Tag: Isaiah 6

One Glory, Two Visions: John 12:41 and the Doxa of the Son

One Glory, Two Visions: John 12:41 and the Doxa of the Son

John 12:41 makes two claims that together carry the Trinitarian argument: that Isaiah saw Jesus's glory, and that the glory John attributes to Jesus elsewhere in his Gospel is pre-temporal Shekinah possessed παρὰ σοί before creation. Even granting the unitarian referent of Isaiah 52–53, the Servant's glorification read through John 17:5 is restoration of co-possessed eternal glory, not the elevation of a creature.

Where Did Isaiah Speak About Him? John 12:41 Supplement

Where Did Isaiah Speak About Him? John 12:41 Supplement

A supplement to 'The Glory Isaiah Saw,' engaging the strongest published form of the unitarian reading of John 12:41 — taking up its central question: Where did Isaiah speak about him in Isaiah 6?

The Glory Isaiah Saw

The Glory Isaiah Saw

A Catholic engagement with the published unitarian case for John 12:41. The grammar is granted; the lexical range is granted; and the pre-Nicene chain — Justin, Irenaeus, Tertullian, Origen — is set out from primary sources. The glory Isaiah saw is the glory of the eternal Son, and the glory the rulers refused.

The Divine Identity of Jesus Christ

The Divine Identity of Jesus Christ

The claim that the Synoptic Gospels present a theologically simple Jesus — a great teacher, an exalted prophet, an agent of God rather than God himself — is one of the most persistent errors in biblical interpretation. This article dismantles it text by text, argument by argument, across Psalm 110, Matthew, Mark, and Luke, and two thousand years of unbroken patristic testimony. The centerpiece is the argument that has never been successfully answered: in Matthew 5, Jesus places his own personal legislative word over against the Lex talionis — the foundational principle of all Mosaic criminal justice — from his own first-person authority. Deuteronomy 18:20 leaves exactly two categories of person who would do that. A false prophet condemned to death. Or the Lawgiver himself. There is no third category.