Talk:Sons of God in Genesis 6

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Helpful articles from multiple perspectives

Angels intermarrying with humans

Sethites intermarrying with Cainites

Rulers intermarrying with commoners

Neutral chart of relevant information

Avatar.png Joey 17:32, 21 February 2012 (UTC)

Haven’t parsed these articles yet: [1], [2], [3], [4], [5], [6], [7], [8], [9], [10], [11], [12], [13]Avatar.png Joey 23:56, 22 February 2012 (UTC)

One line of reasoning I haven’t documented

One line of reasoning for the “angels intermarrying with human women” theory which I haven’t documented is that sexual relations between angels and humans is not entirely unplausible given that angels are seen eating and doing other human-like things and that angels were sought by the Sodomites for homosexual acts. Personally, I think this is baloney, which is why I didn't document it the first time I saw it, but it seems to keep coming up in the literature over and over again, so it has a wide base of proponents and should probably be documented here whether I like it or not. — Avatar.png Joey 05:47, 22 February 2012 (UTC)

Definition of “sons”

I found this extremely interesting from the Trevor Major article above. Maybe has implications for my God the Father topic even more than for this topic:

The word “son” (ben) has a far wider meaning in Hebrew than it does in contemporary English use, and occurs some 4,850 times in the Hebrew Bible. The most common meaning is of a son, as in the male offspring of his parents (e.g., Genesis 5:4), but in general terms the word refers to a variety of rela-tionships in which a person or object belongs to, or is influenced by, someone or something. A son could be a citizen of a city (Psalm 147:13), a student (Proverbs 1:10), or an arrow (Job 41:28). The expression “sons of God” refers to some entity somehow connected or related to God, but whether by birth, creation, ownership, or characteristic, it is impossible to say from the phrase alone. The only way to examine the issue further is to study the use of the phrase in Scripture and other literature sources.

Avatar.png Joey 22:36, 20 February 2012 (UTC)

Reformed Forum episode

There’s a Reformed Forum episode on this where they discuss Meredith Kline’s view that the sons of God are tyrannical kings from the line of Cain and the daughters of men are the daughters of Seth: Reformed Forum Podcasts: The Sons of God and Daughters of Man in Genesis 6.

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