I was trying to be generous, but you're right ─ there's no coherent interpretation of the Trinity doctrine. Either 1+1+1=3 or ⅓+⅓+⅓ = 1. Ain't no middle way.
Of course! A husband and father who programs is 3 men, or 1/3 husband, 1/3 dad, and 1/3 programmer. Either 1+1+1=3 or ⅓+⅓+⅓ = 1. Ain’t no middle way.
Since neither of these “formulas” have anything to do with the Trinity let’s stick with the thread theme of whether Jesus is God. We can save the Trinity for another day.
No part of my argument says Jesus is deity. Exactly as Jesus said, nothing about Jesus is of himself deity. No question of 'how' arises.
“Exactly as Jesus said”? Are you referring to red letters only, and if so, what about the prophets? This makes no sense if you hold scripture as authoritative. However it does make sense if we must throw scripture under the bus when Jesus is not God... which is exactly my point.
No, once the Trinity doctrine applies, nothing like that can happen. For instance, Trinity Jesus never ceases to be 100% of God because that's his Trinitarian nature Again, Trinity Jesus doesn't worship the Father ─ if anyone, he worships God, and he's 100% of God and the equal of the Father and of the Ghost in all respects, so if he worships anyone, and he says he does, he worships himself. Again, Trinity Jesus says on the cross, Me, me, why have I forsaken me? Again, the Trinity Father has no better claim to being the Father than Jesus or the Ghost have, albeit no worse either.
English has many words for the Trinity sort of situation, but this is a family show so I'll settle for 'nonsense'.
Let’s stay focused Blü. We’re not talking about misshapen views of the Trinity. Asking a Trinitarian why he supports Tritheism is like asking a Muslim why they support Buddha. Instead, we’re talking about whether Jesus is God. We’ll have plenty of time to talk about the Trinity on another thread. Promise.
Nothing like that in my book. Please quote me the text on which you rely for that claim.
I previously asked how many Saviors, Lords, and Gods does scripture hold for mankind?
Yet Yahweh and Jesus are called:
- God
- King
- Beginning and End
- Savior
- Redeemer
- Lord
- Creator
As I said, the Tanakh is ambivalent on the topic eg going the other way ─
Ecclesiastes 3: 18 I said in my heart with regard to the sons of men that God is testing them to show them that they are but beasts. 19 For the fate of the sons of men and the fate of beasts is the same; as one dies, so dies the other. They all have the same breath, and man has no advantage over the beasts; for all is vanity. 20 All go to one place; all are from the dust, and all turn to dust again.
I see no problem here and no rebuttal of Daniel 12:2. Both men and beasts turn to dust after they die. Our fate, to the extent it mirrors the beast, is the same. Our bodies return to dust. But beasts were not made in the image of God, and the spirit of beasts do not rise up. In other words, the bodies of dead beasts can never be said to “sleep” because there is no resurrection of a body.
Job 14:10 But man dies, and is laid low; man breathes his last, and where is he? 11 As waters fail from a lake, and a river wastes away and dries up,12 so man lies down and rises not again; till the heavens are no more he will not awake, or be roused out of his sleep.
Another proof text lacking context? This is simply a lament by Job, not a treatise on the condition of the dead.
Psalm 146: 3 Put not your trust in princes, in a son of man, in whom there is no help. 4 When his breath departs he returns to his earth; on that very day his plans perish.
Correct. His
plans perish.
Ecclesiastes 9: 4 But he who is joined with all the living has hope, for a living dog is better than a dead lion. 5 For the living know that they will die, but the dead know nothing, and they have no more reward; but the memory of them is lost.
So a man dies and has no more reward, neither good nor bad? And have you really already forgotten those who have died around you? Again, no treatise on the state of the dead, but this verse is simply expressing the viewpoint of a worldly person, “a man living under the sun” (Ecclesiastes 9:3).
You can perceive Jesus as God to your heart's content, but the Tanakh will still have internal inconsistencies, the NT will still have internal inconsistencies, and the Tanakh and the NT will still be incompatible. (The Christian habit of pretending the Tanakh is really about Jesus is as nonsensical as the Trinity doctrine.)
Not if both Testaments are authoritative…a point you now freely abandon in order to show Jesus is not God. Again we arrive at the point of this thread, and we will keep arriving at this point no matter which circular route we take because there is no other point when both Testaments are authoritative.
Nope, you've misread your text. It says 'Greater love hath no MAN than this.' It says nothing to rule God out.
This assertion might make sense if man is love. But scripture tells us God is love, not man. How is the object greater than the source? So carrying your argument further, God was never the source of this love because, according to you, He was never on the cross! Since scripture flat out states God is love (1 John 4:8; 1 John 4:16), another way to read this is “Greater God hath no man than this, to lay his life down for his friends”, but only when we understand it is God that is the source of God, not man. Besides, this same assertion flutters and dies when we consider other verses like Romans 5:
6 You see, at just the right time, when we were still powerless, Christ died for the ungodly. 7 Very rarely will anyone die for a righteous person, though for a good person someone might possibly dare to die. 8 But Jesus God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.
The context here is of first person and not third party sacrifice. As you know,
personal is when I die, third-party is when the goat dies.
Verse 7 states “Very rarely will anyone die…”. It doesn’t say “Very rarely will we send anyone to die…” Who dies is
personal, not
objective. It is you, your very person that is dying. It is not someone else, it is your own life given for another.
Verse 8 keeps thematic harmony, not by telling us that it is
Jesus showing this same love by dying, but
God showing his
own love, the
exact same love described in verse 7, when Christ dies for our sins. So the question is not why God is “ruled out”, it is why God is “ruled in” if Jesus is not God. It is Christ that dies but it is God who demonstrates the love. And as we know, it is the one who dies
personally, and not the one who dies
vicariously that shows greater love.
Under the rules we agreed, scripture therefore wins and Jesus' many declarations that he's not God stand unchallenged.
I’m glad we can agree scripture wins, but once we look beyond the empty silo of proof texts and actually analyze scripture it becomes increasingly clear Jesus is God.