The Great Angel: A Study of Israel's Second God
What
did "Son of God," "Messiah," and "Lord," mean to the first Christians
when they used these words to describe their beliefs about Jesus? In
this book Margaret Barker explores the possibility that, in the
expectations and traditions of first-century Palestine, these titles
belonged together, and that the first Christians fit Jesus' identity
into an existing pattern of belief. She claims that pre-Christian
Judaism was not monotheistic and that the roots of Christian Trinitarian
theology lie in a pre-Christian Palestinian belief about angels--a
belief derived from the ancient religion of Israel, in which there was a
"High God" and several "Sons of God." Yahweh was a son of God,
manifested on earth in human form as an angel or in the Davidic King.
Jesus was a manifestation of Yahweh, and was acknowledged as Son of God,
Messiah, and Lord. Barker relies on canonical and deutero-canonical
works and literature from Qumran and rabbinic sources to present her
thoughtful investigation.
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