csguy said:
There is no need to address every little point of the trinity. Besides - the 100% man 100% God thing is just as illogical as the rest of the trinity. Unless man = God, one cannot both be 100% man and 100% God. If one is equal amounts of both - then one is 50% man and 50% God.
That is a misunderstanding of what is meant. What is meant is that Jesus Christ had a fully human nature and a fully divine nature, not some mathematical statement about a 200% of a being.
It is the context from which we can derive that it is clearly and exclamation. He was doubting Christ and refused to believed that he had arrisen - then Christ appeared to him and proved it to him - and upon the realization that Christ had indeed came back he said "My Lord and my God."
Sorry, but that is wrong for many reasons. First reasons is that using the expression "My Lord!" or "My God!" as an expression of astonishment in the time of Jesus would be blasphemy to say the least, it is taking the name of God in vain, so reading it as an astonishment is anachronistic to say the least.
Second, the word used is
ho theos mou and not
theos mou, not god, but the God. Ho theos is only used about God himself.
Third, the statement is not said to everyone as one does when one expresses astonishment. The verse starts with "Thomas said to him" (
apekrithe Thomas which is a very specific form used of direct speech to one person.
Or as Professor of the New Testament Francis Moloney says it in his commentary on the gospel of John (Sacre Pagina: The Gospel of John pp.539-540):
"This
confession is not against something, but the final affirmation of the Christology of the gospel"
Actually, if you look up above at it in context it says:
"In the sight of God, who gives life to everything, and of Christ Jesus, who while testifying before Pontius Pilate made the good confession, I charge you 14to keep this command without spot or blame until the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ, 15which God will bring about in his own time—God, the blessed and only Ruler, the King of kings and Lord of lords, 16who alone is immortal and who lives in unapproachable light, whom no one has seen or can see. To him be honor and might forever. Amen."
"God" or "Jesus Christ" could be the antecedent for "he." The translators were able to determine the correct one based upon what is said of "he" - "[one] who lives in unapproachable light, whom no one has seen or can see." Does that sound like Jesus? No - Jesus came down from God and lived amongst us, and was seen by thousands if not millions throughout his life time. No - it is God who no one has seen or can see. The translators are thus correct here.
I disagree. Where is the Word of God in John 1:1? With God and have been with God since all eternity. What happened to Jesus after the resurrection? He ascended and assumed his place back at the right hand of the Father, where he always has been.
Basic logic tells us that one cannot be one's own father - Christ is necessarily not the Father who is the only God. Since he is not the Father - he is necessarily not the only true God.
Christ - a man - is identified as the mediator between God and men. As a mediator he is necessarily neither God nor one of the sinful men who need interceding before God - if God went directly to sinful man and sinful man to God, there would be no mediator.
Christ is the first born of creation, he is the wisdom of God - the first creation. It is through God's Wisdom/Logos that God created everything else. This is all in scripture as I have shown.
The early church was extremely diverse and did not take into account all the different views. Rather - those whom they disagreed with they wrote off as 'heretics' and destroyed their writings and scriptures. In particular the 'orthodox' church.
Basic logic? This is not exactly the same kind of father and son relationship , it is an image, not human biology. God did not have sex with Mary did he? If not, basic logic says that he can not be his father in that sense either.
He was the Father of Jesus through the miraculous conception through the Holy Spirit. That does not make Him the Father of the Word.
No one is denying that Jesus Christ was a man, that is not the question, the question is whether that was all he was.
Christ is not the firstborn of creation if you recognize that Christ was the Word of God. I'm sorry, but the language of John is clear, the Word has always been. The use of imperfect tense in John 1:1 is not an accident. The John commentary I quoted above put it well:
"Before the arche of Gen 1:1 there were only God, the waters of chaos, and darkness, but the author of the Fourth Gospel announces that even then the Word "was". The use of imperfect tense of the verb "to be" places the Word outside the limits of time and place, neither of which existed en arche." (Ibid. p.35)
This places the Word before the creation.
And yes the church was diverse and it wrote off people as heretics. I do not see that as proof for the heretics being correct in any way. They did not do it to be nasty, they did it because in the early church one needed to put the belief into a system and there were differing opinions and some had to be chosen over others. I think it is wrong to assume that the church were idiots, the fathers were dedicated believers and these issues were resolved in councils and decisions were made.
The Trinity is considered a mystery, a derivative description of what the Fathers found in the scriptures. I have to agree with them, because there are simply too many portrayals of Jesus as God himself in the scriptures. I accept that it can seem unclear in some parts of scripture, but the doctrine of merely an abstract in human language trying to capture a divine mystery.
He commands the sea in the synoptic gospels which is a clear image of God controlling the sea of chaos.
He is the glory (doxa, kabod) of God in the world according to John.
Thomas confesses that Jesus is Lord and God.
He is described as being in the form of God, being equal with Him in the Carmen Christi.
In Him the fullness of God dwelled according to Colossians. Dwell is used in the same way it is used to describe God dwelling in his Temple.