freelight
Eclectic Theosophist
Putting Jesus in the hot seat.......
Putting Jesus in the hot seat.......
Yes, when we consider Jesus having both a 'human' and 'divine' nature, and this is the wonderful mystery, conundrum and paradox we face, which church councils and theologians have pondered and debated over for centuries. Obviously from my POV...a Unitarian view is quite logical from within its own 'relational context', as well as a Trinitarian one (there are also different views which include aspects of both),...which presents a different 'arrangement' relationally,...and that's all we have here as far as the details and dynamic are concerned, besides the fundamental question of "in what way is Jesus divine?" - this compounds further into the question of how Jesus the Man is 'related' or 'joined' with this 'divinity',....and then the whole host of debated questions of just how much of Jesus is 'human' and how much is 'God'? - we dive into 'technical abstracts' :sherlock: - here the fun begins..... :surf:
In truth however, does it really matter how we 'slice & dice' Jesus nature, or what 'ratio' of humanity or divinity we give him? - since we cant prove any of this anyways :think: - as to how much this might affect our reception and practice of the religion he taught us to live...well that's a more pertinent inquiry.
And still the ole Unitarian/Trinitarian debate continues...and to what avail? Which is why I take a more 'transcendentalist' approach to this, over-riding any 'lock-down' on a dogmatic conclusion here, accepting the highest attributes and qualities of BOTH Jesus 'humanity' and 'divinity' - I'm quite happy allowing for BOTH to be fully potentialized and perfected, and allow the divine mystery of how Jesus (as both Son of Man and Son of God) is the perfect union of both. (note that will be enough to say, before any 'speculating' ensues, which fills our theological bowls with alphabet soup)
In-joy!
pj
Putting Jesus in the hot seat.......
The Jews had the same attitude towards Jesus, their minds were seared by the false sense of sacredness of the scripture written and redacted by the priest of former days.
It is because Jesus was, and will forever be, a duel nature personality on earth, one can find him speaking from two different perspectives while in the flesh.
After he resurrected himself, he spoke in the singular, by divine right.
Yes, when we consider Jesus having both a 'human' and 'divine' nature, and this is the wonderful mystery, conundrum and paradox we face, which church councils and theologians have pondered and debated over for centuries. Obviously from my POV...a Unitarian view is quite logical from within its own 'relational context', as well as a Trinitarian one (there are also different views which include aspects of both),...which presents a different 'arrangement' relationally,...and that's all we have here as far as the details and dynamic are concerned, besides the fundamental question of "in what way is Jesus divine?" - this compounds further into the question of how Jesus the Man is 'related' or 'joined' with this 'divinity',....and then the whole host of debated questions of just how much of Jesus is 'human' and how much is 'God'? - we dive into 'technical abstracts' :sherlock: - here the fun begins..... :surf:
In truth however, does it really matter how we 'slice & dice' Jesus nature, or what 'ratio' of humanity or divinity we give him? - since we cant prove any of this anyways :think: - as to how much this might affect our reception and practice of the religion he taught us to live...well that's a more pertinent inquiry.
And still the ole Unitarian/Trinitarian debate continues...and to what avail? Which is why I take a more 'transcendentalist' approach to this, over-riding any 'lock-down' on a dogmatic conclusion here, accepting the highest attributes and qualities of BOTH Jesus 'humanity' and 'divinity' - I'm quite happy allowing for BOTH to be fully potentialized and perfected, and allow the divine mystery of how Jesus (as both Son of Man and Son of God) is the perfect union of both. (note that will be enough to say, before any 'speculating' ensues, which fills our theological bowls with alphabet soup)
In-joy!
pj