Glad it 'took'...
Yes...
I would hope so...
The writer of this passage in Greek used Greek words which described what he was explaining, and harpazo and its cognates are pretty well understood... I mean, exploiting what one has stolen is a fair derivative of the primary meaning, but would not be definitive for the meaning of the text, yes?
I think the matter is far more profound... You see, He not only took on a human fallen body, but He also took on a fallen human soul... Had he kept His Divinity in the soul of His humanity and will, then He would not have had to overcome temptations, and then our ability to do so would not exist...
Whatever He did NOT take on, He did not heal for us in Himself, you see... So as a human person, he lived sinlessly in obedience to His Father in Heaven, and THAT connection was never lost, except at the end, when it was lost to His human eyes in the agony of the final minute on the cross...
So that the consequence of all this is that there are two minds working in one Divine Hypostasis/Person, and in the human mind, He forsook His Divine one... This is His kenosis... To take on what we have, that He heal it in his own virginal flesh and blood...
And on occassion, He does speak as God, and most of the time, as the Son of Man, and always in obedience to His Heavenly Father... So when He says He does not know something, He is speaking as man, not as God...
This means after we have attained union with Him... We cannot then inflate ourselves because "WE KNOW CHRIST AND YOU DON'T TOO BAD FOR YOU HA HA"... That will send us straight to hell...
I think I am beginning to see what you were wondering about in this thread's purposing...
Arsenios
right on Arsenios, this is what i mean in the triune post to BR tonight, i just can't put it in words properly yet. good post ! ! !