The Trinity and Light

God, Christ, & The Holy Spirit
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Homer
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Re: The Trinity and Light

Post by Homer » Thu Jun 18, 2015 10:05 pm

Dizerner wrote:
Can you help me clarify:

Do you think Jesus, the Father, and the Spirit are all one person?
Could you define what you think "person" means in regard to the Trinity and do you think the word as applied to the Trinity means the same today that it did in the first creeds regarding the subject? Today "person" is even applied to corporations in our law.
Do you think Jesus has all the attributes of God?
Yes. If you have seen Jesus you have seen the Father.

Jose
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Re: The Trinity and Light

Post by Jose » Thu Jun 18, 2015 10:18 pm

dizerner wrote:Deut. 6:4 in no way contradicts Trinitarian theology
Hmm....Deut 6:4 says "YHWH is one." Trinitarianism says "YHWH is three."

dizerner

Re: The Trinity and Light

Post by dizerner » Thu Jun 18, 2015 10:20 pm

Homer wrote:Could you define what you think "person" means in regard to the Trinity and do you think the word as applied to the Trinity means the same today that it did in the first creeds regarding the subject? Today "person" is even applied to corporations in our law.
Well, I think we use humans to define personhood, and not our bodies, but our essential attributes of mind, will and emotions that give us an identity as a unique coherent conscious entity separate from others. For example, by definition one person cannot have two separates wills; they can want things to differing degrees, but not have entirely separate wills.

dizerner

Re: The Trinity and Light

Post by dizerner » Thu Jun 18, 2015 10:20 pm

Jose wrote:
dizerner wrote:Deut. 6:4 in no way contradicts Trinitarian theology
Hmm....Deut 6:4 says "YHWH is one." Trinitarianism says "YHWH is three."
Well, we say the Three are One. Trinitarianism says it's completely proper to call the Three as One, because of mystery.

Jose
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Re: The Trinity and Light

Post by Jose » Thu Jun 18, 2015 11:00 pm

dizerner wrote:
Jose wrote:
dizerner wrote:Deut. 6:4 in no way contradicts Trinitarian theology
Hmm....Deut 6:4 says "YHWH is one." Trinitarianism says "YHWH is three."
Well, we say the Three are One. Trinitarianism says it's completely proper to call the Three as One, because of mystery.
Yes, I know.

Jose
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Re: The Trinity and Light

Post by Jose » Thu Jun 18, 2015 11:01 pm

dizerner wrote:I disagree with your assessment. Jesus did not "pat him on the back" he said "you are not far." That's not a pat on the back, or him saying everything's okay with his interpretation.
It's only a figure of speech, isn't it? Didn't Jesus approve of what he said? Didn't Jesus commend him for speaking wisely? Is it so far fetched to say that he gave him a "pat on the back?" Why is this even a point of debate?

Jose
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Re: The Trinity and Light

Post by Jose » Thu Jun 18, 2015 11:05 pm

dizerner wrote:IAnd then it says "no one dared asked him more questions." It's far too big of an assumption by you that Jesus had nothing left to say
I made no such assumption. I never talked about any of that.

dizerner

Re: The Trinity and Light

Post by dizerner » Thu Jun 18, 2015 11:07 pm

Jose wrote:
dizerner wrote:I disagree with your assessment. Jesus did not "pat him on the back" he said "you are not far." That's not a pat on the back, or him saying everything's okay with his interpretation.
It's only a figure of speech, isn't it? Didn't Jesus approve of what he said? Didn't Jesus commend him for speaking wisely? Is it so far fetched to say that he gave him a "pat on the back?" Why is this even a point of debate?
Because the man was going to hell, he was not in the kingdom of God. Christ himself was the Savior he needed to trust to be his Shema-keeper, Christ's righteous life and death for sinners is what fulfills the law of God on our behalf. Jesus never once compromised that message, nor did he here for this scribe. The scribe preached the Law, which is half of Gospel truth—there was no grace in what the scribe said.

For the Law was given through Moses; grace and truth were realized through Jesus Christ.

Jose
Posts: 153
Joined: Sun Dec 21, 2014 1:42 pm

Re: The Trinity and Light

Post by Jose » Fri Jun 19, 2015 12:52 am

dizerner wrote:The scribe preached the Law, which is half of Gospel truth—there was no grace in what the scribe said.
Within the context of the passage, the scribe didn't preach anything. He asked Jesus a question; "Which commandment is the most important of all?" and Jesus answered, “The most important is, ‘Hear, O Israel: YHWH (The Lord) our Elohim (God), YHWH (the Lord) is one. "And the scribe said to him, “You are right, Teacher. You have truly said that he is one, and there is no other besides him." Jesus said he "spoke intelligently" (NET), "answered wisely" (ESV), "answered with understanding" (YLT). No matter how you look at it, whether the scribe was in the kingdom or not, Jesus affirmed what he said and agreed with him that YHWH our GOD is ONE and that there is no other besides HIM. As good monotheists, they both understood that there is only one God whose name is YHWH, and that there is no other God besides YHWH.

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Homer
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Re: The Trinity and Light

Post by Homer » Fri Jun 19, 2015 9:01 am

Dizerner,

You wrote:
Well, I think we use humans to define personhood, and not our bodies, but our essential attributes of mind, will and emotions that give us an identity as a unique coherent conscious entity separate from others. For example, by definition one person cannot have two separates wills; they can want things to differing degrees, but not have entirely separate wills.
What are your thoughts on this:
"This God is never called a person. The word person was never applied to God in the Middle ages. The reason for this is that the three members of the trinity were called personae (faces or countenances): The Father is persona, the Son is persona, and the Spirit is persona. Persona here means a special characteristic of the divine ground, expressing itself in an independent hypostasis.

"Thus, we can say that it was the nineteenth century which made God into a person, with the result that the greatness of the classical idea of God was destroyed by this way of speaking... but to speak of God as a person would have been heretical for the Middle Ages; it would have been to them a Unitarian heresy, because it would have conflicted with the statement that God has three personae, three expressions of his being. (Tillich, Paul, A History of Christian Thought, p. 190)
It seems we assume we can have a complete understanding of the nature of the unsearchable God through human analogy, but is this valid? Do we confound things human and divine and come to the correct conclusions? I realize we have only ourselves to compare to. But if we are made in the image of God, how does the trinity fit in regard to separate persons?

In our striving for answers it seems we give new ideas, unthought of by the inspired writers of the scriptures, to biblical words.

Just trying to understand this.

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