s 19 s
Is God All Powerful?
Is God All Powerful?
Why did God allow lies and falsehood to
creep into his Bible? If one assumes
that the God of the Bible is all powerful and all wise, then how could God
allow the Bible to become so polluted?
The question is flawed because the assumption is flawed. God is not all powerful.
Certainly the God of Genesis 1 is all
powerful, for this God created everything, and had the power to ensure that
everything was good. But that God is the
God of the Priestly text.
The God of the earlier parts of the Hebrew
Bible is different. Below are quotes
from the earlier, more authentic parts of the Bible, such as the Yahwist and
Elohist sources, Judges, and Samuel:
Yahweh was with Judah; and he possessed the
mountains, but he was not capable of driving out the inhabitants of the
valley, because they had iron chariots.[1]
After
God tested Abraham, God said, "Now
I know that you fear God."[2]
(Beforehand, God was not sure if
he did.)
When God saw he could not beat Jacob in a wrestling
match, God said, "You have struggled with God and man and have
prevailed."[3]
Yahweh
regretted making humans on the earth.[4]
(God said) I greatly regret that I have set
Saul up as king.[5]
Moses convinced God not to destroy Israel in the desert,
and afterward Amos again convinced God not to destroy Israel.[6] Hence, God can be swayed by human
arguments.
Indeed,
the entire corpus of archaic Hebrew literature is entirely incompatible with
any notion that God controls everything, knows everything, or is impermeable.
This cannot be explained away with theological constructs, hermeneutics, or
exegesis, for the earliest sources of the Bible are clear and consistent on
this point.
Likewise, the earliest gospel, Mark, takes
for granted that Jesus Christ is not all powerful, as is clear from the quotes
below:
Jesus
could not do a mighty work there, except for laying his hands
on a few sick people and healing them.[7]
They brought a blind man to Jesus and they begged
him to touch him… When he had spit on his eyes and put his hands on him, he
asked him if he could see anything. He
looked up and said, "I see men like trees, walking." Then He put His hands on his eyes and again
made him look up, and he was restored and saw everything clearly.[8]
So sometimes it takes Jesus
multiple attempts to accomplish something.
The Gods of Nag
Hammadi and the Dead Sea Scrolls
Traditional religious establishments have brainwashed us to
think Moses taught monotheism on Mount Sinai.
He didn’t. They tell us that the
Judeo-Christian tradition has always believed in only one God. It didn’t.
In fact, monotheism did not even exist among the Hebrews until the late
600's BCE, which was long after Moses and the early Prophets. When monotheism came to dominate Jewish thinking
in the mid 400's BCE under Ezra, then God stopped sending Prophets to Israel
altogether. Why did the Prophets
cease? Was Yahweh angry at the
monotheists?
Allusions to "the gods" plural are constant
throughout the Dead Sea Scrolls. Here
are two examples:
On the Last Day, the congress of the gods shall engage
in ferocious combat with the armies of the humans, causing mass destruction.[9]
Who in the heavens is like you, my God? Who among the sons of the gods? Who in the entire congress of the gods?[10]
We may also point out that
Josephus makes mention of the fact that some Jews were not monotheists even in
his day:
There are many schisms among the
Jews. Some espouse that God is one, as
it says in the ancient holy writ, but others declare that God is a plurality.[11]
The Dead Sea Scrolls also
mention a church of gods, and that Michael reigns over a kingdom of gods. They also specify that these are living gods,
indicating their real existence outside the imagination.[12] The Dead Sea Scrolls were written by the
Essenes, who, as we have already stated, were in many ways similar to Jesus,
and were the only major denomination of Judaism that Jesus did not
criticize. One must ask, if Jesus were
so adamantly opposed to the Pharisees and the Sadducees, who believed in only
one God, yet was tolerant toward the Essenes, who believed in many gods, then
does it not stand to reason that Jesus Christ himself may have also believed in
many gods?
In fact, Jesus Christ did believe in many gods. This is implicitly stated within his
commentary on Psalm 82. People were
criticizing him for calling himself the Son of God, because they thought it was
blasphemy. In response, Jesus pointed
out that Psalm 82 in the Bible says that there are many gods, and so therefore
it is not blasphemy for Jesus to assert that he is one of these gods, as he put
it:
Is it not written in your Torah, "I said you are
gods?" If he called them gods unto
whom the word of God came, and the scripture cannot be broken, then how can you
accuse me of blasphemy just because I said I am the Son of God?[13]
By saying this, Jesus affirmed
the real existence of more than one God and affirmed his own divinity at the
same time.[14]
More than a few ancient Christian writers affirmed the
existence of many gods. They spoke of
"cosmic gods,"[15]
"secret gods,"[16]
and "gods that are above god."[17] They said "God creates gods,"[18]
and that "when three gods are in one place, they are gods,"[19]
indicative of the Trinity.
The early Christians who believed in a
multitude of gods clearly distinguished them from angels and demons. One text lists several types of heavenly
entities including, "cosmocrator princes, principalities, authorities,
woman-gods, man-gods, and archangels"[20] –
each apparently being distinct. The
depths of hell are also filled with distinctly different entities, including at
least four different types - "princes, angels, demons, and souls."[21] The following two passages give us precision
in defining gods, for they draw a distinction between "gods" and
"angels," making it clear they are two different types of entities.
The gods arose, and from them divine gods, and from
them masters, and from them archangels.[22]
We are not
certain whether the Unfathomable One has angels or gods – or maybe he was just
by himself in the ylem.[23]
The
Genesis story records that the serpent tempted Eve saying, "Your eyes will
be opened, and you will become like elohim."[24] The Hebrew word elohim can mean either "God" singular or "gods"
plural, depending on the verb. An early
Christian source clarifies the matter, explicitly saying "You will become
like gods."[25] Moreover, the book of Jubilees found among
the Dead Sea Scrolls also confirms that "gods" plural is the original
meaning.[26]
The
God of the early sources of Genesis clearly does not know everything. Ancient Christians attested to this:
The prince asked, "Adam,
where are you?"[27]
because he didn't know what happened.[28]
What kind of God angrily keeps
Adam from eating of the Tree of Knowledge and asks "Adam, where are
you?" Doesn't God know everything?[29]
The
early Christian sources also state that "the gods are derived from
pristine matter."[30] Here, the gods are not spiritual entities,
but material entities, and therefore may be biological in nature like we
are. Yet the same passage also asserts
that the gods are immortal. Perhaps
certain biological entities that are much more intelligent than we are have
figured out a way to cheat death indefinitely, and thus become "pristine
matter."
Genesis 1 presents us with one single all powerful Creator
God. As such, it is incompatible with
the notion that there are many gods.
What did Jesus think about Genesis 1? Jesus never affirmed that the earth was
created in six days. Jesus never
affirmed the creationist timeline. Only
one place in the entire New Testament speaks about the six-day creation, and it
occurs in Hebrews,[31] a
book that had a little harder time getting into the canon than did most books
of the Bible. We don't even know who
wrote Hebrews, and many of the eastern churches kept it out of their Bibles. Moreover, the opening verse of John’s gospel,
"In the beginning was the Logos,"
presents a creation account that appears to be aimed at competing against
Genesis 1. The Greek word Logos
implies logic and order, which is the exact opposite of what Genesis
1 says about the earth being "without form and void." From a New Testament perspective, the
Genesis 1 account of creation is stuffed in the back of the pantry like an old
wineskin.
Henotheism
Henotheism, not monotheism, is the theology of Moses and the
Prophets. This fact is generally
accepted by scholars, as any number of authorities can attest.
What is Henotheism?
Nothing better defines Henotheism than what Saint Paul the Apostle told
the Corinthians:
There are many gods, but
for us there is one God.[32]
Henotheism is the belief that
many gods exist, but that only one God should be worshipped. Unlike monotheism, there are truly many gods
and they really do exist. Yet unlike
polytheism, not all the gods are worshipped.
Only one of them is worshipped, and the rest are profane.
Henotheism
explains why James the brother of Jesus and Saint John the Apostle, together
with all the Prophets, were so thoroughly against idols and eating meat
sacrificed to idols, even to the point where it was one of the few regulations
of the Old Testament that they insisted non-Jewish Christians must keep[33] –
because sacrifices to idols serve profane entities that truly do exist.[34]
Henotheism
explains why idolatry is the most frequently mentioned offense in the entire
Bible – for if God is all powerful, then an idol is nothing, and it would only
be an inconsequential joke and hardly worth the mention – but if idolatry truly
serves other gods that truly do exist, and if sacrifices to idols truly assist
those gods, then this explains why Yahweh and his Prophets are so vociferously
against idolatry. For if there are other
gods, then these gods are truly a threat to Yahweh and to his Messiah, and
therefore it is particularly important that idolatry does not infiltrate the
ranks of the faithful, for it truly gives enemies a foot in the door by which
they can infiltrate the armies of Yahweh.
The God of Henotheism is actually competing against other gods who are
real. Worshipping other gods is serving
other gods, and serving other gods undermines the power of your covenant God,
and this is tantamount to adultery against your God and treason against your
nation. In such terms the Prophets speaks
of idolatry. This line of thinking only
makes sense in light of Henotheism.
If
God were Almighty, then the overarching importance of the prohibition against
idols makes no sense at all, because in a monotheistic system, and idol has no
power. Which
is worse, praying to rocks and dead trees, or committing murder? In a monotheistic system, the first is
laughable but the second is quite heinous.
But in a Henotheistic system, idolatry is even more heinous than murder,
for murder can only kill the body, but idolatry kills both body and soul, for
it puts the soul at the mercy of gods who care not for humanity. Only within the framework of Henotheistic
thinking does it make sense that idolatry is a worse crime than murder, theft,
sexual perversion, or any other infraction.
Seeing that the Bible condemns idolatry more frequently than any other
sin, this is a case for Henotheism.
The Uniqueness of Yahweh
Nevertheless,
the God of Israel was still unique from the other gods in some ways. Unlike other gods of the region, Yahweh never
had sex and he never died. Most other
ancient Near Eastern gods at least had sex, and some like Tammuz died. We know from archaeology that Baal had sex
with a cow 77 times and he also died.[35]
From
the very earliest of the Israelite settlements, there is no archaeological
evidence that an idol of Yahweh was made, indicating a very early belief in the
prohibition against idols.[36]
Examples of Henotheistic Thinking in the Bible
The
real existence of the pagan god Dagon is implied in the Biblical story of how
Dagon's idol fell on his face before Yahweh.
The Bible never says that wind blew him over or that God blew him
over. Rather, the Bible presents the
story as if Dagon was truly a living god who made a conscious decision to
humble himself before another god.[37]
In
another archaic Biblical text, Naomi tells Ruth, "Your sister-in-law went
back to her nation and to her gods. You
should do the same."[38] Naomi was a Hebrew who believed in Yahweh,
but here she sanctioned the worship of other gods besides Yahweh, but only for
those outside the Hebrew nation.
Then
there is the case of how the Old Testament makes references to other gods as if
they were actual people, and that they could be bound in chains and led into
captivity. The Prophet Jeremiah wrote
about Chemosh, the god of the Moabites,
Chemosh shall go into captivity,
with his priests and princes together.[39]
It's as if the god Chemosh were
physically capable of being handcuffed.
Henotheism Explains Things Monotheism Cannot
Have
you ever wondered why the prophecies in the Bible are vague? If God were really all powerful, then God
should be able to pinpoint exact times, dates, locations, and names when giving
prophecies for thousands of years in the future. But most of the prophecies in the Bible do
not attempt such precision. This is not
consistent with monotheism. But on the
other hand, if there are gods who live for thousands of years or more, and if
they have substantial control over future events, but not total control, then
they can give vague prophecies, which will remarkably and fairly consistently
come true. Such are the Prophets of the
Bible.
Have
you ever wondered why bad things happen to good people? If God were all powerful and all good, this
should not happen. On the other hand, if
there are gods who are good, yet who cannot always control things, or who do
not have the resources to intervene, then the existence of evil makes sense,
for the gods can only do so much.
Understanding the Ancient Hebrew Theological System
What follows is an explanation of the ancient Hebrew
theological system, as scholars know it from piecing together archaeology with
the Biblical texts. The western Semitic
peoples, including Hebrews, Canaanites, and the more archaic city of Ugarit,
believed in a Father-God called El. The
name El and its variants are known throughout the Bible – El, Elyon,
El-Shaddai, and Eloah. They believed El
spawned a brood of sons called bn-Ilm (Ugaritic) or beni-ha-Elohim (Hebrew),
which means "sons of El" or
"sons of the God," and that these sons of El participated in some
kind of divine government called "the congress of the gods."[40] The
operations of this congress are implicit within such Biblical stories as the
Tower of Babel, where Yahweh consults with the other gods – "Let us go
down and confuse their language"[41]
– and in Job, where "the sons of God came to present themselves before
Yahweh."[42]
El and his wife Athirat had a total of 70 sons in the Biblical and Ugaritic
traditions, or 77 in the Hittite tradition.
These were the "sons of God," and to each of them El gave a
nation as an inheritance. Yahweh was one
of these sons of El, and his inheritance was Israel.[43] Consequently,
each nation was supposed to worship one of the sons of El as its appointed
God. Canaan worshipped Baal, Moab
worshipped Chemosh, Ammon worshipped Molech, and Israel worshipped Yahweh. They all paid homage to El as the
Father-God. This can be seen in
Jubilees, where Shem "blessed the El of elohim (God of gods) who gave
Yahweh's word, and he blessed Yahweh."[44] In this passage, it sounds as if Shem was
blessing two distinct divine entities – El and Yahweh, Father and Son.
These ancient Semites assumed that the gods of other nations
truly existed. If somebody wanted to
worship a foreign god, they scooped up some dirt from the foreign soil of that
god's nation and took it home with them to worship with, because the gods were
geographically limited to a certain nation.
This can clearly be deduced from the story of Naaman the leper, who took
two mule loads of Israelite dirt back to Syria on which to kneel down and pray
to Yahweh. The Prophet Elisha did not
protest Naaman's theological interpretation on this topic, but merely said,
"Go in peace."[45] Some even thought that the God of Israel was
confined to the mountains.[46] The national limitation of deities is
attested for by the Biblical Prophet Micah, and also by Deuteronomy:
All the nations will walk each in the name of their
own god, and we will walk in the name of Yahweh our God forever.[47]
When Elyon divided the nations, when He separated the
sons of Adam, he set the boundaries of the nations according to the number of the sons of Elohim.[48]
What
this passage means is this: The
Father-God Elyon divided the nations according to the number of sons he had,
and so each nation got its own god. Your
Bible might say "sons of Israel" in place of "sons of
Elohim," but both the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Septuagint attest that the
Bible originally said "sons of Elohim" not "sons of
Israel,"[49]
as does Irenaeus also.[50] Scholars believe that the Hebrew Bible was
intentionally corrupted by the monotheists to read "sons of Israel"
because later Judaism evolved to become monotheist.[51]
Often, even in early times, the national god was combined with
the Father-God El to form one entity, hence the term "Yahweh Elyon"
(the LORD Most High) in Genesis 14, and "Yahweh Elohim" (the LORD
God) – these titles occurring in the Yahwist narrative, which is considered to
be the earliest of the four major source texts of the Torah. Hence, the two deities were collapsed into
one long before monotheism was invented.
This also is the origin of Trinitarian thinking – that Jesus Christ, as
an entity, can be collapsed into a single entity with the Father and the
Spirit, thus making God three-in-one.
Today, theologians often refer to the Trinity as a "mystery,"
but there was no such "mystery" in the minds of ancient Christian
Trinitarians. They took it for granted,
because it was consistent with the same way they had thought for
centuries. Only with the general
acceptance of the monotheistic heresy did the Trinity become a seemingly
self-contradictory "mystery."
On Psalm 82, Smith asserts Elohim (God) and Yahweh are the
same:
Here the figure of God, understood as Yahweh, takes
his stand in the assembly. The name El
was understood in the tradition – and perhaps at the time of the original
text's composition as well – to be none other but Yahweh, and not a separate
God called El.[52]
Yahweh's Right to Rule and the Covenant Relationship
This brings
us to Psalm 82 itself, which tells another aspect of ancient Hebrew religion –
the God of Israel's rightful destiny to ultimately conquer the other gods and
appropriate their inheritances:
God is the president of El's
Congress. He judges among the gods…
saying "You are gods. You are all
sons of Elyon. But like mortals you will
die, and like the rulers you will fall."
Rise O God, and judge the earth, for you will inherit all nations.[53]
In
a world filled with hostile nations and hostile gods, the logical thing to do
is to make your nation and your god the top dog, so that you can defend your
interests. That's exactly how ancient
Israel viewed things. Yahweh should be
president in the congress of gods, and he has a right to take away all power
and possessions of other gods.
This
is especially evident when we study the Psalms and the life story of King
David. David's covenant with Yahweh was simple:
you keep me from being killed by my enemies, and I will conquer all Israel's
neighbors for you. The covenant was a
contractual obligation between two parties for their mutual benefit. The benefit to David was a long life. The benefit to Yahweh was the conquest of
Edom, Moab, Philistia, Syria, Ammon, and the national unity of Israel. Once this is understood, David's Psalms make
sense. His frequent mention of the
underworld and his intense fear of death – coupled with his description of
Yahweh as a god of war with nostrils filled with fire, riding on thunderclouds,
sword in hand, hurling lightening bolts, and shooting arrows at his enemies,
along with multiple songs of victory – these features are consistent with
David's incessant wars of conquest against all Israel's neighbors.
It
was a god-eat-god cosmic system, and David wanted to ensure that his god was
the top dog. This sort of alliance
system between gods and humans is what Old Testament covenant theology is all
about. When Israel went to war, they
carried the throne of Yahweh into battle, the Ark of the Covenant, because
Yahweh was their commander and ally.
Before they attacked, they consulted with Yahweh, to make certain he
approved of the military action. Every
war was a holy war against some other competing nation and its god. Expanding the boundaries of your nation meant
expanding the empire of your covenant god, and your god would reward you for
it.
Jesus'
Jihad
This type of theology does not stop in the
Old Testament. It is quite evident in
the New Testament message of Jesus Christ too.
The types of personalities Jesus chose for his Apostles mirrored that of
King David. They had a tendency toward violent
bravery. Saint Peter toted a sword
around. When Jesus was threatened, Peter
cut off the ear of the high priest.
Likewise Saint Paul, who actually committed murder in the name of
religion before being converted. James
and John were called sons of thunder.
One of the Apostles was named Simon the Zealot. The Zealots were a boisterous anti-Roman
faction, essentially hell bent on violence in the name of freedom. What else would one expect from a Messiah who
said, "Do not think that I came to bring peace to the earth. I did not come to bring peace, but a
sword?"[54]
Jesus
Christ made friends with hated bureaucrats, prostitutes, and social
outcasts. He was not looking for ethical
people. He was looking for loyal people. He was looking for people in the dregs of
society who would fight for him – who would risk everything for him, because
they had nothing to loose anyway.
Conspicuously
absent from Jesus Christ's inner circle were people such as Gandhi or Mother
Teresa. There were no such Apostles or
disciples of that nature. If the
Christian God is a God of Almighty Universal Love, this simply makes no
sense. On the other hand, if Jesus
Christ is not all powerful, then he is a god among gods, who must fight his way
to become chief of the gods, or else become a slave to gods more powerful than
himself. In this case, he would not want
Gandhi or Mother Teresa in his army, because they are too universalistic in
their theology, and therefore too apt to be kind to the enemy. Instead, he would want to save violent people
who were ferociously loyal to him.
This
also explains the doctrine of hell. Why
would an Almighty God torture people forever?
Isn't that sadistic? But on the
other hand, if the gods are at war, it stands to reason that they will
incarcerate prisoners of war. Such is
the Christian perception of hell, for in the New Testament, hell is described
as a dungeon of spirits in chains, who are awaiting judgment,[55]
and they will be judged at the time of the resurrection, that is after the war
is over, when they can receive due process of law as non-combatants.[56] This makes perfect sense with regard to the
rules of war.
To
be sure, Jesus Christ certainly aspires to attain a master plan of love,
whereby if he is victorious, he will implement a policy of peace, love, and
justice. But until victory is realized,
Jesus must conserve his resources. He
cannot afford to save people who are not loyal to him. If a violent sinner is more loyal to him than
Gandhi, he will save the violent sinner first, for at least violence and
loyalty is useful on the field of battle, but universal love is not.
This
is not the mentality of an Almighty God.
Rather, it is the mentality of a god who is struggling in a death match
with other gods, who desperately needs to recruit loyal soldiers. He is not looking for saints. He is looking for soldiers.
Henotheism, Gnosticism, and Evolutionary Science
Agree
A fundamental principle that unites
Henotheism, Gnosticism, and evolutionary science is this: they all reject any notion that the governing
force of this cosmos is good and just.
The governing force of ancient Near
Eastern Henotheism was the Father-God El, who was known for his support of the
hostile forces of nature, such as Yamm (the ocean) and Mot (the desert), which
were symbolized in mythology as grotesque primordial monsters and serpents.
Likewise, the governing force of
Gnosticism was the demiurge, who was known for his arrogance and stupidity,
which caused him and his stupid perverted angels to create a failed cosmos.
The governing force of evolutionary science is natural selection or survival of the fittest, which is nothing but the selfish instinct to preserve one's own interests at the expense of others. For 540 million years, animals have been ripping each other's throats out and feeding on each other's misery. There is no room for a Universal God of Love in such a system. Rather, there is violence among the animals, and war among the gods.
[1] Judges 1:19
[2] Genesis 22:12
[3] Genesis 32:24-30
[4] Genesis 6:6
[5] 1st Samuel 15:11
[6] Exodus 32:14, Amos 7:1-6
[7] Mark 6:5
[8] Mark 8:22-25
[9] Dead Sea Scrolls. The War Scroll 1:10
[10] Dead Sea Scrolls. Non-Canonical Psalms fragment 15
[11] The Tripartite Tractate 12, Nag Hammadi 1:112
[12] Dead Sea Scrolls. 4Q400 fragment 1i, The War Scroll 17:7-8, 4Q403 1i 44, 4Q405 19-20, 4Q491 fragment 11:5, 4Q471b 5, 4Q280-290 fragment 7ai
[13] John 10:34-36
[14] Heiser, Michael S. The Unique Son of the Most High: The Place of Jesus in the Divine Council, Part 1 of 4. Divine Council Files 1(7), Downloaded Oct 5, 2008, www.thedivinecouncil.com/dc101psalm82john10.pdf
[15] On the Origin of the World, Nag Hammadi 2:97
[16] Marsanes, Nag Hammadi 10:30
[17] Zostrianos, Nag Hammadi 8:34
[18] Asclepius, Nag Hammadi 6:68
[19] The Gospel of Thomas 30
[20] Melchizedek, Nag Hammadi 9:2
[21] Trimorphic Protennoia, Nag Hammadi 13:35
[22] Eugnostos, Nag Hammadi 3:87
[23] Allogenes, Nag Hammadi 11:67
[24] Genesis 3:5
[25] The Hypostasis of the Archons, On the Origin of the World, Nag Hammadi 2:119, 2:90
[26] Jubilees 3:18
[27] Genesis 3:9
[28] The Hypostasis of the Archons, Nag Hammadi 2:90
[29] The Testimony of Truth, Nag Hammadi 9:47
[30] Asclepius, Nag Hammadi 6:67
[31] Hebrews 4:4
[32] 1st Corinthians 8:5-6
[33] Acts 15:29, 1st John 5:21, Revelation 2:14, 2:20, 9:20
[34] 1st Corinthians 10:19-22
[35] Smith, Mark S. The Origins of Biblical Monotheism: Israel's Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts. 2001, Oxford University Press, New York, NY, p 175, 90-92, 87
[36] Dever, William G. Who Were the Early Israelites and Where Did They Come From? 2003, Eerdmans Publishing, Grand Rapids, MI, p 128
[37] 1st Samuel 5:2-4
[38] Ruth 1:15
[39] Jeremiah 48:7
[40] Smith, Mark. The Origins of Biblical Monotheism: Israel’s Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts. 2001, Oxford University Press, New York, NY, p 37-53
[41] Genesis 11:7
[42] Job 1:6, 2:1
[43] Smith, Mark S. The Origins of Biblical Monotheism: Israel's Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts. 2001, Oxford University Press, New York, NY, p 55, 157, 44-46, 63
[44] Jubilees 8:20-21
[45] 2nd Kings 5:17-19
[46] 1st Kings 20:28
[47] Micah 4:5
[48] Deuteronomy 32:8, Dead Sea Scrolls and Septuagint. Masoretic text is corrupted to read "sons of Israel" in place of "sons of elohim."
[49] Abegg, Martin Jr; Flint, Peter; Ulrich, Eugene. The Dead Sea Scrolls Bible: The Oldest Known Bible Translated for the First Time into English. 1996, HarperCollins Publishers Inc, New York, NY, p 191
[50] Irenaeus. Against Heresies 3.12.9
[51] Smith, Mark S. The Origins of Biblical Monotheism: Israel's Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts. 2001, Oxford University Press, New York, NY, p 48-49, 73
[52] Smith, Mark S. ibid, p 48, 156
[53] Psalm 82:1,6-8
[54] Quelle, Luke 12:51, Matthew 10:34
[55] 2nd Peter 2:4, 1st Peter 3:19
[56] 1st Peter 3:19-4:6, Revelation 20:11-15