Wrong. The milk in the cereal is fully milk, and the cereal is fully cereal. Fully != only.
Hypostatic union, two natures forming one person.
C = A+B
A is fully A, and B is fully B, but C is neither fully A nor B.
Wrong, that is not the way the Greek works. The form for that would be
legein auto.
http://isv.org/catacomb/john_20v28.htm
Perhaps - you know more Greek than I do (for now :noid
so I'll submit that Thomas was calling him God in this verse. That still doesn't address the issue that Jesus himself did not claim to be God - but rather God's Son. John 10:30-36. That also doesn't address the fact that the gospel of John was written in order to support the idea that Christ was the Son of God (not God).
I'll sumbit that there is some support for the idea that Christ is God, but the majority view presented in scripture (and the logical view) is that Christ is the Son of God - that is who he claimed to be.
No. A definite article in front of theos means a lot. It is the conventional way of referring to God in the gospel. Especially not in 20:28, where there is a double article ho kurios mou kai ho theos mou.
The double article doesn't seem like anything special - the articles go with two different words - and the words are connected (and distinguished) by "kai." But perhaps this simply something I have yet to learn about :idunno:
Christ did not descend from heaven, he was incarnated, that is a big difference. You are confusing the historical Jesus Christ with the eternal Christ/Word. No one has seen the Word non-incarnated. Where does Jesus say that he is going in John 8:21-30:
"Where I am going, you cannot come"
Do you divide the man Jesus from the divine Christ? I know there are some historical forms of Christianity that do that, but haven't debated anyone who holds that view myself.
At any rate, my position is that Jesus is the Christ and the Logos - they aren't seperable, they are one in the same (at least as of his being born as a man). Christ was sent by God to us - whether he was also incarnated is another matter that isn't entirely relevant. I have already shown in scripture, in John no less, that Christ was sent to us from God. I'm sure I could find more verses which repeat that sentiment if you want?
That Jesus went where others could not follow is also irrelevant - because regardless of where he came from and where he went to - he was for a time amongst us, and he was seen by men. God, on the other hand, cannot be seen by men - for to see God is to die. Yet lots of people saw Jesus, and a couple of his disciples even saw him in his glorified form on the mountain.
Ex 33:18-23 Then Moses said, "Now show me your glory." 19 And the LORD said, "I will cause all my goodness to pass in front of you, and I will proclaim my name, the LORD, in your presence. I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion. 20 But," he said, "you cannot see my face, for no one may see me and live." 21 Then the LORD said, "There is a place near me where you may stand on a rock. 22 When my glory passes by, I will put you in a cleft in the rock and cover you with my hand until I have passed by. 23 Then I will remove my hand and you will see my back; but my face must not be seen."
And Isaiah sees God in Isaiah 6 btw, so does Ezekiel in Ezekiel 1
Whether one can see God or not depends on the theological school behind the text.
Isaiah 6 is prophecy first of all, so what he saw needs to be taken with a grain of salt - he wasn't really in the presence of the LORD (or at least I wouldn't say he was). Also, as Isaiah 6 says
"Woe to me!" I cried. "I am ruined! For I am a man of unclean lips, and I live among a people of unclean lips, and my eyes have seen the King, the LORD Almighty." 6 Then one of the seraphs flew to me with a live coal in his hand, which he had taken with tongs from the altar. 7 With it he touched my mouth and said, "See, this has touched your lips; your guilt is taken away and your sin atoned for." It's not a matter of the school behind the text - its an established fact in Judaism.
And he didn't actually see the LORD in Ezekial 1 - it doesn't say he did. He saw "the
likeness of the glory of the LORD. When I saw it, I fell facedown, and I heard the voice of one speaking."
Kabod/doxa is not a mere revelation, it is Gods own presence in the world.
I don't deny that God was literal WITH Christ, but he was not Christ - and he left him on the cross when he took on the sins of the world.
And we are? Who canonized the NT? Was it God? And how is Arianism any different?
Men canonized the bible. Arianism isn't any different, except that I believe it to be a much more logical (and historic) position. Like with the trinity - I don't hold the arianist model for God to be salvific, merely a lot more logical and scriptural.
Carmen Christi is Philippians 2:5-11. And the Greek word morphe does not mean image or representative, it means physical external entity or form.
I thought so, but I'd never heard it by that name before. God is not physical but spirit. At any rate, all it is saying is that he is in the form of God - not that he is God. This sentiment goes right along with him being the image of God.
Colossians 1:15 He is the
image of the invisible God, the
firstborn over all creation.
2 Corinthians 4:4 The god of this age has blinded the minds of unbelievers, so that they cannot see the light of the gospel of the glory of
Christ, who is the image of God.
It cannot. Any academic of the NT will disagree with you on that.
I'll submit that you are right on this passage for now. I'll need to study more Greek before I can effectively debate one way or the other on this matter.
It is a mystery in the sense that it is merely concept attempting to describe the biblical revelation, revelation itself is deeper than the abstract concept of it.
I'm not lifting up man's logic to revelation any more than you or the heretics did. Revelation is meaningless without logic and interpretation and that is necessarily human regardless of which side you are on.
I do not think that the church fathers disregard the Son of God title. You seem to attempt to portray it that way. They are simply having a different understanding of what Son of God is.
You have a good position on what the trinity is, even if I disagree with you on whether it is the best biblical model :thumb:
However, it is a fact that trinitarians have redefined biblical terms to suite their theology. Here's another example: the title "Father." Trinitarians would have you interpret scripture wherever it says "Father" to be refering to one of the three 'personages' of God. However the scriptural usage of the term Father is as a title for the whole of God, not some 'personage' or part of God. They use this eisegeses to write off passages which clearly distinguish Christ from the Father - or even from God (saying that the Father "personage" is implied).