Aunty Jane
Well-Known Member
Yes, very distinctly separate entities, working together in creation but only one is The Almighty.How can the Father and the Son be one and the same Person, when Scripture is clear that they are distinct?
The Father is the Creator, who used the agency of his son to fashion all that exists, using God's powerful spirit. There is no trinity there, just the three necessary components who are responsible for creation. Creation came "through" the son, not "from" him.
According to Christendom’s trinity, there are three gods....”God the Father”....”God the Son”...and “God the Holy Spirit”.....this is polytheism in direct opposition to the Jewish Shema in Deuteronomy 6:4....so not what Jesus would have taught at all. He was born a Jew, and died a Jew.
Jesus never once claimed to be God. If there is a direct statement by either Yahweh or Jesus stating that they are both equally “God” along with the holy spirit.....then please provide it.
Indeed, there is not one scripture where that is even implied.Like John 1:1, where "καὶ ὁ Λόγος ἦν πρὸς τὸν Θεόν", can only mean, "and the Word was in the presence of God", and then "Θεὸς ἦν ὁ Λόγος", "the Word was God". The use of the Greek preposition "πρὸς" shows distinction, and cannot mean "one and the same Person".
"In en the beginning archē was eimi the ho Word logos, and kai the ho Word logos was eimi with pros · ho God theos, and kai the ho Word logos was eimi God theos." (Mounce Interlinear)
How is God "with" himself? How did God pray to himself....or how did the Father know things that the son did not?
Use of the definite article (ho/the) in John 1:1 determines who is “ho theos” (the God) and who is just “theos” (a god) in that verse. One is the Almighty and the other is a divine personage but is not “ho theos”. One little word but with a whole lot of meaning.
IOW, that scripture if it was interpreted correctly tells a completely different story to what most translations present.
The correct translation should read..
“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with the God (Yahweh) and the Word was divine.”
The Greeks had many gods, all of whom had names to identify them. But because the Jews had ceased uttering the divine name, this nameless “Lord” was difficult to point out in the Greek definition of a god. (theos) (Which simply identifies a “mighty or powerful one” or in the Jewish understanding can be someone imbued with divine authority.) The "Lord" Yahweh and the "Lord" Jesus somehow became one and the same person.....only later were they joined by the holy spirit to become a trinity.....over 300 years after Jesus died.
When Jesus was being accused of blasphemy by the Jews for claiming that he was God’s son, he said that Yahweh himself called the judges in Israel “gods” because they ruled with his Father’s authority. (John 10:31-36) All he ever said was that he was God’s son...never did he claim to be God, otherwise he would have been guilty of blasphemy and the Jews could have legally put him to death as a blasphemer.....but Jesus had to die as an innocent man. If the apostles had accepted Jesus as God incarnate, then they too would have been guilty of breaking God's law, putting other 'gods' in the Father's place. (Exodus 20:3) There was no trinity among the first Christians, all of whom were Jewish.
The word “god” in both Hebrew and Greek has more than one meaning that seems to be ignored when the trinity is being promoted. There is no trinity in the Bible, no matter how much it is forced into scripture by inference. There is not a single direct statement that says "Jesus is Almighty God", and many verses that prove that this is impossible.
At Revelation 3:12 e.g. Jesus, who was in heaven at the time he gave John the Revelation, still calls his Father “my God” four times in this one verse. How does one equal part of God worship another part of himself in heaven?
And if John also said that “no one has seen God at any time”....how many people saw Jesus? (John 1:18) Thousands.
Yes, like John 17:3....there Jesus acknowledges that his Father is “the only true God” without including himself, and that he was “sent” by him. Jesus is also called God’s “holy servant”. (Acts 4:30)Also, there are passages where God SENDS Jesus Christ, which is always speaking about another Person.
So, if there are three entities, who can all operate independently, but who demonstrate no equality, how on earth do people accept a trinity, which presents three separate “persons” who are all equally “God”.....but claim that there is no polytheism.....?
I believe that the trinity is absolutely illogical, unscriptural nonsense.
Why can I find trinities in various pagan religions, but not in any Abrahamic faith except for Christendom? Can you answer me that?
What do we always find in the scriptures? It is always God's people who fall away to false worship.....the false worshippers never adopt the teachings of true worship. (2 Corinthians 6:14-18)
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