Greetings again Lon,
I find some of the terms of John 17:3-5 are interesting, and I doubt that it is teaching the Trinitarian or Arian concepts, or of the pre-existence of Jesus as God the Son or the Son of God.
John 17:3–5 (KJV): 3 And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent. 4 I have glorified thee on the earth: I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do. 5 And now, O Father, glorify thou me with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was.
A few comments /questions:
Verse 3 sets the context, and this states that God the Father is the only true God and therefore Jesus is not God the Son.
Remember I HALF agree with you. Where we depart is where YOU start speculating INSTEAD of just reading what it means. As soon as YOU stop making assumptions, you'll be Biblical. Notice that English also, conveys equivalence 'and' here. For a great Greek discussion,
read here.
Verse 3, God has sent Jesus Christ, and therefore Jesus is not God the Son.
Again, 'assumption' Trevor. "IF" we just stick with the text, 'we' don't make mistakes. "IF" we make assumptions, we have an awful lot of room for all kinds and many, mistakes. Secondly, most Unitarians only read and know English. I do agree with you that English often gives grounds for Arianism/Unitarianism and thought.
Verse 4, Jesus has glorified the Father, not the Trinity.
Verse 5 means its reciprocal doesn't it?
Verse 4, Jesus finished the work given him by God the Father, and therefore Jesus is not God the Son.
Again, remember I half agree with you. The Son is not the Father. John 20:17 is similar for our agreement. I'm not arguing that the Son is the Father here. I agree with you there indeed is a difference between Father and Son. Scripture itself instructs us and both must/necessarily have to be true that Jesus 'has a God' and that Thomas said to Jesus "You are the Lord and God of me." Therefore, I don't assume. When I first heard 'Trinity' I was told "it is confusing, we simply believe the scriptures and have to let God explain all of this. We read the scriptures and try to not have any one scripture trampled as we pull it all together." That was always the endeavor and It is the best tack because it doesn't try to assume anything. It is the most faithful Biblically because that is all it tries to be. I freely admit the shortcoming with you.
Verse 5, again addressing God, the Father, Jesus asks God to be glorified with God the Father’s own self, and hence Jesus is not God the Son.
Er, no, simply He is not God the Father at that point. You are making what 'seems' a reasonable assumption, but it is an assumption nevertheless and it is what Trinity doctrine tries to eschew.
Verse 5, why does Jesus use the term “before the world was”, and not “before my incarnation” if the Trinity is correct?
Good question. We can make assumptions, but what does the phrase, by itself and with context, mean? It means He had glory with His Father before Creation. Are you thinking that isn't part of the Triune doctrine? Can you reframe your question if you believe it doesn't? Thanks.
Looking at the more difficult phrase “the glory which I had with thee” which is perhaps the only phrase in the whole of verses 3-5 which you base your assumption. My answer is that the glory which Jesus had with God before the creation is an allusion to the New Creation Psalm, where God the Father anticipated glorifying the Son of Man, Jesus who is also the Son of God. Please note that it is written in the past tense, even though it was future.
All of us 'try' to make sense of tricky passages, and so I appreciate that BUT at this point, your theology idea/assumption is driving your deduction. Is it plausible? Yes. The next question, however, has to be 'does it do damage to any other scripture text or this one?' Then, "how clear is this from the text? How much am I assuming? Is there any other scripture or theologian that agrees? Why and who are they?" etc.
Psalm 8:4–6 (KJV): 4 What is man, that thou art mindful of him? and the son of man, that thou visitest him? 5 For thou hast made him a little lower than the angels, and hast crowned him with glory and honour. 6 Thou madest him to have dominion over the works of thy hands; thou hast put all things under his feet:
Kind regards
Trevor
Colossians 1:15-20 says that the Son created all things so while I appreciate a working theory, those theories must be tested and this particular needs a lot of work to check against other scriptures as well as the whole body getting to weigh in on whether it is acceptable (orthodox) to all of us. To date, we have decided that this is too far of a stretch as well as tramples, does harm, to other scriptures. -Lon