I continue from where I previously left off: Daniel’s Son of Man: YHWH’s Angel? Pt. 2.
Before I proceed into disclosing the identity of the particular Angel of God that is not a created being and who, at the same time, is personally distinguished from God, I want to share the opinion of one critical scholar that argues for a somewhat similar opinion.
British Methodist preacher and author Margaret Barker has written that early Israelite religion and many first century Jews believed that YHWH was/is actually the son of God (el) or the Most High (elyon), and that he was the one who appeared as the Angel of the Lord, as is the God that often manifested in human form all throughout the OT. Barker also claims that this Angel manifests as the Messianic Davidic King, and that this is the viewpoint adopted by the NT authors:
The investigations range over a wide area, and cannot be in any sense comprehensive. What has become clear to me time and time again is that even over so wide an area, the evidence points consistently in one direction and indicates that pre-Christian Judaism was not monotheistic in the sense that we use that word. The roots of Christian trinitarian theology lie in pre-Christian Palestinian beliefs about the angels. There were many in first-century Palestine who still retained a world-view derived from the more ancient religion of Israel in which there was a High God and several Sons of God, one of whom was Yahweh, the Holy One of Israel. Yahweh, the Lord, could be manifested on earth in human form, as an angel or in the Davidic king. It was as a manifestation of Yahweh, the Son of God, that Jesus was acknowledged as Son of God, Messiah and Lord. (Barker, The Great Angel: A Study of Israel’s Second God [Westminster John Knox, Louisville, 1992], p. 3; bold emphasis mine)
Barker further writes that the first century AD writing 4 Ezra (also known as 2 Esdras) identifies Daniel’s Son of Man as this very same Angel of the Lord who also called the Son of the Most High:
The kingmaking ritual in Jerusalem has long been recognized as similar to the enthronement of Ba’al described in the Ugaritic texts, but when one compares these texts with the Old Testament material, a problem arises. Was the figure who corresponded to Ba’al in the Jerusalem ritual the Davidic king, or was it Yahweh? Or was it both, i.e. was the king thought to be divine? Is it possible that the Davidic king was seen as Yahweh, as implied by the Chronicler’s description of Solomon’s coronation? A key passage is the son of man vision in Dan. 7 which is thought to have had close links with Ps. 2. It may have been an imaginative elaboration of the psalm, or, as is more likely, it may have been a vision shaped by the memory of royal rituals to which the psalm alludes. If this latter is the case, then the son of man figure was the Davidic king. But Dan. 7 has also been shown to resemble closely the Ugaritic accounts of Ba’al himself ascending to El, to be installed as king and judge. ‘Behind the figure of the Son of man lies Yahwe and ultimately B a’al.’6 Israel must have had a divinity Yahweh who corresponded in some ways to Ba’al and was represented in Dan. 7 by the Man figure, who was enthroned. The theophanies in Deut. 33.2 -5, Hab. 3 and Zech. 14 were descriptions of this same installation of Yahweh as king and judge.
The vision in 2 Esd. 13, from the end of the first century AD, i.e. some two hundred and fifty years after the Daniel vision, is based on the same underlying tradition. Here the Man figure is described as a son of Elyon, i.e. as an angel. If he was a son of Elyon a tthe end of the first century, then presumably he was also divine in the Daniel text, and if so, who were the two divinities of the vision? Daniel, unfortunately, gives no recognizable names; there is the Ancient of Days, and there is one like a son of man. In the classic study of this vision by Emerton, it is assumed that the Ancient of Days was Yahweh, ‘The Ancient of Days must, in Maccabaean times, have been understood to be Yahwe’7 but this is not necessarily so. The deity in the Aramaic chapters of Daniel is named ‘IIIaya (Elyon), and this was the ancient name for the High God, which means that the unnamed angel/son of man figure was the Holy One, Yahweh. The son of man figure certainly resembled Yahweh. One explanation offered for this is that the old Yahweh figure had somehow been divided; the High God remained Yahweh, and the functions of the warrior angel were separated off and assigned to the archangel Michael.8 But if the High God had never been Yahweh, the vision in Daniel would record accurately the older traditions of Jerusalem. (Ibid., pp. 37-38; emphasis mine)
And:
Among references to an unnamed Great Angel must be included all those which mention a son of man. ‘Son of man’ may not in itself have been a significant phrase since it probably meant no more than ‘a human being’ or ‘a man’, but in the apocalypses a man always meant an angel (as in ‘the man Gabriel’, Dan. 9.21, or a ‘man’s hand’, Rev. 21.17) and so ‘son of man’ must also have meant an angel. In the son of man visions outside the New Testament (Dan. 7; 2 Esd. 2.42-8; 13.1-13; and The Similitudes of Enoch), the appearance of the figure is not described. We are told only that a stream of fire came from his mouth (2 Esd. 3.10) and he had ‘the appearance of a man, and his face was full of graciousness, like one of the holy angels’ (l Enoch 46.1). It is not until Revelation that John describes a son of man, and it becomes clear that this was not just a phrase for an ordinary human being. The son of man figure in Rev. 1.13-16 is the angel of fire and bronze, the same as the man in Ezek. 1.26-8. Since Dan. 7, the earliest known son of man text which uses that particular phrase, has already been seen to be a description of Israel’s second God, other son of man passages should be read in this light. Son of man, or man, was a way of describing an angelic being, the chief of whom was Yahweh, and so the New Testament passages which refer to the coming of the son of man in fact refer to the Day of the Lord (e.g. Matt. 24.27-31) which is just how the first Christians described it (I Thess. 5.2; see chapter 10). It is not necessary to speculate how the day of Yahweh expectations were transferred by the Christians to the Son of Man texts; Yahweh was the Man. (Ibid., p. 77; emphasis mine)
In light of the foregoing, I now cite from 2 Esdras to highlight the fact of the Danielic Son of Man being described as the Messianic Son of the Most High:
42 I, Ezra, saw on Mount Zion a great multitude that I could not number, and they all were praising the Lord with songs. 43 In their midst was a young man of great stature, taller than any of the others, and on the head of each of them he placed a crown, but he was more exalted than they. And I was held spellbound. 44 Then I asked an angel, “Who are these, my lord?” 45 He answered and said to me, “These are they who have put off mortal clothing and have put on the immortal and have confessed the name of God. Now they are being crowned and receive palms.” 46 Then I said to the angel, “Who is that young man who is placing crowns on them and putting palms in their hands?” 47 He answered and said to me, “He is the Son of God, whom they confessed in the world.” So I began to praise those who had stood valiantly for the name of the Lord. 48 Then the angel said to me, “Go, tell my people how great and how many are the wonders of the Lord God that you have seen.” Chapter 2 New Revised Standard Version Updated Edition (NRSVUE)
After seven days I dreamed a dream in the night. 2 And behold, a wind arose from the sea and stirred up all its waves. 3 As I kept looking the wind made something like the figure of a man come up out of the heart of the sea. And I saw that this man flew with the clouds of heaven, and wherever he turned his face to look, everything under his gaze trembled, 4 and whenever his voice issued from his mouth, all who heard his voice melted as wax melts when it feels the fire.
5 After this I looked and saw that an innumerable multitude of people were gathered together from the four winds of heaven to make war against the man who came up out of the sea. 6 And I looked and saw that he carved out for himself a great mountain and flew up on to it. 7 And I tried to see the region or place from which the mountain was carved, but I could not.
8 After this I looked and saw that all who had gathered together against him to wage war with him were filled with fear, yet they dared to fight. 9 When he saw the onrush of the approaching multitude, he neither lifted his hand nor held a spear or any weapon of war, 10 but I saw only how he sent forth from his mouth something like a stream of fire and from his lips a flaming breath and from his tongue he shot forth a storm of sparks. All these were mingled together, the stream of fire and the flaming breath and the great storm, 11 and fell on the onrushing multitude that was prepared to fight and burned up all of them, so that suddenly nothing was seen of the innumerable multitude but only the dust of ashes and the smell of smoke. When I saw it, I was amazed.
12 After this I saw the same man come down from the mountain and call to himself another multitude that was peaceable. 13 Then the forms of many people appeared to him, some of whom were joyful and some sorrowful; some of them were bound, and some were bringing others as offerings…
Interpretation
25 “This is the interpretation of the vision: As for your seeing a man come up from the heart of the sea, 26 this is he whom the Most High has been keeping for many ages, who will himself deliver his creation, and he will direct those who are left. 27 And as for your seeing wind and fire and a storm coming out of his mouth 28 and as for his not holding a spear or weapon of war, yet destroying the onrushing multitude that came to conquer him, this is the interpretation: 29 The days are coming when the Most High will deliver those who are on the earth. 30 And bewilderment of mind shall come over those who inhabit the earth. 31 They shall plan to make war against one another, city against city, place against place, people against people, and kingdom against kingdom. 32 When these things take place and the signs occur that I showed you before, then my Son will be revealed, whom you saw as a man coming up from the sea.
33 “Then, when all the nations hear his voice, all the nations shall leave their own lands and the warfare that they have against one another, 34 and an innumerable multitude shall be gathered together, as you saw, wishing to come and conquer him. 35 But he shall stand on the top of Mount Zion. 36 And Zion shall come and be made manifest to all people, prepared and built, as you saw the mountain carved out without hands. 37 Then he, my Son, will reprove the assembled nations for their ungodliness (this was symbolized by the storm) 38 and will reproach them to their face with their evil thoughts and the torments with which they are to be tortured (which were symbolized by the flames) and will destroy them without effort by means of the law (which was symbolized by the fire).
39 “And as for your seeing him gather to himself another multitude that was peaceable, 40 these are the nine tribes that were taken away from their own land into exile in the days of King Hoshea, whom Shalmaneser, king of the Assyrians, made captives; he took them across the river, and they were taken into another land. 41 But they formed this plan for themselves, that they would leave the multitude of the nations and go to a more distant region where no humans had ever lived, 42 so that there at least they might keep their statutes that they had not kept in their own land. 43 And they went in by the narrow passages of the River Euphrates. 44 For at that time the Most High performed signs for them and stopped the channels of the river until they had crossed over. 45 Through that region there was a long way to go, a journey of a year and a half, and that country is called Arzareth.
46 “Then they lived there until the last times, and now, when they are about to come again, 47 the Most High will stop the channels of the river again, so that they may be able to cross over. Therefore you saw the multitude gathered together in peace. 48 But those who are left of your people, who are found within my holy borders, shall be saved. 49 Therefore when he destroys the multitude of the nations that are gathered together, he will defend the people who remain. 50 And then he will show them very many wonders.”
51 I said, “O sovereign Lord, explain this to me: Why did I see the man coming up from the heart of the sea?”
52 He said to me, “Just as no one can explore or know what is in the depths of the sea, so no one on earth can see my Son or those who are with him, except in the time of his day. 53 This is the interpretation of the dream that you saw. And you alone have been enlightened about this, 54 because you have forsaken your own ways and have applied yourself to mine and have searched out my law, 55 for you have devoted your life to wisdom and called understanding your mother. 56 Therefore I have shown you these things, for there is a reward laid up with the Most High. For it will be that after three more days I will tell you other things and explain weighty and wondrous matters to you.”
57 Then I got up and walked in the field, giving great glory and praise to the Most High for the wonders that he did from time to time 58 and because he governs the times and whatever things come to pass in their seasons. And I stayed there three days. Chapter 13 NRSVUE
Clearly, the author has drawn on the traditions of Daniel in his depiction of the Man arising from the sea, whom God identifies his very own Son. Elsewhere, this figure is explicitly said to be the Messiah who appears like a lion:
36 Then I heard a voice saying to me, “Look in front of you and consider what you see.” 37 When I looked, I saw what seemed to be a lion roused from the forest, roaring, and I heard how it uttered a human voice to the eagle and spoke, saying, 38 “Listen, and I will speak to you. The Most High says to you, 39 ‘Are you not the one that remains of the four beasts that I had made to reign in my world, so that the end of my times might come through them? 40 You, the fourth that has come, have conquered all the beasts that have gone before, and you have held sway over the world with great terror and over all the earth with grievous oppression, and for so long you have lived on the earth with deceit. 41 You have judged the earth but not with truth, 42 for you have oppressed the meek and injured the peaceable; you have hated those who tell the truth and have loved liars; you have destroyed the homes of those who brought forth fruit and have laid low the walls of those who did you no harm. 43 Your insolence has come up before the Most High and your pride to the Mighty One. 44 The Most High has looked at his times; now they have ended, and his ages have reached completion. 45 Therefore you, eagle, will surely disappear, you and your terrifying wings, your most evil little wings, your malicious heads, your most evil talons, and your whole worthless body, 46 so that the whole earth, freed from your violence, may be refreshed and relieved and may hope for the judgment and mercy of him who made it.’” Chapter 11 NRSVUE
While the lion was saying these words to the eagle, I looked 2 and saw that the remaining head had disappeared. The two wings that had gone over to it rose up and set themselves up to reign, and their reign was brief and full of tumult. 3 When I looked again, they were already vanishing. The whole body of the eagle was burned, and the earth was exceedingly terrified…
31 “And as for the lion whom you saw rousing up out of the forest and roaring and speaking to the eagle and reproving him for his unrighteousness, and as for all his words that you have heard, 32 this is the Messiah whom the Most High has kept until the end of days, who will arise from the offspring of David and will come and speak with them. He will denounce them for their ungodliness and for their wickedness and will display before them their contemptuous dealings. 33 For first he will bring them alive before his judgment seat, and when he has reproved them, then he will destroy them. 34 But in mercy he will set free the remnant of my people, those who have been saved throughout my borders, and he will make them joyful until the end comes, the day of judgment, of which I spoke to you at the beginning. 35 This is the dream that you saw, and this is its interpretation. 36 And you alone were worthy to learn this secret of the Most High. 37 Therefore write all these things that you have seen in a book, put it in a hidden place, 38 and you shall teach them to the wise among your people, whose hearts you know are able to comprehend and keep these secrets. 39 But as for you, wait here seven days more, so that you may be shown whatever it pleases the Most High to show you.” Then he left me. Chapter 12 NRSVUE
It shouldn’t come as a surprise that the NT writings describe Jesus as resembling a Lion, as well as identifying him God’s Messiah, the Son of the Most High, and the Danielic Son of Man:
“‘He will be great, and will be called the Son of the Most High; and the Lord God will give to him the throne of his father David, and he will reign over the house of Jacob for ever; and of his kingdom there will be no end.’ And Mary said to the angel, ‘How can this be, since I have no husband?’ And the angel said to her, ‘The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you; therefore the child to be born will be called holy, the Son of God.’” Luke 1:32-35 Revised Standard Version Catholic Edition (RSVCE)
“And when he saw Jesus from afar, he ran and worshiped him; and crying out with a loud voice, he said, ‘What have you to do with me, Jesus, Son of the Most High God? I adjure you by God, do not torment me.’” Mark 5:6-7 RSVCE
“And then they will see the Son of man coming in clouds with great power and glory. And then he will send out the angels, and gather his elect from the four winds, from the ends of the earth to the ends of heaven.” Mark 13:26-27 RSVCE
“But he was silent and made no answer. Again the high priest asked him, ‘Are you the Christ, the Son of the Blessed?’ And Jesus said, ‘I am; and you will see the Son of man sitting at the right hand of Power, and coming with the clouds of heaven.’” Mark 14:61-62 RSVCE
“… Then I turned to see the voice that was speaking to me, and on turning I saw seven golden lampstands, and in the midst of the lampstands one like a son of man, clothed with a long robe and with a golden girdle round his breast; his head and his hair were white as white wool, white as snow; his eyes were like a flame of fire, his feet were like burnished bronze, refined as in a furnace, and his voice was like the sound of many waters; in his right hand he held seven stars, from his mouth issued a sharp two-edged sword, and his face was like the sun shining in full strength. When I saw him, I fell at his feet as though dead. But he laid his right hand upon me, saying, ‘Fear not, I am the first and the last, and the living one; I died, and behold I am alive for evermore, and I have the keys of Death and Hades.’” Revelation 1:7, 12-18 RSVCE
“Then one of the elders said to me, ‘Weep not; lo, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, the Root of David, has conquered, so that he can open the scroll and its seven seals.’” Revelation 5:5 RSVCE
“Then I looked, and lo, a white cloud, and seated on the cloud one like a son of man, with a golden crown on his head, and a sharp sickle in his hand. And another angel came out of the temple, calling with a loud voice to him who sat upon the cloud, ‘Put in your sickle, and reap, for the hour to reap has come, for the harvest of the earth is fully ripe.’ So he who sat upon the cloud swung his sickle on the earth, and the earth was reaped.” Revelation 14:14-16 RSVCE
In the final installment I will focus on specific OT texts which refer to one particular divine Messenger whom the inspired prophets expressly call YHWH God.
FURTHER READING
Yahweh Son of the Most High! Pt. 1, Pt. 2
Yahweh Son of the Most High: Yahweh is the Most High!
EARLY CHURCH & DANIEL’S MESSIANISM
Daniel’s Son of Man as the Messiah
The Son of Man Rides the Clouds Pt. 1a, Pt. 1b, Pt. 2a, Pt. 2b
Appearances of Christ in Daniel
A Divine Messiah That Suffers and Reigns! Pt. 2