Yes, very much so.
There are far too many references to cite, but here are some of the things he did and said, and the consequences. If you would like to know chapter and verse, I suggest you message me.
1. Jesus forgave others' sin. In the Jewish faith this was possible only for God and then only by sacrifice at the Temple. Yet Jesus forgave in his own name.
2. Jesus performed miracles in his own name, not God's. Moses' miracles, for example (eg the parting of the Red Sea) were performed in God's name, not Moses.
3. Jesus taught with his own authority ("You have heard it said...but I tell you this...")
4. Jesus used the name of God (YHWH = 'I am') on many occasions (eg 'I am the way, the truth and the life...', '...before Abraham was, I am...' and so on.
5. Jesus claimed that he and the Father 'are one', that 'I am in the Father and the Father is in me..', that 'he who has seen me has seen the Father' - plus many other identifications with the Father God and Holy Spirit.
6. The disciples recognised Jesus as God incarnate, After the resurrection, even Thomas the doubter fell to his knees before him and called Jesus 'My Lord and my God'.
7. Jesus accepted worship -- unthinkable blasphemy if he wasn't who he said he was.
8. Even those who opposed him charged him with claiming to be God. On several occasions they tried to stone him for blasphemy, only finallly managing the execution of Jesus for blasphemy (claiming to be God) after a clandestine plot against him.
This is all well and good, if Jesus's claims were not substantiated. We could say that he's deluded, a fool, or deceitful. But his life shows the exact opposite. He was down to earth, a perfect human being and displayed no signs of being a fool or deluded - quite the opposite, in fact. The resurrection was his last great miracle that turned the lives of the disciples and all those who follow him even today totally upside down. No man before or since has had that effect on humanity.
So his claims were truly substantiated, and that Jesus, we have to conclude, not only claimed to be divine, but wasdivine - Emmanuel, God in human form.
Yes, Jesus claims to be the Son of God in the Bible.
The son of Jehovah god
Yes, Jesus did explicitly claim to be the Son of God during his time on Earth.
Yes, according to the Bible, Jesus did explicitly claim to be the Son of God during his time on Earth.
Yes, Jesus did claim to be the Son of God in his teachings and interactions during his time on Earth. This claim is recorded in the Bible in various instances, such as in the Gospel of John where Jesus refers to himself as the Son of God.
Yes, Jesus does claim to be God in the Bible. In the Gospel of John, Jesus says, "I and the Father are one" (John 10:30), indicating his divine nature.
Unless the rabbi was a Messianic Jew he would disagree. A Catholic priest would agree with the claim that Jesus was God.
Jesus claimed to be the Son of God during his ministry on Earth, as recorded in the New Testament of the Bible.
Yes, Jesus claimed to be the Son of God in the Bible, specifically in the New Testament. He referred to God as his Father and spoke of his divine relationship with God.
They didn't, the people did- (we did) he claim he was the son of God
In the Bible, Jesus claims to be the Son of God in the Gospel of John, specifically in John 10:36.
Yes, Jesus claimed to be God in the synoptic gospels by referring to himself as the Son of God and using divine titles and attributes.