Thanks for that connection, mr copper! That lends an entirely different connotation to that phrase. Was St. Paul evoking the Name of God in his statement above--albeit with the necessary qualifier gratia Dei (by the grace of God) to show that we are made in the image and likeness of God?
I'm still trying to wrap my head around this---that St. Paul actually appropriated the Name of God and used in reference to himself---although with the qualifier of the grace of God, but this really seems to be the case.
I looked up Exodus 3:14 in the Latin Vulgate and bingo, there's almost exactly the same phrase from the Lord Himself to Moses:
Dixit Deus ad Moysen: Ego sum qui sum.
I imagine if there were any Jews in the audience well-acquainted with the Pentateuch, as they almost certainly would have been, might have been a bit scandalized by St. Paul's boldness.
The more I think about it, the more I like this metaphor. Switch out "grace" for "spinach," and about half of the New Testament is reducible to a Popeye cartoon.
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