Wrangler
Well-Known Member
You must be tired doing all these laps. The trinity is not in the Bible. No point doing laps on ground already covered.Your bow out is duly noted.
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You must be tired doing all these laps. The trinity is not in the Bible. No point doing laps on ground already covered.Your bow out is duly noted.
It's akin to a mathematical fallacy, where an invalid assumption is made in interpreting Genesis 1-3. God, through His Holy Angels, plays an essential role in the creation process. Ignoring this in favor of your own dogma is a clear error. Begin with God and His power, administered through His Holy Angels (who always do His Pleasure!), and recognize Christ as uncreated, yet present in the hearts and minds of those who awaited His revelation. As Jesus said, "Abraham saw my day and was glad!"The term Holy Trinity refers to the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, and they are in Scripture: "Go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit [...]" (Matt. 28:19), and therefore your statement that "[...] the trinity is not in the Bible" is false. It seems that you meant to word your statement as "My understanding of the concept of the Holy Trinity being three separate gods isn't in Scripture", and that would've been true, because the Holy Trinity isn't three separate gods. Refer back to post 480 for a brief explanation of the Holy Trinity.
You must be tired doing all these laps. The trinity is not in the Bible. No point doing laps on ground already covered.
It's akin to a mathematical fallacy, where an invalid assumption is made in interpreting Genesis 1-3. God, through His Holy Angels, plays an essential role in the creation process. Ignoring this in favor of your own dogma is a clear error. Begin with God and His power, administered through His Holy Angels (who always do His Pleasure!), and recognize Christ as uncreated, yet present in the hearts and minds of those who awaited His revelation. As Jesus said, "Abraham saw my day and was glad!"
By introducing trinitarian dogma, your understanding of Genesis 1-3 will always be flawed.
F2F
As @Wrangler has said…it’s ground already covered and then some….rehashing will not make a lie into truth, no matter how many times you use inference instead of clear statements…..circumstantial evidence is inadmissible, because there are no clear statements and there are far more against this doctrine than there are for it.We agree that there's one single God. So, how do you reconcile there being one single God with Him having used pronouns in the first-person plural in Gen. 1:26?
Can you show us where it says that “Father, Son and Holy Spirit” are “one God in three” presentations?The term Holy Trinity refers to the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, and they are in Scripture: "Go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit [...]" (Matt. 28:19), and therefore your statement that "[...] the trinity is not in the Bible" is false.
We would beg to differ….”God the Father” is clearly stated in the Bible but “God the Son“ and “God the Holy Spirit“ are completely missing. That is three “gods”..….1+1+1=3….but there is no three and wasn’t until the Catholic Church adopted it like a lot of other adoptions that find no mention in Scripture.It seems that you meant to word your statement as "My understanding of the concept of the Holy Trinity being three separate gods isn't in Scripture", and that would've been true, because the Holy Trinity isn't three separate gods.
And you quote the work of a Catholic visionary....Maria Valvorta?......as if those who are careful students of God’s word would put any store by anything that came out of Roman Catholicism....do you not understand that those visions could well have been provided by the devil.....seriously....who told you that anything this woman said was from God? We are supposed to test these things out....have you?Refer back to post 480 for a brief explanation of the Holy Trinity
Neither are Jesus nor the Holy Spirit mentioned here....inserted?Angels aren't mentioned in Gen. 1:26-27;3:5;22;11:6, so are you just inserting them into these verses?
Can you see the issue with overlooking the involvement of the angels in Genesis 3:22?
"And the Lord God said, 'Now that the man has become like one of us, knowing good and evil, he must not be allowed to stretch out his hand and take also from the tree of life and eat, and live forever.'" (Genesis 3:22)
The context is sin—specifically, the experiential knowledge of sin. Can you see how inserting God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit into this verse creates a problem?
F2F
Let's apply your interpretation though
"Behold, the man has become like one of us, knowing good and evil."
Could the man become like one of the Trinity?
No need to answer! ...but he could become like one of the angels, as it is clear that the angels attained their exalted status through a period of probation. (Without faith it's impossible to please God!)
Christ promised that the approved would be "equal to the angels" in the Age to come (Luke 20:36).
As @Wrangler has said…it’s ground already covered and then some….
We would beg to differ….”God the Father” is clearly stated in the Bible but “God the Son“ and “God the Holy Spirit“ are completely missing. That is three “gods”..….1+1+1=3….but there is no three and wasn’t until the Catholic Church adopted it like a lot of other adoptions that find no mention in Scripture.
And you quote the work of a Catholic visionary....Maria Valvorta?......as if those who are careful students of God’s word would put any store by anything that came out of Roman Catholicism....
So are you arguing against the context that sin introduced this knowledge? Sounds painful...If in Gen. 3:22 the context is sin as you assert, then that's a problem, whether you apply the word "us" in that verse to the Holy Trinity or angels, because they don't commit sins. The accurate context is of man now knowing good and evil, and possessing the knowledge of evil in and of itself isn't a sin.
Happy to read your thoughts.You didn't ask me for my interpretation of Gen. 3:22, but rather assumed what it is.
So are you arguing against the context that sin introduced this knowledge? Sounds painful...
Happy to hear your thoughts.
The harm caused by reading the Word of God out of context is deeply damaging to developing a correct understanding of Scripture.I'm arguing against your assertion that the context in Gen. 3:22 are sins. Sins are an offense against God, and that's not what is being spoken of in that verse, but rather how man now knows good and evil, and possessing the knowledge of evil in and of itself isn't an offense against God.
I have no issue with apologising but my response was to #510 where you introduced the Trinity.If you first apologize for assuming my interpretation of Gen. 3:22.
Elohim is plural but it is not found in the original Aramaic dialect of Hebrew. The most high EL is talking to the angels anyway.
The harm caused by reading the Word of God out of context is deeply damaging to developing a correct understanding of Scripture.
If sin is not the context, then why did the angels drive them out of the garden?
In verse 21, the angels covered their sin with coats made from a slain animal (shedding of blood principle).
In verse 22, the effects of sin led them to know good and evil (having only known good).
In verse 23, the angels drove them out of the garden.
What else, other than sin, could verse 22 be referring to?
I have no issue with apologising but my response was to #510 where you introduced the Trinity.
If your post was incorrect maybe you can clarify?
Correct, and it is - the affect of sin on the first pairIn post #526, you quoted Gen. 3:22 specifically and asserted that the context of that verse is sins,
but it isn't because it says, "And the Lord God said, Behold the man is become as one of us, to know good and evil [...]. Sins are an offense against God, and what's being spoken of is how man now knows good and evil, and possessing that knowledge in and of itself isn't an offense against God.
All the references in Genesis 1-3 pertain either to God Himself (Yahweh) or the Elohim (the mighty ones), who are His angels.I first spoke about the Holy Trinity in post #480, and post #510 wasn't about Gen. 3:22. You brought up Gen. 3:22 to me first in post #526, and then assumed my interpretation of it in post #530. An apology for the assumption would be appreciated.
Genesis 1:26: "Then God said, 'Let us make humankind in our image, after our likeness, so they may rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air, over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over all the creatures that move on the earth.'" (Gen 1:26)The term Holy Trinity refers to the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, and they are in Scripture: "Go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit [...]" (Matt. 28:19), and therefore your statement that "[...] the trinity is not in the Bible" is false. It seems that you meant to word your statement as "My understanding of the concept of the Holy Trinity being three separate gods isn't in Scripture", and that would've been true, because the Holy Trinity isn't three separate gods. Refer back to post #480 for a brief explanation of the Holy Trinity.