Hebrew Thoughts Archives First available on March 10, 2007 Bên 'son, offspring, descendant'
Ba bên 'son, child, grandson' (Strong's #1121) from Bnh
bânâh (Strong's #1129) would
normally be a noun of the form Bnh bêneh
but which has lost the weak final h 'h'. The very
first use in Genesis 3:16 is the plural Bnye
bânîym (as if the singular were Ba
bân) meaning both 'sons and daughters'. [Arabic uses ’ibn,
Phoenician b-n, but Aramaic has br
bar (Strong's #1247), as in barmitvah - son of the
commandments, from Br( berâ’ 'to
create/procreate'].
'Sons and daughters' is more fully expressed by Bnye
wbnwt bânîym ûbhânôwth (e.g., Genesis 5:4,7,10,13). The idea of a child in general is
perhaps paramount since passages such as Jeremiah 20:15 speak of a Ba-zkr ben-zâkhâr 'a-son, a-male-one', as if a son could
be female!
'Son' could also be used for 'grandson', as in Genesis 29:5 where Laban is referred to as
Ba-nxwr ben-nâchôwr the 'son of Nahor',
whereas in fact he was the son of Bethuel and
grandson of Nahor (Nâchôwr).
'Grandsons' could also be pedantically described as Bny
Bnye benêy bânîym the 'sons-of sons'
since there was no specific word for them (e.g., Exodus 34:7; Proverbs 13:22; 17:6).
More metaphorically Ba bên could be used
of anyone under the authority of another, as a
subject to its king, a son to his father; 2 Kings 16:7 speaks of Ahaz calling himself a servant and
a 'son' to the king of Assyria in his plea for assistance. Genesis 15:2-3 uses the phrase Ba ... Byty
ben...bêythîy 'a-son-of-my-house' to describe a steward or servant
(Eliezer in Abraham's
house).
It could imply tutored discipleship as with the later rabbis and their
disciples and in the
Biblical period Bny-hNby(ye
benêy-han'nebhîy’îym 'sons of the prophets' (e.g., 2 Kings 2:3-7). This idiom applies equally to non-human
obeisance such as in the phrase Ba-mwt
ben-mâveth 'a-son-of-death' (1 Samuel 20:31; 2 Samuel 12:5) or 'subject to death'
translated as "doomed to die" in the AV.
On the same principle 'a son of' a particular virtue or even vice describes a
person or creature
with that characteristic. For example 1 Kings 1:52 speaks of Adonijah showing himself to be
Ba-xyl bhen-chayil 'a son of
might/integrity' rather than wicked. Job 5:7 uses the brief phrase wbny-r#v ûbhenêy-resheph 'sons of fiery coals/darts'
either to describe the swift and natural
flight of birds (as the Greek Septuagint OT and some Jewish commentators
think) or to depict
the offspring of fire which may be 'sparks'. The king of Babylon (Lucifer) is
called not
'morning star' but literally Ba-#xr
ben-shâchar 'son-of-the-morning'.
In the New Testament, literal Greek translation betrays the underlying
idiomatic Hebrew use
of 'son' in 'a son of peace' (Luke 10:6) and Jesus' description of the repentant Jew
Zacchaeus as
'a son of Abraham' (Luke 19:9), he was already a son of Abraham by birth, but
now he was a
son by deed. Compare also, Jesus' apparently harsh words "you are [sons] of
your father the
devil" (John 8:44), in other words, 'you do his works' in character or
deed. In the New
Testament parable of the two sons, the true son was the one who 'did' the work
required not
the one who only 'said' he would. Ephesians 2:2 speaks of "sons of disobedience/unbelief".
On this basis we could go down the path of suggesting that Jesus' divine
sonship as
'son-of-God' was more his imitation of God's character and works rather than
any familial tie
or reference to Graeco-Roman offspring of the gods. Equally, Jesus' preferred
title
'son-of-man' has been seen by some to mean simply 'a human one'. David was
God's son when
he exhibited trust and displayed God's mercy and character. Jesus as the
messianic
'son-of-David' was both of David's line and was in character the true Davidic
king; as Son of
Man he was the figure of Danielic expectation rather than just a man; and as
Son of God, he
was committing heresy to his hearers in making himself equal and one with God.
So,
"son-of-..." as an idiom of character rather than childbirth does not really
offer a way out of the
"was Jesus God?" question, it simply adds another dimension to our
understanding of his
godlikeness.
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