pagan document, which I think clearly illustrates God’s point:

From Origins: Christian Perspectives on Creation, Evolution, and Intelligent Design,
by Deborah B. Haarsma and Loren D. Haarsma 

Bibliography

Haarsma, Deborah B., Loren D. Haarsma, Origens: Christian Perspectives on Creation, Evolution, and Intelligent Design,2011, Grand Rapids: Faith Alive Christian Resources.

Walton, John H., Ancient Near Eastern Thought and the Old Testament, 2nd ed., 2018, Grand Rapids: Baker Academic.

Zuck, Roy B., Basic Bible Interpretation, 1991, Colorado Springs: Cook Communications Ministries

Next in series: Quantum Freewill


The Ancient of Days

Posted on:

Modified on:


  1. Defining the Infinite
  2. God and Infinity
  3. God’s Size
  4. God’s Age
  5. Daniel 7
  6. Is God Ancient, or Just Old?

Between research, and then pushing my aging brain to get things “on paper”, my blog posts generally take a long time to write, and I assume a long time for you to read—sorry. My goal with this one is to just go with what I know (or if you disagree, with what I think I know) and knock out something shorter. With maybe a few slightly off-topic thoughts thrown in. Just my ponderings here…

Mathematical Infinity symbol, Pixabay free image.

Infinity is a concept that most people are familiar with and that I have encountered over and over again during my long life, primarily in three contexts: pure mathematics, physics, and theology. Not so much petroleum engineering, my professional field.

Infinity is a useful conceptessential, in some respects—but it is not a real thing!

Defining the Infinite

Infinity is the concept of the unimaginably and immeasurably


It’s what you get when you disobey your grade school math teacher and divide by zero. It’s so big that when you double it, it’s still infinity. If you double it infinitely many times, it’s still just plain old infinity:

God and Infinity

Theologians like to apply the term infinite to God. All of His attributes are said to be infinite in scope. Well, that may be, but the Bible doesn’t actually make that claim. Infinity was not a known concept in ancient times. If God had claimed it, nobody would have understood it anyway. The most you’re going to read in ancient literature is “a whole big bunch!”

Enormity only gets stated in idiomatic terms. For example, many English translations say that the “army from the east” in Rev. 9:16 will be exactly 200 million strong. The actual Greek says literally “twice ten thousand times ten thousand”, which is way bigger than the record 12 million that the US fielded in 1945, and way, way bigger than the next biggest human army in history. There is no question in my mind that John was speaking merely of a very large army. See also below.

That is not to say that God has no infinite attributes. I’m simply pointing out that, given the Bible’s silence, it’s a philosophical question, not theological.

God’s Size

In Implications of God’s Omnipresence and Eternity in Space-Time, I discussed God’s omnipresence in terms of His spanning, encompassing, infusing, and in fact subsuming all of everything that is—space, the universe, in other words, all matter and energy that exists. The 93 billion lightyears estimate I mentioned for the diameter of the universe is probably a minimum.

Some astronomers still throw around the term infinite for the actual size of the universe. That discussion goes beyond my pay grade. 93 billion lightyears is enough of a living space for me. That’s 550 quadrillion miles, or about 3 million trips to the sun and back. So, God is at least that big! If the universe is infinite, then God is more infinite… Huh?! That doesn’t mean anything quantitative.

God’s Age

In the same previous post, I explained that God’s age, as does His size, spans, encompasses, infuses and subsumes the age of the universe.

Some scientists postulate an infinitely old multiverse; that is, a master universe that grows, “buds off” like a hydra or a nematode, and the “baby universes” each have their own, random sets of physical laws. This theory has very tenuous scientific support and was proposed mainly to explain the mind-boggling (to unbelievers) Anthropic Principle, the unavoidable observation that our universe has a huge set of physical characteristics, many of which are independently necessary to support life in any way that we can envision. The idea is that if the multiverse is infinitely old, then it has spawned an infinite number of buds, and with infinite tries it is statistically likely that at least one of those is anthropically friendly. Hence, they have no need for the God hypothesis.

(Incidentally, they would never admit to this, if they even made the connection, but physicists have a theory that might account for a “god” popping into existence out of nothing. It’s a theoretical consequence of random quantum mechanical fluctuations over an infinite period of time. This is what is called a Boltzmann Brain, and no, I don’t believe that accounts for God! I’m just pointing out that, as much as I love science, it does have its inconsistencies.)

The Spirit Beings I discussed in Gods and Demons are immortal and everlasting, which means that they will survive forever if God lets them, but they have not always existed because God created them to manage the cosmos. Eternality is not the same as everlastingness. Scripture says that God alone is eternal—but what does that mean?

The assumption made by most theologians is that God has existed from the infinite past. There’s that pesky, undefinable infinity again. I don’t deny it, but I can’t comprehend it. There are some respected conservative theologians (don’t ask me who, I think I remember some of them, but I’m taking a vacation from research for this post, and I don’t want to slander anyone if I’m wrong) who acknowledge that God’s existence may define the term, “eternal.” That would be to say that His existence did have a beginning, and that beginning marked the beginning of eternity.

I neither believe nor disbelieve that. Once again, it is philosophy, not theology.

Daniel 7

[9] I beheld till the thrones were cast down [set in place], and the Ancient of days did sit, whose garment was white as snow, and the hair of his head like the pure wool: his throne was like the fiery flame, and his wheels as burning fire.
[10] A fiery stream issued and came forth from before him: thousand thousands ministered unto him, and ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him: the judgment was set, and the books were opened.

[13] I saw in the night visions, and behold, one like the Son of man [Daniel’s conception of the coming Messiah] came with the clouds of heaven and came to [approached] the Ancient of days, and they brought him near before him.

[22] Until the Ancient of days came, and judgment was given to the saints of the most High; and the time came that the saints possessed the kingdom.
—Daniel 7:9–10,13,22 (KJV) the annotations and emphases are mine

Daniel 7 is perhaps the most pivotal chapter in all of prophecy, because it explains so much that we read elsewhere in Scripture.

My emphasis here, though, is on the cast of characters. The stage is a meeting in heaven of God and His Divine Council. Those in attendance are,

  • The Ancient of Days, also called here the most High. The three instances in Daniel 7 are the only occurrences of the term, “the Ancient of Days”, in the Bible.
  • The term “son of man” appears many times in Scripture. At a minimum, it simply means a male human being. It is frequently used in the prophetic books to emphasize that the prophet is merely a human, delivering God’s divine words. Here, though, Daniel has added something important (see Son of Man, Son of God):

    A human being is ushered into the presence of God in heaven. But the phrase, “with the clouds of heaven” is something that appears frequently in Ugaritic and Babylonian literature to signal the movements of Ba’al. The use of a polemic here is Daniel’s (or rather, the dream’s) way of saying that this particular Son of Man is divine!

    Second Temple Era Jewish scholars, the Pharisees and their scribes, were divided on whether Daniel was actually referring to a divine Messiah or something else, but without question, when Jesus quoted this verse in Matthew 26:64 and applied it to Himself, the high priest and Sanhedrin sitting in Judgement of Him took it the only way possible, as an explicit claim not only that He was Messiah, but that He was divine.

[63] Yeshua remained silent. The cohen hagadol [high priest] said to him, “I put you under oath! By the living God, tell us if you are the Mashiach, the Son of God!” [64] Yeshua said to him, “The words are your own. But I tell you that one day you will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of HaG’vurah [Lit., ‘the Power’, a euphemism for Yahweh] and coming on the clouds of heaven.” [65] At this, the cohen hagadol tore his robes. “Blasphemy!” he said. “Why do we still need witnesses? You heard him blaspheme! [66] What is your verdict?” “Guilty,” they answered. “He deserves death!”
—Matthew 26:63–66 (CJB) the emphasized text here is the quotation

  • There were also many, many of the Heavenly Host on stage. The “thousand thousands” in verse 10 are members of the Divine Council, while the “ten thousand times then thousand” are additional “angelic” witnesses. Here are two more examples of the idiomatic expression mentioned above. The Council members are the “they” of verse 13, ushering Jesus to God’s throne.
  • The term “saints” that occurs twice in verse 22 is קַדִּישׁ (qaddiysh, pronounced “kad-DEESH”). It means “holy”, “holy one”, or “holy ones”, and it applies both to redeemed humans and to loyal angels. That “judgement was given to the saints” can’t mean that they pronounce judgement, because that is Jesus’ job, specifically. Instead, it has to mean that they administer judgement, which is borne out in the statement that they also “possessed the kingdom.”

(Forgive me, but I’m going to throw in another rabbit trail here. My interpretation regarding “judgement” in verse 22 is an illustration of something that really bugs me: traditional, verses thoughtful, exegesis. I’ve personally read a number of commentaries on Daniel 7 over the years, and as far as I can recall, every single one of them has assumed that pronouncing judgement was in view, leading them to further assume that verse 22 is applying the name “Ancient of Days” to Jesus, rather than to Yahweh. Because we all know that it is Jesus who will pronounce judgement in the eschatological future.

Why? In no particular order, it is because (a) too many commentators lean too heavily on earlier works and forget to think for themselves; (b) too many Christian commentators overemphasize Jesus and relegate Yahweh to the “stale writings” of the Old Testament; (c) too few Christian commentators care enough about the ancient Hebrew and Near East cultural background to provide more that standard “Sunday School” answers to harder interpretive questions; and (d) simple careless thinking.

I’m not a theologian. I’m not a scientist. I’m an engineer, and skeptical of anything I haven’t personally evaluated.)

Is God Ancient, or Just Old?

So, this brings me, ponderously to be sure, to the crux of my ponderings. Which may seem anticlimactic to most of you.

Is God merely old, or is He ancient?

Those are relative terms, of course. Age is a property of “stuff” and stuff didn’t exist until God created it. The Second Law of Thermodynamics, in effect, says that everything ages. But aging, and time itself, are properties of the universe. Isaac Newton notwithstanding, God does not age, because He is not bound by the universe He created.

As most of you know by now, I’m an “Old Earth Creationist.” In my view, God defined the physical laws, and then by His word, He spoke the universe into existence, in all of its building blocks and the forces that drive them. At one point in time and space, about 13.7 billion years ago. He decreed it, and He continues to supervise the orderly processes of birth, growth and maturation. Those processes are ongoing; God does not have to repeat them every week.

I have a different interpretation of the “six days” than those of Young Earth Creationists. To my senses, creation itself tells me that it is way more than 6,000 years old. Given that God doesn’t actually age, I would term Him truly “ancient” based on His resume. In my view, regardless of how long He has existed in currently understood earth-years, His “experience” is some 2.3 million times more impressive than a mere 6,000 years!

Next in series: “Gotcha” Proofs by Young Earth Creationists (The Lincoln Memorial)


Gods and Demons

Posted on:

Modified on:


  1. Personal musings
  2. Heiser
    1. Criticisms of Heiser’s theology by online reviewers
    2. Keys to Heiser’s theology
    3. Source materials
    4. The elohim
    5. God as Elohim
    6. The Angel of God
    7. The heavenly host
    8. The heavenly hierarchy
    9. The Divine Council
    10. Angelic Rebellions
      1. First Rebellion: Genesis 3
      2. Second Rebellion: Genesis 6
      3. Third Rebellion: Genesis 11
    11. Angelic War

Note: When I first published this post back in mid-2023, as explained below I was new to Dr. Heiser’s work and a novice in terms of Ancient Near East scholarship. As of two years later, I have read much more on the subject and am fully convinced. I have written several subsequent posts that reference both this post and the source material.


Heiser’s understanding of God is based on: “The God of the Old Testament was part of an assembly – a pantheon – of other gods” (p. 11 Heiser, The Unseen Realm: Recovering the Supernatural Worldview of the Bible, 2015).

Yep, that is definitely a startling statement coming from a conservative Christian Bible scholar! But completely out of context. Yes, Heiser did say that about a pantheon, but it was in a book introduction, where he was describing his initial knee-jerk reaction to Psalm 82 when he first encountered it as an ignorant student. The mature scholar Dr. Heiser, when he wrote the book, was neither pantheist nor polytheist. He was an unapologetic conservative believer in the one true God, creator not only of the universe, but also of the “angelic host” ruled by that God.

Personal musings

Before I get into that, let me dredge up some related musings from my own distant past:

  • Many years ago, it occurred to me that the pagan “gods” of secular history and of the Old Testament must have been something more than fables. How else can one explain the ability of the Egyptian magicians to duplicate the first three Mosaic plagues?

10 Moshe and Aharon went in to Pharaoh and did this, as ADONAI had ordered — Aharon threw down his staff in front of Pharaoh and his servants, and it turned into a snake.
11 But Pharaoh in turn called for the sages and sorcerers; and they too, the magicians of Egypt, did the same thing, making use of their secret arts.
12 Each one threw his staff down, and they turned into snakes. But Aharon’s staff swallowed up theirs.
—Exodus 7:10–12 CJB

20 Moshe and Aharon did exactly what ADONAI had ordered. He raised the staff and, in the sight of Pharaoh and his servants, struck the water in the river; and all the water in the river was turned into blood.
21 The fish in the river died, and the river stank so badly that the Egyptians couldn’t drink its water. There was blood throughout all the land of Egypt.
22 But the magicians of Egypt did the same with their secret arts, so that Pharaoh was made hardhearted and didn’t listen to them, as ADONAI had said would happen.
—Exodus 7:20–22 CJB

2 Aharon put out his hand over the waters of Egypt, and the frogs came up and covered the land of Egypt.
3 But the magicians did the same with their secret arts and brought up frogs onto the land of Egypt.
—Exodus 8:2–3 CJB

I simply don’t believe in magical arts by humans, unless there is some type of supernatural intervention. Certainly, it wasn’t Israel’s God helping Pharaoh’s magicians. The logical alternative, in my mind, is that it must have been some demonic power. It is a small step for me to conjecture that if there was some supernatural power behind at least some of the Egyptian “gods”, then why could there not be similar power behind other pagan deities? Consider the following:

[17] They sacrificed to demons [shedim], who were not God [eloah],
To gods [elohim] whom they have not known,
New gods [chadashim, literally, to new things] who came lately,
Whom your fathers did not know.
—Deuteronomy 32:17 (NASB)

  • Another thing I’ve been aware of for many years, is that the definition of “monotheism” has changed over the millennia. That change started as a Talmudic “defensive theology” with the rise of Trinitarian Christianity. Today, Merriam-Webster defines monotheism as, “the doctrine or belief that there is but one God.” But in ancient times, it meant, “the worship of but one God.” It is abundantly clear, from Scripture alone, that Israelites before the Babylonian captivity not only believed in other gods, but also were quite willing to worship them, alongside Yahweh. After the return from captivity, most Jews were unwilling to test Yahweh’s patience on that matter, but Second Temple Era (Intertestamental) literature makes it clear that even if the worship of “foreign gods” was rare at that time, belief in their reality was not.
  • Part of Merriam-Webster’s definition of “god” is, “a being or object believed to have more than natural attributes and powers and to require human worship.” I have both heard and read many sermons, lessons, and devotionals that claim anything that a person values more than God is in fact that person’s god. I’m sure there is some truth to that, but I’m also sure that, if so, then all human beings are from time to time guilty of idolatry, and I think that harping on that subject trivializes a much more heinous sin: worshiping demonic beings!
  • Although the prophets sometimes polemicized against “gods made with human hands”, only the most unsophisticated among the ancient peoples believed that idols themselves were divine. Rather, like Yahweh’s Ark of the Covenant, they were the focus of contact between the demons and their worshipers.
  • One final related observation from my own mental data bank is that I long ago read discussions of whether or not the dictionary definition of “god” would also encompass angels. I don’t recall the conclusion reached, but it seems to me that, with respect to having “more than natural attributes and powers“, angels certainly qualify, and if said angels demand worship or are in fact worshiped, then the shoe fits.

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Heiser

In a recent email exchange with an old friend, I was introduced to an author I was unfamiliar with, the late Dr. Michael S. Heiser, and a branch of theology I didn’t even know existed as a separate scholarly specialty. Dr. Heiser, among other places, has been professionally affiliated with Liberty University and Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, both of which I believe to be theologically sound on most issues. Wikipedia describes him as an “Old Testament scholar and Christian author with training in ancient history, Semitic languages, and the Hebrew Bible.”

Dr. Michael S. Heiser (February 14, 1963 – February 20, 2023), from Logos.com.

According to my friend, Heiser taught that, when God scattered the people of Babel, He “…created nations for them with separate borders and languages and assigned gods over each.  Israel, his portion, was to be a light unto the Nations.” Honestly, that sounded really hokey to me at first; but not completely, in view of my previous mental ramblings mentioned above.

So, I’ve been cramming on Heiser’s books and videos, and reading the opinions of others on his work. His books are scholarly and heavily footnoted, so they aren’t easy reading. I have been checking all of his Scripture references, which is very time consuming. I’m not close to done with my evaluations, but I’m off to a good start, and I believe that, with respect to his teachings on “the unseen realm” of angels and other spirit beings, his arguments are so far very compelling. As for his theology in general, he was a Presbyterian, and held many Reformed views that I do not accept.

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Criticisms of Heiser’s theology by online reviewers

Critical reviews of Heiser’s theology range from laughable to thoughtful. The quote at the very top of this post comes from theBereanCall.com, among the laughable.

Then there is someone on YouTube going by JackSmack77. According to him, Heiser is “a false prophet, unsaved devil and a liar…an unsaved fool…an unsaved devil who works for Satan”. Okay…

I can’t say that some of the more measured critical comments by more mainstream reviewers didn’t give me pause, but none of them convinced me.

I don’t believe anybody on earth (including Heiser) about everything, and I believe almost nobody about some things. God gave me an analytic brain, an inquisitive mind, an engineer’s insistence on meticulous accuracy, and a reluctance to take any human opinion at face value.

More than once in my blogs I have suggested that there are important interpretive Church traditions that do not in my opinion meet strict Biblical standards, even within Conservative Evangelical academia. Every Christian denomination has at least some beliefs that are based more on tradition than on Scripture. That is why there are “denominations” in the first place! Some of the traditions I question originated in the Hellenism of the 1st Century, some from two millennia of Christian antisemitism, some as a defense against the oft-hated Catholics and of course “Evolutionists”, and some simply from early translational errors.

With regard to translational errors, I don’t think there are any English translations that are free of them. Almost all translations are done by good Christians—with presuppositions. They may be top-notch linguists, but few have a really in-depth historical knowledge, including familiarity with ancient extrabiblical literature, which has long been incorrectly considered too flawed to consider (see below). Hebrew is a difficult language, and too often translators fall back on older translations like the King James.

On account of the constraints of time, Bible translators tend to rely on other people’s studies, which ultimately enter the reference books and standard commentaries.
—Edward L. Greenstein, Bar-Ilan University

This isn’t to say that I endorse all of what I’m describing below. But I’m not dismissing it either.

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Keys to Heiser’s theology

The theology discussed below has come to be called by some, the Deuteronomy 32 Worldview.

8 When the Most High divided the nations, when he separated the sons of Adam, he set the bounds of the nations according to the number of the angels of God.
9 And his people Jacob became the portion of the Lord, Israel was the line of his inheritance.
—Deuteronomy 32:8–9 LXX-B (emphasis mine)

You may recognize this as the “hokey” topic I mentioned above. I’ll mention it again under “Angelic Rebellions.”

The Table of Nations, from Genesis 10. Noah’s descendants.

The Greek term correctly translated “angels of God”, is eggelon theou (ἀγγέλων θεοῦ). The quotation is from the Septuagint, aka, LXX, a 2nd Century BC translation from Hebrew into Greek of the Old Testament and part of the Apocrypha. Since the Apostle Paul was a missionary to the Greek-speaking world, he used and quoted from the LXX. Most English translations follow the KJV and render the original Hebrew text as “children of Israel”. I think that that is an early 17th Century error in interpreting the ancient customary meaning of b’ne Yisra’el. Having not spent enough time in the LXX, I had missed the topic entirely.

There is a lot of material to absorb from Heiser’s work (and the work of other scholars he quotes), so I am just going to comment on some key concepts that fall under this theological umbrella, particularly issues that have aroused the contempt of some of his critics.

Since a lot of what follows is my own analysis of the subject, I am showing what I specifically gleaned from Heiser (whether quoted or paraphrased) in

blue type.

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Source materials

Heiser’s primary, though not sole, source is the Bible. He and a number of like-minded colleagues contend that there are many clear and/or highly suggestive Scriptures, particularly in the OT, that shed light on angels, demons, Satan, the Divine Council (see below), angelic rebellions, and the “spirit world” in general. These are largely unfamiliar topics because translators and scholars for the most part have long been unwilling to consider extrabiblical evidence from Second Temple Judaism (the Second Century BC through the First Century AD) and the later Rabbinical Period.

Even less so are they willing to consider gleaning from pagan texts. Understandably. But the Ancient Near East (ANE) was a dynamically interconnected milieu that, stripped of mythology, shared many memories of their own common histories going back to Babel.

This literary blindness has always puzzled me, because off the top of my head, I think there are some 100 Biblical references to non-canonical sources actually cited by name by the Scriptural writers (see this for examples).

The fact that the large body of pre-Christian Apocryphal and Pseudepigraphal Jewish literature is rightly considered to not be Inspired does not mean that it was written as fiction and has no bearing on Judeo-Christian history. Aside from citations, the writers of the New Testament either quoted or paraphrased from The Wisdom of Sirach (Ecclesiasticus), The Wisdom of Solomon, 1 & 2 Maccabees, Tobit, 2 Esdras, and 1 Enoch.

Theology should not, of course, be gleaned solely from writings that weren’t inspired. But if contemporary non-canonical material can help us understand the material presented only in skeletal form in Scripture, then I think it’s fair to use it non-dogmatically. If that suggestion appalls you, then consider how often you’ve heard Josephus quoted, or Philo, or Eusebius.

The apocryphal book, 1 Enoch is particularly applicable to Heiser’s theology because it mostly discusses “fallen angels” on the antediluvian earth. Though 1 Enoch is included in the canon of a number of Christian denominations, it is clearly not an infallible source. Yet, parts of it have been given a “seal of authenticity” by being directly quoted in Scripture we include in our own canon:

14 It was also about these that Enoch, the seventh from Adam, prophesied, saying, “Behold, the Lord comes with ten thousands of his holy ones,
15 to execute judgment on all and to convict all the ungodly of all their deeds of ungodliness that they have committed in such an ungodly way, and of all the harsh things that ungodly sinners have spoken against him.”
—Jude 1:14–15 ESV

Compare with…

Behold, he will arrive with ten million of the holy ones in order to execute judgment upon all. He will destroy the wicked ones and censure all flesh on account of everything that they have done, that which the sinners and the wicked ones committed against him.”
—1Enoch 1:9 PSEUD-CW

Greek is in some respects a language rich in vocabulary, but it has only one word for “angel”, where Hebrew has many that are more descriptive (compare English “love” with the richer set of choices on that subject in the Greek). Because much of the Bible’s Hebrew material can’t be directly translated into Greek, there is much less clarity on these issues in the NT, in the important Greek Septuagint translation of the OT, and in the Dead Sea Scrolls. The latter are of huge import but have only become available during my lifetime. I personally believe that Greek and Latin cultural influences on the Church have further muddied the water in modern scholarship.

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The elohim

Heiser has made a good case for defining “elohim” as a generic common noun designating all disembodied spiritual beings, from the eternal Triune God at the top, through the created angelic beings (a hierarchy of untold billions of individuals, both loyal and rebellious), and the spirits of the dead. For an example of the latter, read 1 Samuel 28.

Although the elohim are spirits, they can take on form to interact with humans. As such, they can be seen (at least in ancient times), speak audibly (as they did with Abraham, Isaac, Daniel, the women at Jesus’ tomb, and others), touch and be touched (Isaiah’s lips), wrestle (Isaac), and even breed with human women (Genesis 6).

War of the angels, from Revelation 12.

Most Hebrew grammars define elohim as a generic term for “gods“. Strong’s and other grammars also list alternative meanings like “angels”, “magistrates”, or “judges”; but dictionaries derive definitions from actual usage, and I strongly suspect that the last two of those variants are mistranslations that the dictionaries added after the fact (much like English dictionaries now have twice as many definitions for “gay” than they did when I was a schoolboy). Whether we call them “gods”, “angels”, “spirits”, “spiritual beings”, or simply leave it at elohim, is simply a matter of semantics.

[6] Then his master shall bring him unto the judges [elohim]; he shall also bring him to the door, or unto the door post; and his master shall bore his ear through with an aul; and he shall serve him for ever.
—Exodus 21:6 (KJV) Emphasis mine

Consider Exodus 21:6, above. The KJV translation reads in part, “bring him unto the judges [elohim].” ESV, on the other hand, reads, “bring him to God [Elohim].” I would take the latter as the correct translation. But it’s a bit moot in this case, since the “judge” before whom he was to be brought was a priest functioning as God’s agent in the matter. I would consider it to be a valid paraphrase that, unfortunately, obscures the role of Elohim.

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God as Elohim

As I’m sure most of you know, Elohim (capital “E”) is one of the primary terms used for Yahweh in the Bible. But the Hebrew language has no alphabetic “case”, so the capitalization (or not) of elohim is a transliteration device. Elohim is a descriptive common noun, used here (with a capital “E”) as a proper noun, or name, for a particular elohim. When Moses requested an actual name at the burning bush, God did not use Elohim, but rather the term we transliterate to Yahweh.

Chariot Throne? One of many, many failed attempts to depict Ezekiel’s vision.

Elohim (Yahweh) is not just any old elohim, of course. Yahweh is eternal and preexisted all of the Host of Heaven. He created all the other elohim, and He rules all the other elohim. And He is vastly superior, in every respect. Where they have power, it is only because He has granted that power, and when He retracts that gift, they will immediately lose it. These things are non-negotiable to me, and I think they were to Heiser, as well.

The -im suffix on “Elohim” is a confusing issue. It is the Hebrew masculine plural ending for a noun, but it is more complicated than that. According to judaism.stackexchange.com, “both Eloahi and Elohim are the plurals of Eloah, but Eloahi is simple plural ([like] Jurors) while Elohim is a collective plural noun ([like] Jury).” But in practice, the plural forms are interchangeable, and elohim appears in the OT far more frequently than eloahi or eloah. The ambiguity is usually dispelled by the fact that other Hebrew parts of speech also have singular and plural forms. If elohim is grammatically tied to a singular verb or pronoun, then it is singular. If tied to a plural, it is plural. Also, as a common noun, elohim is often prefixed by an article, as haelohim, meaning “the gods.” Finally, according to Heiser, elohim by itself can be used for either singular or plural, like “deer” or “sheep”.

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The Angel of God

The above discussion pretty much puts to rest the theological contention that the collective plural form of elohim is a Trinitarian construct. So, too, claims that the Hebrew adjective echad in Deuteronomy 6:4 (“Hear oh Israel, the LORD our God, the LORD is one [echad]“) is collective and therefore Trinitarian language. This, too, fails. Echad appears with and without modifying prefixes and suffixes 967 times in the OT. Considering just the 471 times that it occurs in lemma form (no attached modifiers, as here), it usually means, simply, “one” or “first“, e.g., “first day”, “one place”, “one flesh”, “one people”, “one of the bushes”, and so on. So, we can’t use these terms to prove the Trinity. We don’t need them to make that case!

Heiser believes in the Trinity, of course, but you really have to dig (in the material I’ve gotten through so far) to find it. He builds up to it, starting with a complicated discussion of “two Yahwehs—one invisible and in heaven, the other manifest on earth in a variety of visible forms, including that of a man.

It was hard for me to grasp his particular point because I’m really quite used to the idea of the Transcendent God in heaven simultaneously present in a Theophany, like the pillars of fire and cloud; and of the Son appearing on earth as a Christophany while the Father remains in heaven. The OT makes frequent reference to “The Angel of God”, Yahweh mal’ak.

What Heiser was concerned with explaining, though, is how an OT Jew processed the concept of a visible manifestation of Yahweh on earth, at the same time knowing that Yahweh was in heaven. He calls this a “two Yahwehs concept“, taking care to distinguish that from the dualist views of Plato and the later Gnostics (urge and demiurge), and the Yahad of Qumran (Man of Righteousness and Man of Unrighteousness).

I recall reading only one mention in Heiser of the Holy Spirit: “I believe that the evidence for a two-person Godhead discussed in those chapters can in places reveal a third person in the Old Testament.”

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The heavenly host

In Heiser’s theology, before The Triune God created the universe (or perhaps, per some ancient sources, on Day 1 of creation), He created an immense number of spirit beings (elohim); like Him, incorporeal, but vastly inferior to Him and only more or less immortal (they have no end, but they did have a definite beginning). They were created, and they will live forever unless God destroys them. These beings were created:

  • To “image” Him—Heiser sees “in His image” as an expression of function, not of attributes. The Host was created to represent Him in the Heavenlies, as man would be to represent Him on earth. Note, though, that man is a soul (nephesh) composed of both body and spirit, while the elohim are spirit with no natural body. Note also that man must procreate, but procreation is not a natural function of the elohim, who have no need of procreation.
  • To administer the coming universe—Again as Adam’s seed was to administer earth.
  • To be family to him—along with, yet again, Adam’s seed.

None of the above because God needed these things, but because He chose to share eternity with a vast family.

Terms that describe the nature of these beings:

  • Like God, they are called elohim.
  • Like God, they are spirit beings (ruachot), without physical substance.
  • Like God, they are “Heavenly Ones” (shamayim), dwelling in heaven, not on earth.
  • Like the stars of the yet-to-be created universe, they are described as “Stars” (kochebim, sometimes boqer kowkbe, “morning stars“), or light bearers.
  • Like God (but imperfectly), they are “Holy Ones” (qedoshim), set aside for God’s purposes.

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The heavenly hierarchy

Heiser describes a hierarchy among the created elohim: “That hierarchy is sometimes difficult for us to discern in the Old Testament, since we aren’t accustomed to viewing the unseen world like a dynastic household… as an Israelite would have processed certain terms used to describe the hierarchy. In the ancient Semitic world, sons of God ([haelohim b’ne]) is a phrase used to identify divine beings with higher-level responsibilities or jurisdictions. The term angel (malʾak) describes an important but still lesser task: delivering messages. In Job 38, the sons of God are referred to as morning stars.”

The Holy Ones are holy only because of their proximity to God. The way I understand it, they sit on the Divine Council (more on that, below), and some are the “princes” spoken of in Daniel, overseeing affairs on earth and in the heavens. These latter are spoken of by the Apostle Paul:

[12] For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.
—Ephesians 6:12 (KJV)

Note that the “angels” are only a subset of the Heavenly Host. They function as courtiers, or messengers. They answer to the archangels, but both groups, together with the seraphim and cherubim (“throne guardians”) are inferior in function to the Holy Ones. All of them together function sometimes as Heaven’s armies, under the direction of the “Captain of the Host.” This latter figure is a fellow created spirit being.

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The Divine Council

“The term divine council is used by Hebrew and Semitics scholars to refer to [members of] the heavenly host, … divine beings who administer the affairs of the cosmos. All ancient Mediterranean cultures had some conception of a divine council. The divine council of Israelite religion was distinct in important ways.”

I’m not sure what distinguishes the Israelite beliefs from those of other Semitic and non-Semitic cultures, but from a Biblical standpoint, the concept seems to hold water. The idea is that, though God can of course do anything and everything Himself, He chose to share responsibility with His created beings. For a conceptual precedent, consider that God could have chosen to bring salvation to the World by means of divine fiat; instead, He first chose Israel as His “beacon on a hill”, and since the Resurrection, the Church is recipient of the Great Commission.

From time to time, God convenes His Council of upper-echelon Sons of God to discuss the status of events in the created universe, particularly on earth, and to decide on actions to take. For example,

  • A defining Biblical text is found in Psalm 82. This is a Psalm of Asaph, who King David appointed as chief musician to serve “in front of” the Ark of the Covenant after David pitched a tent for it within the City of David (1 Chronicles 16:5–7). According to 2 Chronicles 20:14, Asaph was also a seer, or prophet, as is evident in the Psalms that he wrote.

    In Psalm 82, Asaph is prophetically seeing God convening His Council to criticize those who are unseen princes over worldly realms. Here the word elohim is translated “God” once for Yahweh Himself, and “gods” many times for the corrupt spiritual princes who are “judging unjustly.” Verse 6 defines who they are, the heavenly Sons of God, and verse 7 says that regardless of their status as such, they will still fall like any human prince, and they will die like any mortal human.

1 ¶ God has taken his place in the divine council;
in the midst of the gods he holds judgment:
2 “How long will you judge unjustly
and show partiality to the wicked? Selah
3 Give justice to the weak and the fatherless;
maintain the right of the afflicted and the destitute.
4 Rescue the weak and the needy;
deliver them from the hand of the wicked.”
5 ¶ They have neither knowledge nor understanding,
they walk about in darkness;
all the foundations of the earth are shaken.
6 ¶ I said, “You are gods,
sons of the Most High, all of you;
7 nevertheless, like men you shall die,
and fall like any prince.”
8 ¶ Arise, O God, judge the earth;
for you shall inherit all the nations!
—Psalms 82:1–8 ESV

Note that this, like almost all Hebrew poetry, is structured in parallel lines. The second line of each verse expresses the same thought as the first, but in different, and often expansive, terms. Verse 5 here differs only in that it does the same thing in three parallel lines, each expressing the condition of oppressed humanity in harsher terms than the previous.

  • Psalm 89, a “Maschil [instructional poem] of Ethan the Ezrahite”, contains another clear prophetic view of the Devine Council. Ethan was a priest, and one of four men whose wisdom was compared to Solomon’s in 1 Kings 4:31.

[5] Let the heavens praise your wonders, O LORD,
your faithfulness in the assembly of the holy ones!
[6] For who in the skies can be compared to the LORD?
Who among the heavenly beings is like the LORD,
[7] a God greatly to be feared in the council of the holy ones,
and awesome above all who are around him?
—Psalms 89:5–7 (ESV)

  • The next example is important in that it demonstrates how the Council functions. In 1 Kings 21, Israel’s King Ahab was upset after a harsh prophecy from Elijah, so he repented, and God gave him a “stay of execution”, so to speak. But three years later, in chapter 22, Ahab suggested to King Jehosaphat of Judah that they should unite in war against Syria. Jehosaphat promised to help, but suggested that they consult the prophets first. Ahab brought in 400 prophets to tell him whether or not it was safe to do battle. Being false prophets, they all told him what they thought he wanted to hear, that he would triumph.

    But Jehosaphat wanted to hear from a prophet of Yahweh, so the prophet Micaiah was consulted. Micaiah’s words, quoted below, described God’s approach in the Devine Council. God delegates responsibility and takes suggestions but He reserves the final authority. Much as it would be in a business called “Yahweh and Sons.”

[19] And Micaiah said, “Therefore hear the word of the LORD: I saw the LORD sitting on his throne, and all the host of heaven standing beside him on his right hand and on his left; [20] and the LORD said, ‘Who will entice Ahab, that he may go up and fall at Ramoth-Gilead?’ And one said one thing, and another said another. [21] Then a spirit came forward and stood before the LORD, saying, ‘I will entice him.’ [22] And the LORD said to him, ‘By what means?’ And he said, ‘I will go out, and will be a lying spirit in the mouth of all his prophets.’ And he said, ‘You are to entice him, and you shall succeed; go out and do so.’ [23] Now therefore behold, the LORD has put a lying spirit in the mouth of all these your prophets; the LORD has declared disaster for you.”
—1 Kings 22:19–23 (ESV)

  • I’ll close out this section with Daniel’s vision of God on His “chariot throne”, surrounded by the enumerable Host and His Divine Council. This shows another of the administrative functions of the Host: keeping records, presumably so that the Righteous God can never be accused of unrighteousness in eternity to come.

[9] “As I looked,
thrones were placed [for Yahweh and the Council],
and the Ancient of Days took his seat;
his clothing was white as snow,
and the hair of his head like pure wool;
his throne was fiery flames;
its wheels were burning fire.
[10] A stream of fire issued
and came out from before him;
a thousand thousands served him,
and ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him;
the court sat in judgment,
and the books were opened.
—Daniel 7:9–10 (ESV)

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Angelic Rebellions

The last topic but one I’m going to cover here, but very briefly because the length of this post, is the three “angelic” revolts described in Genesis. You are familiar with all three, but perhaps in a slightly different context.

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First Rebellion: Genesis 3

Heiser connects the Serpent of Genesis 3 with the rebellion of the powerful figure called Satan in the NT, as prophesied in Isaiah 14.

Isaiah 14 is actually a prophecy against Babylon and its king, describing their fall at the hands of Assyria. Hebrew prophetic poetry often layers prophecy within prophecy, and most scholars agree that the verses below are such.

“Lucifer” is a name found only once in scripture. It is a translation of the Hebrew helel, a masculine noun meaning, literally, “a shining one.” The translation I normally prefer, the Complete Jewish Bible (CJB), translates “Lucifer, that rose in the morning” as “morning star, son of the dawn”, but in the Septuagint…

12 How has Lucifer, that rose in the morning, fallen from heaven ! He that sent orders to all the nations is crushed to the earth.
13 But thou saidst in thine heart, I will go up to heaven, I will set my throne above the stars of heaven: I will sit on a lofty mount, on the lofty mountains toward the north:
14 I will go up above the clouds: I will be like the Most High.
15 But now thou shalt go down to hell, even to the foundations of the earth.
—Isaiah 14:12–15 LXX-B

Heiser suggests that perhaps Lucifer’s rebellion was in part precipitated by Yahweh’s decision to create mankind, a lower race of “imagers”. Primordial racism?

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Second Rebellion: Genesis 6

According to Heiser, the Sons of God, below, were “Watchers” (Heb. iyr). These heavenly beings and the incident itself are the subject of a great deal of 1 Enoch, discussed above under “Source Materials“, and widely known to Jewish scholars in Jesus’ day. The function of Watchers is to observe and report to the Devine Council. In the OT, Watchers are mentioned in Daniel 4:13 and 23.

1 And Noe was five hundred years old, and he begot three sons, Sem, Cham, and Japheth.
2 And it came to pass when men began to be numerous upon the earth, and daughters were born to them,
3 that the sons of God having seen the daughters of men that they were beautiful, took to themselves wives of all whom they chose.
4 And the Lord God said, My Spirit shall certainly not remain among these men for ever, because they are flesh, but their days shall be an hundred and twenty years.
—Genesis 6:1–4 LXX-B

This unnatural union of Watchers and human women did not require “possession” of human males by the watchers. The Bible includes a number of examples of angelic beings taking human form and exhibiting human function. The products of the abominable union of angelic males with human females were hybrid Nephilim—giants with spirits that were evidently ineligible for the same fate as humans after death. Heiser equates demons with the spirits of dead Nephilim.

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Third Rebellion: Genesis 11

After the abomination of angel/human coupling, sin on earth multiplied until God put an end to it by means of the Great Flood, an event of such vast consequence that it was recorded in the annals of every great civilization of the ancient world, and in a number of Jewish writings from the intertestamental period. After the flood waters receded enough that Noah and his family could step back onto dry land on the Ararat mountaintop, there must have been a slow drying as the water seeped back into the earth’s mantle (see my 2022 article, Fountains of the Deep). During that time, I think that the newly growing family of humanity migrated slowly southeast along the highlands of the Zagros Mountains and reentered the Shinar region near the confluence of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, from the east.

Probable migration route of Noah’s descendants after the Great Flood. Google Earth, annotated by Ron Thompson.

1 And all the earth was one lip, and there was one language to all.
2 And it came to pass as they moved from the east, they found a plain in the land of Senaar [Shinar], and they dwelt there.
3 And a man said to his neighbor, Come, let us make bricks and bake them with fire. And the brick was to them for stone, and their mortar was bitumen.
4 And they said, Come, let us build to ourselves a city and tower, whose top shall be to heaven, and let us make to ourselves a name, before we are scattered abroad upon the face of all the earth.
5 And the Lord came down to see the city and the tower, which the sons of men built.
6 And the Lord said, Behold, there is one race, and one lip of all, and they have begun to do this, and now nothing shall fail from them of all that they may have undertaken to do.
7 Come, and having gone down let us there confound their tongue, that they may not understand each the voice of his neighbor.
8 And the Lord scattered them thence over the face of all the earth, and they left off building the city and the tower.
9 On this account its name was called Confusion, because there the Lord confounded the languages of all the earth, and thence the Lord scattered them upon the face of all the earth.
—Genesis 11:1–9 LXX-B

Heiser contends that at this time, at the Tower of Babel, when Yahweh “confound[ed] their tongue” and “scattered them … over the face of the earth”, He divided them into 70 (or 72, depending on the translation elsewhere in scripture) distinct nations throughout Europe and western Asia, and assigned to each one or more “heavenly princes.” These spiritual beings either were or became corrupt and were subsequently worshipped by the people they oversaw.

8 When the Most High divided the nations, when he separated the sons of Adam, he set the bounds of the nations according to the number of the angels of God.
9 And his people Jacob became the portion of the Lord, Israel was the line of his inheritance.
—Deuteronomy 32:8–9 LXX-B (emphasis mine)

Heiser may have made this point in something I have not yet read, but I believe that the nations of Deuteronomy 32:8 are the peoples that Paul referred to in Romans 1:18ff. Note, in particular,

[22] Claiming to be wise [engineering and constructing the Tower!], they became fools, [23] and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man and birds and animals and creeping things.
—Romans 1:22–23 (ESV)

I had decided not to lengthen this post further by carrying the discussion of the Genesis 11 rebellion one step further, but perhaps I’ve been overruled… I went to sleep last night thinking about Ephesians 4, and I woke up this morning thinking about Ephesians 4. Then, at church this morning, we had a guest preacher in the pulpit, and his text was, out of all the roughly 1,189 chapters in the Bible, Ephesians 4! So, here are the relevant verses:

[8] Wherefore he saith, When he ascended up on high, he led captivity captive, and gave gifts unto men.
[9] (Now that he ascended, what is it but that he also descended first into the lower parts of the earth [or: lower parts, the earth]?
[10] He that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all heavens, that he might fill all things.)
—Ephesians 4:8–10 (KJV) Emphasis mine

Paul’s message here was actually a midrash, that is, a metaphorical use of text to illustrate a point that is at most loosely connected to the text quoted. The underlined text quoted above refers back to Psalm 68, in particular

15 O mountain of God [har elohim, mountain of the gods], mountain of Bashan;
O many-peaked mountain, mountain of Bashan!

18 You ascended on high,
leading a host of captives in your train
and receiving gifts among men,
even among the rebellious, that the LORD God may dwell there.
—Psalm 68:15,18 ESV

Bashan is the region of the Golan Heights, Mt. Hermon and the surrounding area: Caesaria Phillipi with “The Gates of Hell”, the shrines to Pan, the god of the underworld, and Jeroboam’s calf idol at Dan.

This portion of the Psalm is a prophetic picture of Jesus, at His crucifixion and resurrection defeating the corrupt gentile “gods” and leading them captive to Sheol. These demonic captives were the booty of war. Paul is applying the Scripture metaphorically to say that the victor distributed booty to His subjects. That was an introduction to the subject of “spiritual gifts.” Nevertheless, the backstory in the Psalm is that Jesus has reversed the exclusion of the nations that was affected at Babel!

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Angelic War

The final point I’ll pursue here is this:

The idea that, when Satan rebelled, he was exiled to earth, and 1/3 of the other angels, who were “his team”, were exiled with him. This is one of those Church traditions that occurs nowhere in scripture. It is no doubt based on Revelation 12, which actually describes a war in heaven between Michael and his angels, on one side, and Satan and his angels on the other.

Satan’s team lost. In the context, this happened, not when Lucifer fell, but when Jesus was born!

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