JR you wrote:I still need to be blunt, so I will only ask you these three questions;
Is Jesus Lord, or is God Lord?
Is Jesus our Savior, or is God our Savior?
Who is your Lord?
Okay JR, since my answers to these questions are so important to you, I will gladly do so.
1. Is Jesus Lord, or is God Lord?
Jesus is Lord.
For us there is one God, the Father, from whom are all things and for whom we exist, and one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom are all things and through whom we exist. (1 Corinthians 8:6)
So Paul affirms that Jesus is the one Lord. Yet Jesus has a God! "My God, My God, why have you forsaken me?"
... that together you may with one voice glorify the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.(Romans 15:6)
So, if Jesus is Lord, then the One who is His God, is also Lord. Indeed, He is called "Lord God" frequently in the Old Testament (though the word LORD, all capitals, is actually "YHWH ").
2. Is Jesus our Savior, or is God our Savior?
Jesus is our Savior and God is our Savior. In the New Testament, both are affirmed to be our Savior.
The expression "God our Savior" occurs in I Timothy 1:1, 2:3; Titus 1:3, 2:10, 3:4; Jude 1:25
Jesus is referred to as our Savior in Acts 13:23; Philippians 3:30; Titus 1:4, 2:3, 3:6; 2 Peter 1:1,1:11, 2:30, 3:18; Jude 1:25
Since Jesus is the exact imprint of the Father's essence (Hebrews 1:3), and since He and the Father are one in thought, purpose, will, and in every other way except identity, there is no difference in saying that I am subject to Jesus and that I am subject to the Father. It would be impossible to be subject to Jesus and NOT to be subject to the Father.
3.Who is your Lord?
Jesus is my Lord.
If I took out from my pocket a photo of myself taken with an old-fashioned camera, and then I took out from a different pocket a print made from the same negative, I could hold them up and say, "Here are two pictures of me." You might respond, "But that is the same picture!" Then I might say, "No, look! I have a picture in my right hand and another in my left. That's two pictures." What I have just said is literally true. Yet in another sense they are one picture since they are identical. I could have said to you, "Anyone who has seen one of these pictures has seen the other." That's the way it is with the Father and the Son. They are identical. That's why Jesus was able to say, "If you have seen me, you have seen the Father." So having said that Jesus is my Lord, it would not make sense to say that the Father is NOT my Lord.
Do the answers to these questions prove in your mind that the Father and the Son are the same divine Individual? To me, they don't so prove. At most, they prove that they are exactly the same, one in thought, purpose, will, etc.
Jesus prayed that his disciples would be one, as He and the Father are one. (John 17:21). It makes sense that the disciples of Jesus could some day have that same unity that Jesus and His Father has — alike in thought, purpose, will, etc.
I am not sure if you are a modalist (believe that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are the same divine Person, and therefore one God) or a Trinitarian (believe one compound God consisting of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit).
If you are a modalist, then will our becoming one as Jesus and His Father are one, mean losing our identity and being becoming a single individual? I certainly hope not!
If you are a Trinitarian, then will our becoming one as Jesus and His Father are one, mean becoming one compound human being consisting of millions of individuals? I don't think I would like that either.