is a bit of a fortiori argument. If the Scripture (Ps. 82:6), “which cannot be broken,” applied the term “gods” to ordinary men, should not the term “Son of God” be allowable to Him whom the Father had set apart specially and sent into the world for an unusual mission? Jesus attempted to define His unity with the Father by saying that “the Father is in me, and I in the Father” (38). This statement was later repeated in His farewell address to the Twelve (14:11). It implied a unity of fellowship between
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