The connection would be almost certain if the word “devil” were
alike in both. But in all these narratives it is “demon,” there being in
Scripture but one devil.
The exceptions in the Revelation are only apparent. St. John does
not call Jesus the Son of man (i. 13), nor see Him, but only the type of
Him, standing (v. 6).
And this proves beyond question that He did not merely follow
Ezekiel in applying to himself the epithet as if it meant a son among
many sons of men, but took the description in Daniel for His own.
Ezekiel himself indeed never employs the phrase: he only records it.
It is also very natural that, in telling the story, he should remember
how, while hesitating to enter, he “stooped down” to gaze, in the
wild dawn of his new hope.
“Theology would have been spared much trouble concerning this
passage, and anxious timid souls unspeakable anguish, if men had
adhered strictly to Christ's own expression. For it is not a sin against
the Holy Ghost which is here spoken of, but blasphemy against the
Holy Ghost.”—Lange “Life of Christ,” vol. ii. p. 269.
Once besides in the New Testament this phrase was applied to
death. That was by St. Peter speaking of his own, when the thought
of the transfiguration was floating in his mind, and its voices lingered
unconsciously in his memory (2 Pet. i. 15, cf. ver. 17). The phrase,
though not unclassical, is not common.
The ingenious and plausible attempt to show that His death was
caused by a physical rupture of the heart has one fatal weakness.
Death came too late for this; the severest pressure was already relieved.