NWL
Active member
It doesn't matter what the reason, it doesn't help anything. I too have seen it plenty on TOL, but such rarely does anything except show a bit of exasperation when someone doesn't get it.
Whilst you're entitled to your opinion, I disagree with you. People need to know when they or their reasoning is stupid, lacking good sense. Beloved57 has again replied to me saying "U can't do it can u?", in reference to me not being able to show a scripture that states Jesus isn't the 'one true' and 'living' God, despite me clearly admitting and explaining the reason why I or anyone could never do such a thing, as literature in general rarely denies the negative. Insanity has been defined as doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results, Beloved57 repeats himself over and over despite me clearly answering his question and explaining why his line of thinking is silly, still, he chooses to persist, he is acting in unintelligent and in a stupid manner, hopefully, me telling him shows this.
Only some of them. If I only read what a Unitarian reads, then I'd agree, but the rest of scriptures give a larger and different picture. To ignore that Thomas, for instance, clearly said "my Lord and my God" "To Jesus" is to ignore the rest of scriptures. I have a bit of empathy, but it stops when scriptures give details. Unitarianism ultimately, becomes polytheism and I'm strictly monotheistic because I believe scripture demands it and that there can be no exceptions. When the Lord Jesus Christ quoted 'ye are gods,' it is caveated in a strict and limited sense as an adjective, not a noun (in some respects, the image of our Creator). Anything further is polytheism and outside of Jewish/Christian monotheism.
As I tried to express in my last reply to you, if you think unitarianism becomes polytheism then what do you do with Exo 7:1 where it calls Moses God, with Ps 8:5 when is calls Angels Gods (compare Hebrews 2:7), when it calls a human King God in Psalms 45:6? Surely you don't see any of these beings as God/god, but rather see them as gods in a different sense, you do this to harmonize the bible calling other beings GODS, and this is where we differ. I accept scripture for what it states, there is "one God the Father", and this is exactly what I believe, you on the other hand see 1 Cor 8:6, as well as John 20:28, and instead of trying to harmonize scripture, as you'll do with Exo 7:1, Ps 8:5 and Ps 45:6, you merge John 20:28, claiming Jesus was almighty God according to the text, despite the outcome being contradictory. Planing stated you rejected the categories Paul speaks about in 1 Cor 8:4-6.
:doh: "Perfectly expressed" then 'not have the same soundness?' :nono: These are in-congruent.
What I said was in regard to your statement, "Most of us are caught between modalism and polytheism/Arian concepts. None of these express clearly what the scriptures convey", calm down.
You don't know what a run-on sentence is? Try not to let pride stand in the way on these issues. There is a strong evidence that Unitarians aren't as adept at grammar. Its a GOOD thing. Why? Because God reaches us through grace. You 'can' get scriptures wrong, and still be His. He makes and molds us in His image. I've met a good many ex-Unitarians/Arians. I admit that there are a few who cannot adequately explain the Triune view (trinitarian) at times. We don't believe in three gods (polytheism) either, just emphasize God's distinctions blurring the lines, but the triune view does see and agree with Modalists about there only being one God and Arians, that the Father is not the Son is not the Spirit.
No, it didn't know what a "R.O sentence" meant, a run-on sentence I do, however, the abbreviation got me. Let's assume my level of English disgustingly poor, lets pretend your ridiculous claim that "Unitarians aren't as adept at grammar" is also incorrect, even though some of the best scholarly work has been produced by unitarians (Thayer) and some of the smartest men in the world became unitarian when reviewing the evidence (Isaac Newton). Let's assume that your comments to me about my grammar isn't an attempt to 'put me down' or 'shame me', most probably because I called Beloved57 stupid, according to his reasoning. Next time you try and hit a nerve try or try and make someone seem stupid, try and use something a bit more damaging than them using a comma over a period/full stop. Usually when I write on these forums its at the dead of night without proofreading, please forgive any grammatical mistakes I make here on out.
Somewhat accurate, I haven't read all of your exchanges, however, I do recognize what he is saying, I believe. It is that 'unless' you could find very very clear proof that Jesus isn't God, that he'd not ever be persuade, such is the strength of his conviction. It isn't necessarily 'stupid' for that, just an insistence I think I understand.
I find it hard to believe you could have come to the conclusion you have based on what he's said, he's not asking for "very very clear proof that Jesus isn't God", he asking for proof where a scriture sttaes Jesus isn't two very specific terms, namely, the "one true" and "living" God. I made this extremely clear in my last reply to you and he's made the point extremely clear too, could it be your readining and comprehending skills are as bad as my writing skills? I think so.
Please find Beloved57 questions to me below, try and read and comprehend them more honestly this time, stop pretending he has a point, you know his reasoning here is dead in the water.
Beloved57 remarks to NWL:
So then you can not find a scripture that explicitly says Christ is not theone true and living God!
Where does it say that Christ is not the One True and Living God?
Show me a scripture that says Jesus is not the one only True God. You can't
Again, he clearly isn't asking for proof Jesus is not God, rather, he asking for 'explicit' texts that state Jesus is not the "one true" and "living God". Now tell me, is his reasoning here smart, or does it lack good sense in establishing whether or not Jesus is the 'one true' and 'living' God?
You are special pleading again. Terms mean something and you've called yourself a unit-arian already.
Rather than asserting I'm special pleading demonstrate how you think I am.
I agree with you, terms mean something, and yes I called myself a unitarian, I don't get your point here. If its to do with me saying in my last reply "the term 'Arianism' is a human invention" please do not take that to mean I do not accept man-made group identifications, since I do. The point I was making had to do with the language you used when you tried to make it seem like it is non-trinitarian groups that push the idea that other beings are referred to as 'GODS/gods' when it was not the case, it's the bible that pushes the idea that other beings are called gods and any other non-trinitarian groups.
The main points I made however you seemed to ignore, its the bible that states other beings exist separate from the 'one God' and yet are also called God and not any non-trinitarian group inventing the idea.
1 Corinthians 8:4So about eating food sacrificed to idols: We know that an idol is nothing at all in the world, and that there is no God but one. 5For even if there are so-called gods, whether in heaven or on earth (as there are many so-called gods and lords), 6yet for us there is only one God, the Father, from whom all things came and for whom we exist. And there is but one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom all things came and through whom we exist
Did I 'lie' or do you need to apologize? :think:
It's an important paragraph from scripture and marks a need in your life today. I pray you are open to Him, I'm not really anything but a messenger today. Scripture is our goal and we being changed by it is the need, to be conformed to His image.
What was your quote again, "Scripture calls allother gods 'so-called-gods", such a statement can only be taken to mean that any person called "god" in the bible who isn't the 'one God' are "so-called" gods. Or put more simply, anyone who isn't the 'one God' is not a real God. Now, wherein 1 Cor 8:4-6 does it state this, hmmm, oh that's right, such an idea is nowhere found in the passage.
The passage you read from is poor, since a clear parallel is being made by Paul accompany the term "lord" with "god" in v5. The term "lord" was as common in Jesus day as it is in our day, it could be used in relation to Men, husbands, fathers, elders, kings, slave owners among other things, there were many lords in Jesus day. So it's very unlikely Paul was trying to express that person called "Lords" in his day were 'so-called Lords'. The scripture states when read literally "even truly if indeed there are called gods, whether in heaven or on earth, as there are gods many and lords many yet to us one God the Father", nowhere do we actually see the term 'so-called' anywhere in the verse. Based on the raw form Paul clearly states "there are gods many", this is also what the bible clearly demonstrates.
When Moses was called God in Exo 7:1, or the Angels were called GODS in Ps 8:5 (compare Hebrews 2:7), or when a human king was called GOD in Ps 45:6, are they gods or are they 'so-called' gods?
Paraphrases are just 'okay.' I've no bone to pick when someone is at least trying to give meaning when they try and put it in English, but let's look:
First of all, the KJV is one of your better translations because they do word-for-word from Greek to English when possible. "Son" doesn't appear in the Greek text:
Act 20:28 .. τοῦ Θεοῦ, ἣν περιποιήσατο διὰ τοῦ ἰδίου αἵματος.
"God purchased through his own blood" Literally.
The KJV a better translation, you couldn't be more wrong. I'm aware the term "Son" does not appear in the texts, in fact, every translator would have known that so why do we find it in there verse, why are trinitarian scholars choosing to insert a word which would actually aid them with their theology. Hmm, could it be because they know God wasn't talking about his own blood but rather used blood to express that it was his seed, his own blood (anthropomorphic language), namely Jesus, that gave his life.
This is also where trinitarian logic falls apart, you claim the verse states and refers to God giving his own blood, literally referring to Jesus Christ as almighty God dying for us, but you don't believe God died for us, since, if I ask you how it was possible for God to die, you'll no doubt tell me Jesus divinity, his Godhood did not die, but rather it was his divinity that died. Yet, Acts 20:28 apparently speaking about Jesus as God states "God purchased [the church] through his own blood", expressing it WAS God that shed his blood and not ONLY Jesus humnity.
So which is it Lon, did Jesus in his divinity give his blood for us by dying as Acts 20:28 apparently expresses, or rather, does the "blood" mentioned refer to God the Father purchasing the church by means of his own blood through his son who is his blood?