John 10:33
"You being a man make yourself God"
The Trinitarian Claim
Trinitarians claim that these Jews (rightly) understood Jesus was claiming to
be God himself.
Examination of the Claim
1. A Conspicuous Translation Inconsistency
In the Greek text, the definite article is missing before the Greek word
anthropos ("man") and the Greek word theos (God/god). Because of
the missing article, Trinitarians are happy to translate the passage as "you
being A man." But the same is true for the word theos yet they refuse to
consistently translate the passage as "make yourself A god."
This passage most naturally reads, "you being a man make yourself a god." If
an ancient Koine Greek speaker had wanted to say, "make yourself a god" this is
precisely how he would say it.
Trinitarians render the words kai hoti su anthropos (no definite
article) as "a man" but they will turn right around and say you can't
translate "poieis seauton theon in the exact same manner as
"a god! Why? Because it does not suit their agenda. There is no other
reason.
2. The Context
Observe the flow of this conversation. The Jews make a charge of blasphemy
and Jesus responds to that charge by quoting from the 82nd Psalm.
[The Jewish Charge]: The Jews answered him, "It is not for a good work
that we stone you but for blasphemy because
you, being a man, make yourself a god."
[Jesus' Response to the Charge]: Jesus answered them, "Is it not
written in your Law, "I [YAHWEH] said, 'you are gods'?" If he [YAHWEH] called them gods with whom the word of God came, and
Scripture cannot be broken, do you say to the one the Father set apart
and sent into the world, "You are blaspheming,' because I said, "I am a son of
God'?
Notice how the Jews charge him with blasphemy and Jesus then responds by
asking why they charge him with blasphemy for claiming to be the son of God when
God calls others "gods." To paraphrase, Jesus essentially says, "Why do you have
a problem with me being a god? The Scriptures show us that God himself called
other men "gods." So what then do you say about me, the one who God himself set
apart and sent into the world? Why do you charge me with blaspheming when I say,
"I am a son of God?" In other words, Jesus completely silences the Jewish
objections with YAHWEH's very own words where He calls other men "gods," and the
Jews did't have a leg to stand on and neither does the Trinitarian. Effectively,
Jesus is saying that these Jews were dishonestly charging him when YAHWEH
himself calls lower identities other than himself "gods."
Analysis of the Evidence
1. Jesus was "a son of the Most High."
He will be great and he will be called a son of the Most
High. (Luke 1:32).
The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the
power of the Most High will overshadow you and for that reason the
holy child shall be called a son of God. (Luke
1:35).
Seeing Jesus, he cried out and fell before Him, and said in a loud
voice, "What business do we have with each other, Jesus, son of the Most
High God? I beg You, do not torment me." (Luke 8:28).
2. Psalm 82:6
A careful examination of Psalm 82:6 makes the matter much clearer. The whole
Psalm reads:
I said, "You are gods,
and sons of the Most High,
all of you.
Notice the parallelism between "gods" and "sons of the Most High." The
Psalmist is indicating here that sons of God are gods. In singular form, this
would read, "You are a god, a son of the Most High." Carefully
regard how Jesus responds, "I said, 'You are gods.' If he called them
'gods'.... do you say, 'You are blaspheming because I said, 'I am a
son of God?'" Jesus is drawing the parallel between being "a god" and "a son
of the Most High," when he says, "if he called them "gods"... I am "a son of
God." Jesus quite clearly has the parallelism of the whole Psalm in mind, "You
are gods, and sons of the Most High
3. The Jewish Hypocrisy: Why is this blasphemy for me but not for
you?
Psalm 82:6 is a reference to the judges of Israel, those who were the
religious rulers of the people, the Te. Tmple rulers. The Jews here who were
charging Jesus with blasphemy were the religious leaders and those judges in
Jesus' time. That means they would have applied Psalm 82:6 to themselves and did
not consider it blasphemy to identify themselves as gods and sons of the Most
High. Hence, Jesus here is demonstrating their hypocrisy. They charge him with
blasphemy when they applied this Psalm to themselves, and not only so, Jesus was
indeed the one who God had "set apart and sent into the world."
4. What the Jews Understood Jesus to be Claiming
That the Jews never ever understood Jesus to be claiming to be God, and
therefore their God, is made abundantly clear in the following passage:
In the same way the chief priests also, along with the scribes and
elders, were mocking Him and saying, "He saved others; He cannot save Himself.
He is the King of Israel; let Him now come down from the cross, and we will
believe in Him. He trusts in God; Let God save him if he delights in him,
for he said, 'I am a Son of God.'" (Matthew 27:41-43).
Notice how the Jews clearly have no notion whatsoever that Jesus had claimed
to be God. Observe how they do not mock him and say, 'Save yourself if you are
God.' They rather perceive that for Jesus, God is someone else who would need to
save Jesus if indeed Jesus is truly a son of God.
5. The Final Charge: Son of God
At John 19:7 we see the final Jewish charge. The Jews charged him with making
himself a son of God. Carefully regard the language they use.
The Jews answered him, "We have a law, and by that law He ought to
die because He made Himself a son of God>."
The language they are using here, "made Himself a son of God," is the very
same language they use at John 10:33, "you make yourself a god." When we again
regard the parallelism of Psalm 82:6, the truth of this matter is very clear.
They heard Jesus refer to God over and over as his Father and in this way he was
claiming to be a son of the Most High God. In this way, the Jews understood him
to be making himself a son of the Most High, or put another way, making himself
a god.
I said, "You are gods,
and sons of the Most High,
all of you.
6. How Jesus understood the Jewish Charge
We can see clearly what the Jews really said by simply observing how Jesus
understood what they said to him. In response to their accusation, Jewish quotes
the Psalm, "I said, 'You are gods." Both Jesus and these Jewish leaders would
have known the verse well and so they would have known the whole Psalm by heart,
"I said, 'You are gods and sons of the Most High, all of you." Having quoted the
Psalm, Jesus then makes his point. To paraphrase he says, "If He (God) called
these sons of God "gods" to whom the word of God came, what then about
me, a son of the Most High?" And Jesus qualifies this even further by saying,
"... who God sanctified and sent into the world."
Conclusion
The facts of the matter make the truth quite clear. The Trinitarian claim is
simply false. The Greek grammar is exactly how you would say, "make yourself a
god," in the Greek language. The Jews certainly did not say that Jesus was
making himself out to be the one and only God. The Jews never make such an
accusation throughout the whole gospel of John and they eventually charge him
with claiming to be a son of God. If we translated this passage as Trinitarians
are wont to do, the entire passage becomes non-sensical and absurd. If these
monotheistic Jews had charged Jesus was making himself "God" then why would
Jesus be responding by referring to a passage which identified these Jews
themselveds as "gods?" It makes absolutely no sense whatsoever. But when we
honestly regard all the facts it is quite clear that the 82nd Psalm draws a
parallel between these judges as gods and being sons of God Most High, that is,
each of them being a god and a son of the Most High.
"You being a man make yourself a god."
Jesus answered them, "Is it not written in your Law, "I said, 'you are
gods'?"