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| | #REDIRECT[[Events after the First Vision]] |
| |title=Question: Is there anything wrong with Brigham Young or others using that term to refer to Jesus Christ?
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| |category=First Vision/Brigham Young
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| | [[es:Pregunta: ¿Hay algo de malo con los primeros líderes de la Iglesia que usan el término "ángel" para referirse a Jesucristo?]] |
| <onlyinclude> | | [[pt:Pergunta: Há algo de errado com primeiros líderes da Igreja, usando o termo "anjo" para se referir a Jesus Cristo?]] |
| ==Question: Is there anything wrong with early Church leaders using the term "angel" to refer to Jesus Christ?==
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| ===The word translated "messenger" is the Hebrew mal'ak which can also be translated as "an angel"===
| | [[Category:First Vision/George Q. Cannon]] |
| What about the term "angel"? Is there anything wrong with Brigham Young or others using that term to refer to Jesus Christ? Malachi spoke of the Lord as the "messenger of the covenant whom ye delight in." (Mal.3:1) The word translated "messenger" is the Hebrew mal'ak which can also be translated as "an angel."<ref>James Strong, ''A Concise Dictionary of the Words In The Hebrew Bible With Their Renderings In the Authorized English Version'' (Nashville: Abingdon, 1890), 66.</ref> The Septugint of Isaiah 9:6, traditionally thought by Christians to refer to Christ speaks of the "messenger of great counsel." This term for Jesus was frequently used by early Christians. Eusebius stated that Christ "was the first and only begotten of God; the commander-in-chief of the spiritual and immortal host of heaven; the angel of mighty counsel; the agent of the ineffable purpose of the Father." <ref>The History of the Church Book I:2 (3), in ''Eusebius: The History of the Church From Christ to Constantine'', G.A. Williamson Translator (Penguine Books, 1986), 33-4.</ref> The Martyrdom and Ascension of Isaiah (an apocryphal work, thought to have been written before the fourth century states that when Christ descended to earth he "made himself like the angels of the air, that he was like one of them." <ref>Martyrdom And Ascension of Isaiah 10:30-31, in James H. Charlesworth, ''The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha'' 2 Vols. (Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company, 1985), 2:174.</ref> The Epistula Apostolorum (another important early Christian work, thought to have been written by 2nd Century Christians quotes the resurrected Jesus as saying,"I became like an angel to the angels...I myself was a servant for myself, and in the form of the image of an angel; so will I do after I have gone to my Father." <ref>Epistula Apostulorum 14, in Edgar Hennecke and Wilhelm Schneemelcher, ''New Testament Apocrypha'' 2 Vols. (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1963), 1:199.</ref> At least the use of the term "angel" in Christianity does not seem unknown.
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| | [[Category:The Changing World of Mormonism]] |
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| | [[Category:Questions]] |