“David himself calls him Lord. So how is he his son?” And the great throng heard him gladly.”
David himself calls him Lord. How then can he be his son? The large crowd listened to him with delight — the logical conclusion is stated: if David calls the Messiah Lord, in what sense is the Messiah David's son? The answer Jesus implies but does not state is that the Messiah is both — son of David (human lineage) and David's Lord (divine identity). Romans 1:3–4 will make the full answer explicit. The crowd's delight communicates that the teaching's quality and its implicit critique of the scribal inadequacy are equally appreciated.
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Mark 12:37
“David himself calls him Lord. So how is he his son?” And the great throng heard him gladly.”
David himself calls him Lord. How then can he be his son? The large crowd listened to him with delight — the logical conclusion is stated: if David calls the Messiah Lord, in what sense is the Messiah David's son? The answer Jesus implies but does not state is that the Messiah is both — son of David (human lineage) and David's Lord (divine identity). Romans 1:3–4 will make the full answer explicit. The crowd's delight communicates that the teaching's quality and its implicit critique of the scribal inadequacy are equally appreciated.
David himself calls him Lord. How then can he be his son? The large crowd listened to him with delight — the logical conclusion is stated: if David calls the Messiah Lord, in what sense is the Messiah David's son? The answer Jesus implies but does not state is that the Messiah is both — son of David (human lineage) and David's Lord (divine identity). Romans 1:3–4 will make the full answer explicit. The crowd's delight communicates that the teaching's quality and its implicit critique of the scribal inadequacy are equally appreciated.