Both
fundamentalist and non-fundamentalist biblical scholars, who have been
victims of Augustinian and Carolingian presuppositions, become prone
to misunderstandings of what they read in the Bible, especially when
terms and symbols denoting glorifications which produce prophets are
alluded to.
A classical example is 1 Cor. 12:26. Here St. Paul does not write, “If one is honored,” but “If one is glorified,”
i.e. has become a prophet. To be glorified means that one has seen the
Lord of Glory either before His incarnation or after, like Paul did on
his way to Damascus to persecute the Incarnate Lord of Glory’s
followers.
Another example is the phrase “kingdom
of God” which makes it a creation of God instead of the uncreated
ruling power of God. What is amazing is that the term “kingdom of God”
appears not once in the original Greek of the New Testament. Not
knowing that the “rule” or “reign of God” is the correct translation of
the Greek “Basileia tou Theou,” Vaticanians, Protestants and
even many Orthodox today, do not see that the promise of Christ to his
apostles in Mt.16:28, Lk. 9:27 and Mk. 9:1, i.e. that they will see
God’s ruling power, was fulfilled during the Transfiguration which
immediately follows in the above three gospels.
Here Peter, James and John see Christ
as the Lord of Glory i.e. as the source of God’s uncreated “glory” and
“basileia” i.e. uncreated ruling power, denoted by the uncreated cloud
or glory which appeared and covered the three of them during the Lord
of Glory’s Transfiguration. It was by means of His power of Glory that
Christ, as the pre-incarnate Lord (Yahweh) of Glory, had delivered
Israel from its Egyptian slavery and lead it to freedom and the land of
promise.
The Greek text does not speak about the “Basileion (kingdom) of God,” but about the “Basileia (rule or reign) of God,” by means of His uncreated glory and power.*
At His Transfiguration Christ clearly
revealed Himself to be the source of the uncreated Glory seen by Moses
and Elijah during Old Testament times and who both are now present at
the Transfiguration in order to testify to the three apostles that
Christ is indeed the same Yahweh of Glory, now incarnate, Whom the two
had seen in the historical past and had acted on behalf of Him.
source
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