“‘Abraham your father rejoiced to see my day; and he saw it and was glad.‘ The Jews said to him: ‘You are not yet fifty years old and have you seen Abraham?‘ Jesus said to them: ‘This is the truth I tell you - before Abraham was I am.’ So they lifted stones to throw at him, but Jesus slipped out of their sight, and went to the Temple precincts.”
In this thread I’ll be discussing how a believing Jewish monotheist understands this incident.
On one side, Jewish monotheists. On the other side, Jesus of Nazareth the Messiah, himself a Jewish monotheist.
On one side, Jewish monotheists who had believed in Jesus (v.30), but no longer did after what he said to them concerning truly becoming his disciples (v. 31). On the other side, the teacher, the rabbi, the Son of the living God.
This is an all-Jewish monotheist affair.
The tense confrontation begins in John 8:31. By the time we pick up the story (in verse 56) it has escalated to the boiling point. After a final word from the Messiah (v.58), comes the explosion (v.59). The conversation ends with those who had believed him finally resorting to violence to silence him.
In this thread I’ll be discussing how a believing Jewish monotheist understands this incident.
On one side, Jewish monotheists. On the other side, Jesus of Nazareth the Messiah, himself a Jewish monotheist.
On one side, Jewish monotheists who had believed in Jesus (v.30), but no longer did after what he said to them concerning truly becoming his disciples (v. 31). On the other side, the teacher, the rabbi, the Son of the living God.
This is an all-Jewish monotheist affair.
The tense confrontation begins in John 8:31. By the time we pick up the story (in verse 56) it has escalated to the boiling point. After a final word from the Messiah (v.58), comes the explosion (v.59). The conversation ends with those who had believed him finally resorting to violence to silence him.