How had Jesus seen the Father if no man has seen him?It is funny how you continue to think copy-and-pasting is a substitute for discussion.
To wit, Focus on What You Can Control, Leave What You Can't - Becoming Who You Are
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How had Jesus seen the Father if no man has seen him?It is funny how you continue to think copy-and-pasting is a substitute for discussion.
To wit, Focus on What You Can Control, Leave What You Can't - Becoming Who You Are
Sounds to me that you are again relying on a bad translation.How had Jesus seen the Father if no man has seen him?
That's not the verse I quoted John 6:44-46Sounds to me that you are again relying on a bad translation.
17 For the law was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ. 18 No one has ever seen God; the only Son, who is in the bosom of the Father, he has made him known
John 1:17-18 Revised Standard Version
That's not the verse I quoted John 6:44-46
Jhn 6:44
No man can come to me, except the Father which hath sent me draw him: and I will raise him up at the last day.
Jhn 6:45
It is written in the prophets, And they shall be all taught of God. Every man therefore that hath heard, and hath learned of the Father, cometh unto me.
Jhn 6:46
Not that any man hath seen the Father, save he which is of God, he hath seen the Father.
Nice try. You have to resort to dishonesty to defend your position.
Jhn 6:46Dishonesty? Your question was about seeing God and theses verses have nothing to do with seeing God.
Even though you say you believe God raised Jesus from the dead, you don't recognize how that makes Jesus not the God who raised him from the dead.
The subject of the sentence is God doing the action. Jesus is the object of the sentence, being acted upon. The subject of a sentence is not the object of the sentence. Trinitarianism might have a leg to stand on IF it said 'the Father' raised Jesus from the dead. But Scripture says God - meaning in his unitarian nature - raised our lord from the dead.
Wow! What a convoluted way to try to back door trinitarianism.Jhn 6:46
Not that any man hath seen the Father, save he which is of God, he hath seen the Father.
My question, "How had Jesus seen the Father if no man has seen him?"
Biblical Unitarianism, contrary to its name, is not biblical.
Wow! What a convoluted way to try to back door trinitarianism.
1st, Jesus is not in John 6:46.
2nd, ‘of God’ is proof that the man in question is NOT God. Reading comprehension 101: objects of sentences (of God) are not subjects of sentences (any man).
3rd, your question implies an invalid premise. Jesus is stated elsewhere to be a man and this verse explicitly says no man (who includes Jesus) has seen God.
4th, your question is invalid because it is inherently contradictory. It boils down to the circular, you can’t have your pudding until you eat your meat. How can you eat your pudding if you don’t eat your meat?
Not an answer.Wow! What a convoluted way to try to back door trinitarianism.
SpecUlation. It’s all trinitarianism has. Why does it matter who the mystery man is?Not that any man hath seen the Father, save he which is of God, he hath seen the Father.
Who is the mystery man who has seen God if it is not Jesus?
It matters a great deal. He is the only man who has seen the Father.SpecUlation. It’s all trinitarianism has. Why does it matter who the mystery man is?
Tertullian (and other early apologists) is much closer to Arius than he is to Athanasius; closer to Arius and to Athanasius than he is to Jewish monotheism.
I’m reading Against Marcion now. Tertuallian explicitly writes against consubstantiality in this work.
For Tertullian, the Father is the Supreme God; the other persons being inferior.
Nicaea triumphs over Tertullian. He would call them heretics; they do call him a heretic.
You said Origen was a heretic too, but according to who? The Catholic Church? You and I are probably heretics too.Tertullian is a unitarian. For him to become a trinitarian he would have to convert.
Tertullian falls within the transition period of Church history.
Tertullian is a unitarian. For him to become a Jewish monotheist he would have to convert.
Tertullian is a heretic by the standard of trinitarianism and by the standard of Jewish monotheism; not by the standard of unitarianism.
Even so, I recommend his writings to all audiences. Few, outside of academia, will bother to read them. I never heard his name so much as mentioned in a sermon or Sunday School class in my time as a Southern Baptist. No wonder.