The NT has five models of Jesus, each of which disagrees at key points with the other four. The trap about trying to invent a single Jesus by picking and choosing the characteristics you like is that all you end up with is a sixth model that disagrees with the other five.
I strongly agree with
@Eli G's comment (#2530) on this. This concept of a 5 or 6 different Jesuses not only stretches but borders on snapping the bounds of credulity.
I had a relative pass away not too long ago. During the funeral service several people brought prepared statements to the microphone. Some talked of their shared childhood, others talked about the times they got in trouble, and still others talked about the influence he had in their lives, and the times they laughed and cried together. There were (I believe) 3 prepared and 3 spontaneous, and neither account was the same except in small details: like the hill they grew up on, his favorite sports team, his go-to drink, and how he had been a positive influence on all of them. No one left the service thinking they had just described 6 different people, and certainly no one thought to combine all 6 testimonies into a 7th.
That doesn't alter the coincidence of ideas from Gnosticism and ideas found in Paul and John, Jesus as pre-existing in heaven with God, Jesus as maker of the material universe, Jesus as intermediary between man and very distant God.
Jesus, from the standpoint of the historic Christian church, is God in the flesh. That strikes me as a very personal and not a distant God. Even in the Old Testament, God came and resided with His people, even to the point of speaking with them directly. We needed an intermediary because of sin, and not because we lived in a physical universe as the Gnostics claimed. I see Gnosticism rejected rather than embraced by Paul and John. Historically, Gnosticism was denounced by Christians as heresy.
What I observe with believers, though, is that they constantly wish 'interpretations' on it that comply with their particular take on Christianity, much of which, I'd say, is what they were taught attending church.
We all have influences, either by the church, schools, neighborhood, country, relatives and friends that are part of our immediate orbit. We interpret the world as they interpret ours.
What I like though is that the forum provides a platform where we can talk about our influences and what we believe, so I appreciate the time spent talking with you and others, no matter how much we may disagree.
Of course, we could all stand to be just a bit more agreeable...
Let's look at the verse:
Philippians 2:9-11: "Therefore God has highly exalted him and bestowed on him the name that is above every name, so that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father"
No, before we get bogged in the details again, first quote me Paul saying "Jesus is God", and the Jesus of Mark saying "I am God" and the Jesus of Matthew saying "I am God" and the Jesus of Luke saying "I am God" and the Jesus of John saying "I am God".
No, no... you are taking away the best part of this thread. The OP states specifically that "Jesus is NOT God" which squarely puts the onus on the OP to prove their point.
Exactly my point is the deity of jesus, Jesus is not God. I was a non-believer and had a mind of show me when I first read the Bible. At no time when I read the Bible thought that Jesus was ever God from reading the scriptures. It was when I atteneded main stream Church I was introduced to the Trinity and the idea Jesus was God. The Bible does not teach Jesus is God but man doctrine. Hope this helps in your questions to my thread.
Every comment Andy posted was refuted long before he abandoned it and/or I showed up here. It's up to the OP to evidence any point they wish to make especially when it's the initial point of the OP.
Out loud and proud, of course, not playing around with other words like "Lord" (which Paul clearly distinguishes from "God").
Yes, the onus is on the OP to show where Jesus said, out loud and proud "I am not God" or perhaps where he said "I am not Lord". Lacking that, perhaps they can show where the Father says the same about Jesus.
As I said, all that gets you is the Jesus of Mark and the Jesus of Matthew saying, "Me, me, why have I forsaken me?" and all four gospel Jesuses saying, "If it be my will, let this cup pass from me."
"Me, me, why have I forsaken me?" is EXACTLY why Modalsim was rejected as heresy. "Me, me..." is what you get when Jesus and/or the Spirit are "manifestations" of God.
You may not have noticed the subtle but rather vast difference between Monarchist Modalism, where Jesus IS the Father, and Trinitarianism, which states Jesus is NOT the Father.
Tertullian, (150 ~ 220 AD) of Carthage wrote extensively against Modalism.
And for the reasons I provided previously, the Trinity doctrine itself is not only incoherent, a nonsense, but admitted out loud to be so, albeit by using the euphemism "a mystery in the strict sense".
You misunderstand the Catholic church's use of the word "mystery". It simply means divine revelation that would not have been attainable by our own human reason.
The mysteries of God can only be revealed through the wisdom of God. They are not attainable using human reason or scientific means.
1 Corinthians 1:23-25 but we preach Christ crucified, unto Jews a stumbling block, and unto Gentiles foolishness; but unto them that are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God, and the wisdom of God.
And no, things beyond our understanding are not "a nonsense" and to think so would be the height of vanity.
Unsurprisingly there was a push on to give Jesus god-status from as early as the 2nd century. Indeed the author of John is setting a course to distinguish the God of his Jesus from the Jewish God. (Paul had already done an analogous thing when he abandoned the covenant of circumcision.) However, as I keep pointing out to you, the claim that Jesus is God is mentioned nowhere in the NT, wasn't made official until the 4th century, and in its adopted form is incoherent, for the reasons I linked you and no doubt more.
Now that is "a nonsense"!
I just showed that the early church believed Jesus is God. There it is, a church in 230 AD located in norther Israel. The worshipers there certainly did not get the idea from the Jews or the Romans. In fact, Tertullian states it came from the Statement of Faith that all Christians partook in.
So the idea Jesus is God was part and parcel of the early church, and the idea of the Trinity was right there with it. Tertullian wrote about the Trinity even before the creation of the Megiddo mosaic. As pointed out by Evans, Tertullian points out how scripture talks about God, and goes on to summarize the teaching of scripture on the persons of the
trinity, and their relationship, thereby being the first to explicitly recognize the doctrine of the Trinity. Speaking Adversus (against) Praxean:
Else why is Christ called Man,
and Son of Man, if he has nothing that is man's, and nothing
derived from man?--unless perchance either man is something
other than flesh, or man's flesh is derived from somewhere else
than from man, or Mary is something other than human, or
Marcion's god is a man. Unless one of these suppositions were
true, Christ could not be described in the Scripture as man except
with reference to his flesh, nor as Son of Man except with
reference to some human parent: as neither could he be described as
God without the Spirit of God, nor as the Son of God without
God for his Father. Thus the official record of both substances
represents him as both man and God: on the one hand born, on
the other not born: on the one hand fleshly, on the other spiritual:
on the one hand weak, on the other exceeding strong: on the one
hand dying, on the other living.
"For He was speaking to those in conjunction with whom He was making man and in whose likeness He was making him - with the Son on the one hand, who was to put on " man," with the Spirit, on the other hand, who was to hallow man - as with servants and eyewitnesses, in accordance with the unity of the Trinity."
So we have the earliest discovered Christian church, on or before 230 AD, worshiping "God Jesus Christ" and we Tertullian with the earliest known mention of the Trinity which he states arises on the Statement of Faith he learned when he was converted as a pagan to Christianity.
All these things and you say, 2000 years later, that there is no mention of Jesus as God in the scriptures?
That also stretches any measure of reasonable credulity.
You are confusing the
formalization of the Trinity doctrine, which occurred after the formalization of our biblical canon, and claiming this somehow constituted the ORIGIN of Trinity doctrine which is EASILY demonstrated as FALSE.
The Trinity doctrine no more originated in 4th century Nicaea than did the biblical canon. Both were formulated long before.
Unsurprisingly there was a push on to give Jesus god-status from as early as the 2nd century.
Actually, this unsurprising push came long before. Christ told his followers to go and preach throughout the nations and we see Tertullian discussing the Trinity in Carthage shortly after.
Jesus can have a magic pet dog named Benson, if that's what you want. I won't argue.
Anyway, to address your question ─
1. Paul's version of Jesus
2. Mark's version of Jesus
3. Matthew's version of Jesus
4. Luke's version of Jesus
5. John's version of Jesu
In order to get your 5 versions of Jesus, I think it best we talk with your magic dog. I won't argue with anything he has to say.