Hi
@Dogknox20
CONCERNING THE VARIOUS VERSIONS OF THE TRINITY OF GOD THE FATHER, THE SON, AND THE HOLY SPIRIT.
Your response in post #204 is simply an ad hominem and is irrelevant to my points.
For examples : Regarding :
THE HARM IN MISREPRESENTATION AND THE PROBLEM WITH STRAWMEN
Willing misrepresentation does not educate anyone and offering irrelevant strawmen leaves the actual beliefs of the people it is aimed at, untouched.
While you claim that Christians must believe in the version of the trinity you believe in or else those believers in Christ "
are not Christians", this is simply an illogical form of name calling that smacks of misplaced pride rather than any logical argument.
When multiple other posters pointed out the fallacy of this claim, your response has been to simply repeat the claim rather than to offer rational and objective data.
The inability to see that your interpretation of religion has no advantage over the religion of the earliest Judeo-Christians with their interpretations is not helpful historically.
I also believe that the willingness of a christian to misrepresent others does not go unnoticed by investigators of religion and agnostics and athiests who see forms of dishonesty as a justification to justify their own opinion that Christians
in general are willing to misrepresent and mischaracterize and are therefore not to be trusted.
My point was that mischaracterizations are, in this way, another mechanism used to justify dismissing christian religion in general.
Misusing the texts and offering silly interpretations of the Christian text does not help, but causes the same damage to Christian credibility.
For example, you say of 2 Peter 2:1-2 :
"Clear the next verse tells us.. The Catholic Church is "The Way Of Truth"! 2 Peter2:2 Many will follow their depraved conduct and will bring the way of truth into disrepute. (Dogknox20, in post #204)
This verse does not speak of the roman (Catholic) schism of later centuries that became the roman "Catholic Church".
It is, instead, a perfect example of the very principle that I am trying to point out :
Improper (depraved) conduct by Christians (such as misrepresenting other Christians or making false claims)
"will bring the way of truth into disrepute".
Improper behavior (and improper claims) by Christians was not helpful when 2 Pet 2:2 was written, and it is not helpful nowadays. The scriptures that speak of "false teachers" applied as much to the later organization the became the roman "Catholic" Church as to any other organization.
Making claims that essentially mean "
All Christians who do not believe in the trinity Dogknox20 believes in are not 'real' Christians." was not a doctrine of early Christianity but remains an arbitrary, self-centered, and silly rule and tells us more about the personality of the claimant than it does a n authentic historical doctrine.
The second point I made is that
2) THE EARLIEST CHRISTIANS AND THEIR CHRISTIANITY ARE MORE LIKELY TO REPRESENT AUTHENTIC CHRISTIANITY THAN THE LATER ROMAN SCHISM
The roman "Catholic" organization of the later centuries is not the same organization that Christ started in the earliest days of the Christian movement.
The early Christian movement was not a political movement.
The early Christian movement was not essentially a political organization.
The early Christian movement was not bent on gaining political power.
The early Christian movement was not bent on gaining wealth.
The early Christian movement did not attempt to obtain political power and wealth through oppression.
The later organization that became the Roman "Catholic Church" WAS a political movement (religious, but political),
the Roman "Catholic Church" WAS bent on gaining political power,
the Roman "Catholic Church" WAS bent on gaining wealth, and
the Roman "Catholic Church" DID these things by oppression and slavery.
To claim that the organization that did these things had the correct model of the trinity and all others were not Christians is, simply because that schizm is "old", is, historically, incoherent.
Of course there are Christians who believe in different models of the trinity.
I do not think the earliest Judeo-Christians with their model of the trinity "were not Christians" simply because they described a different trinity than that of the later models created by later Christian movements.
Clear
δρειδρδρω και φυφυτζω