Not for nothing he is called "the hound of Jewish monotheism"
That’s right. Do you remember the story behind it?
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Not for nothing he is called "the hound of Jewish monotheism"
You believe Messiah....btw, what you stated here is precisely what I believe about Jesus.
When God said Adam where art thou? and Adam and Eve were questioned about what happened Adam blamed Eve, Eve blamed the serpent. They basically said what people say today " You don't understand. " God had always been God he didn't know what it was like to be human. He set up a system to cover sin with the blood of animals but it was a temporary solution to an eternal problem. But one day God would come to fix the problem forever and God himself would supply the blood. So God was manifest in the flesh and the one who created the universe became dependent on the nourishment of a young girl. He was learning what it was like to be one of us. He walked where Adam walked he ate what Adam ate he knows all the struggles and feelings of being human but was without sin. He laid his life down and was the ultimate sacrifice for our sins, the spotless lamb and 3 days later he rose from the dead. Whosoever believes in him shall be saved.I firmly and irrevocably believe that the one God is one in being, one in person - the Father.
I understand Jesus as firmly and irrevocably believing that his [and my] God, the one God, is one in being, one in person - the Father.
Not really, care to elaborate?Do you remember the story behind it?
You believe Messiah....
Joh 1:14 And the Dvar Hashem took on gufaniyut (corporeality) and made his sukkah, his Mishkan (Tabernacle) among us [YESHAYAH 7:14], and we [Shlichim, 1Y 1:1-2] gazed upon his Kavod [SHEMOT 33:18; 40:34; YESHAYAH 60:1-2], the Shechinah of the Ben Yachid from Elohim HaAv, full of Hashem's Chesed v’Emes.
OJB
Joh 1:14 ¶ And the Word became flesh and took up residence among us, and we saw his glory, glory as of the one and only from the Father, full of grace and truth.
Joh 1:15 John testified about him and cried out, saying, “This one was he about whom I said, ‘The one who comes after me is ahead of me, because he existed before me.’ ”
..tabernacled among us, yet at the same time Elohim?
I have not read the writings of Tertullian, just a fallible man, is he, or you, branding me as an heretic?Have you read what Tertullian - a “trinitarian” whose concept of the Trinity is incompatible with historical trinitarian orthodoxy - said about heretics?
Bereshis (in the Beginning) was the Dvar Hashem [YESHAYAH 55:11; BERESHIS 1:1], and the Dvar Hashem was agav (along with) Hashem [MISHLE 8:30; 30:4], and the Dvar Hashem was nothing less, by nature, than Elohim! [Psa 56:11(10); Yn 17:5; Rev. 19:13]Yes. Why is it that you cannot understand me?
Do you think the Messiah was a created being?You don’t think you were begotten?
Not really, care to elaborate?
Echad as in a complex unity, or an absolute yachid?I understand Jesus as firmly and irrevocably believing that his [and my] God, the one God, is one in being, one in person - the Father.
Do you think the Messiah was a created being?
So what is the Messiah's "theology?"The hound of Jewish monotheism is the Messiah’s theology.
Bereshis (in the Beginning) was the Dvar Hashem [YESHAYAH 55:11; BERESHIS 1:1], and the Dvar Hashem was agav (along with) Hashem [MISHLE 8:30; 30:4], and the Dvar Hashem was nothing less, by nature, than Elohim! [Psa 56:11(10); Yn 17:5; Rev. 19:13]
OJB
Joh 1:1 The Prologue to John’s Gospel
¶ In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.
With God (pros ton theon). Though existing eternally with God the Logos was in perfect fellowship with God. Pros with the accusative presents a plane of equality and intimacy, face to face with each other. In 1Jn_2:1 we have a like use of pros: “We have a Paraclete with the Father” (paraklēton echomen pros ton patera). See prosōpon pros prosōpon (face to face, 1Co_13:12), a triple use of pros. There is a papyrus example of pros in this sense to gnōston tēs pros allēlous sunētheias, “the knowledge of our intimacy with one another” (M.&M., Vocabulary) which answers the claim of Rendel Harris, Origin of Prologue, p. 8) that the use of pros here and in Mar_6:3 is a mere Aramaism. It is not a classic idiom, but this is Koiné, not old Attic. In Joh_17:5 John has para soi the more common idiom.
And the Word was God (kai theos ēn ho logos). By exact and careful language John denied Sabellianism by not saying ho theos ēn ho logos. That would mean that all of God was expressed in ho logos and the terms would be interchangeable, each having the article. The subject is made plain by the article (ho logos) and the predicate without it (theos) just as in Joh_4:24 pneuma ho theos can only mean “God is spirit,” not “spirit is God.” So in 1Jn_4:16 ho theos agapē estin can only mean “God is love,” not “love is God” as a so-called Christian scientist would confusedly say. For the article with the predicate see Robertson, Grammar, pp. 767f. So in Joh_1:14 ho Logos sarx egeneto, “the Word became flesh,” not “the flesh became Word.” Luther argues that here John disposes of Arianism also because the Logos was eternally God, fellowship of Father and Son, what Origen called the Eternal Generation of the Son (each necessary to the other). Thus in the Trinity we see personal fellowship on an equality.
Robertson
Are we in agreement?
Run that one past me again...you believe Messiah was a created being?I do.
So what is the Messiah's "theology?"
I don't hold to any creeds.(see the first line in the Apostles’ Creed).
Shema Yisroel Adonoi Eloheinu Adonoi Echad.Concerning the one God, his God, it is expressed in the Shema.
Run that one past me again...you believe Messiah was a created being?
A simple yes or no would suffice @Matthias
I don't hold to any creeds.
In the beginning was (ἐν ἀρχῇ ἦν)John is taking his readers back to the Genesis creation account in his prologue. He is taking us back to the work of the Father (see the first line in the Apostles’ Creed). The same God is at work in the new creation, which is where John then moves his readers forward into in the telling of the Messiah’s story.