Mama Kidogo
Τίποτα νέο μυθιστόρημα τίποτα
That last line says it all.
We have purposely trained him wrong, as a joke.



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And I guess it would really come down to, "change" in what sense? Did God's character change in any way, when He became flesh? Does somehow the flesh that was born of Mary change the Divine? I would say emphatically no.
White had mentioned that Enyart was confusing change with action, and that may be a key. Also, perhaps we need to make distinctions between nature and essence? And I have no problem simply chalking it up as a mystery. God the son became man, and Jesus is the same yesterday today and forever.
But a separation between Christ and the Son of God just doesn't fly.
I think the most basic answer is that God, in assuming our human nature, did not change. It was not a change or alteration to His Deity to take on our nature, what He was from everlasting to everlasting was what He was in Mary's womb, walking in our midst, on the cross, risen from the dead, ascended into heaven, and the consummation of all things and forever and ever more.
It was not an alteration of His Being to take upon Himself what we are, and thus it is not a violation of His eternal immutability.
And yet, yes, in the Mystery of the Incarnation we see the Immutable and Eternal One grow up as infant, child, youth, and adult, the Scriptures say He grew in wisdom before both men and God. And yet He is, even there, the Immutable and Eternal One, Who changes not, the same yesterday, today, and forever.
That is the Mystery of the Incarnation: He who is Eternal, Immutable, Immortal, Impassible became man--man who suffered, man who grew, man who died.
God who cannot die, died.
God who cannot suffer, suffered.
-CryptoLutheran
Jesus is also mentioned in Jude 1.It was Christ that walked in the garden.
Just saying.
God be gracious to me a sinner.
Originally Posted by The Boxer![]()
And many places in the new testament declare that Christ is Yahwah.
It was Jesus who led the people out of Egypt.
For certain people have crept in unnoticed who long ago were designated for this condemnation, ungodly people,
who pervert the grace of our God into sensuality and deny our only Master and Lord, Jesus Christ.
Now I want to remind you, although you once fully knew it, that Jesus, Who saved a people out of the land of Egypt, afterward destroyed those who did not believe. Jude 1: 4-5 ESV
I think the most basic answer is that God, in assuming our human nature, did not change. It was not a change or alteration to His Deity to take on our nature, what He was from everlasting to everlasting was what He was in Mary's womb, walking in our midst, on the cross, risen from the dead, ascended into heaven, and the consummation of all things and forever and ever more.
It was not an alteration of His Being to take upon Himself what we are, and thus it is not a violation of His eternal immutability.
And yet, yes, in the Mystery of the Incarnation we see the Immutable and Eternal One grow up as infant, child, youth, and adult, the Scriptures say He grew in wisdom before both men and God. And yet He is, even there, the Immutable and Eternal One, Who changes not, the same yesterday, today, and forever.
That is the Mystery of the Incarnation: He who is Eternal, Immutable, Immortal, Impassible became man--man who suffered, man who grew, man who died.
God who cannot die, died.
God who cannot suffer, suffered.
I would agree.
Another tough one. Yes there is a sense in which God the Son died on the cross, as He cannot be separated from Christ. That merely says He experienced physical death. Did God the Son experience spiritual separation from God? Can the Godhead be separated? Is the answer yes and no?
I am not sure how many translations use "Jesus" in that verse, but it does appear in the DR.........That's an interesting translation...
I've looked at a couple of Sproul's writings. He has a fairly recent book that reviews key Christian doctrines, "Essential Truths of the Christian Faith." In it he says
"That God the Son took upon Himself a real human nature is a crucial doctrine of historic Christianity. The great ecumenical Council of Chalcedon in a.d. 451 affirmed that Jesus is truly man and truly God and that the two natures of Christ are so united as to be without mixture, confusion, separation, or division, each nature retaining its own attributes."
This would appear to directly contradict the statement that God the Son doesn't have a human nature, which he makes not just in the dialog quoted in the OP, but in the Q&A section of "The Truth of the Cross" he talks again about the question of Jesus' death:
"It's the God-man Who dies, but death is something that is experienced only by the human nature, because the divine nature isn't capable of experiencing death."
When he says that the atonement is done by the human nature, I think he's talking about death specifically. I would argue that the atonement involves much than this, and that as a whole it's an act of the whole God-man. I see nothing to suggest that he would disagree.
I think the statements in the OP do not indicate any heresy, but that he's using language that can easily be misleading, in order to emphasize a purist view of the unchangeableness of God.
I've looked at a couple of Sproul's writings. He has a fairly recent book that reviews key Christian doctrines, "Essential Truths of the Christian Faith." In it he says
"That God the Son took upon Himself a real human nature is a crucial doctrine of historic Christianity. The great ecumenical Council of Chalcedon in a.d. 451 affirmed that Jesus is truly man and truly God and that the two natures of Christ are so united as to be without mixture, confusion, separation, or division, each nature retaining its own attributes."
This would appear to directly contradict the statement that God the Son doesn't have a human nature, which he makes not just in the dialog quoted in the OP, but in the Q&A section of "The Truth of the Cross" he talks again about the question of Jesus' death:
"It's the God-man Who dies, but death is something that is experienced only by the human nature, because the divine nature isn't capable of experiencing death."
When he says that the atonement is done by the human nature, I think he's talking about death specifically. I would argue that the atonement involves much than this, and that as a whole it's an act of the whole God-man. I see nothing to suggest that he would disagree.
I think the statements in the OP do not indicate any heresy, but that he's using language that can easily be misleading, in order to emphasize a purist view of the unchangeableness of God.
I think this presumes that Jesus' death was a "spiritual separation from God". I don't think that is a definition of death inherent in Scripture, in fact we read in the Psalms, "If I make my bed in She'ol, You are there". One cannot escape God in death, even in the depths of death--Hades/She'ol/"Hell"--God is there.
So no, the Eternal Logos did not experience spiritual separation from God [the Father]; but when we say "Jesus died" we can't go about trying to argue that "only the human Jesus died" because if the two natures are truly inseparable (and they are) then we can only say "Jesus died". That is, "Jesus who is both God and man died on the cross." That is the orthodox position.
Now of course we want to raise our hand in objection, saying, "Yeah, but God cannot die." Which is true, and yet Jesus--who is fully and entirely God--died. That's the incomprehensible mystery we confess. God, who cannot die, died.
God suffered a human death.
In St. John Chrysostom's Paschal Homily he says, "Hades received a body, and encountered God. It received earth, and confronted heaven."
-CryptoLutheran
It's but a small step from their to Schleiermacher's theology of utter dependence and his dismissal of the Trinity as basically unimportant to the whole system.
Given what I know about Sproul, that's a pretty steep slippery slope. I think it's also misleading to accuse the Reformed tradition of not being Trinitarian.
One of the most unpleasant things about Christians is how unsympathetically we treat each other. Surely we need to be careful not to treat those with whom we disagree unfairly.
Given what I know about Sproul, that's a pretty steep slippery slope. I think it's also misleading to accuse the Reformed tradition of not being Trinitarian.
One of the most unpleasant things about Christians is how unsympathetically we treat each other. Surely we need to be careful not to treat those with whom we disagree unfairly.
Yes there is a sense in which God the Son died on the cross, as He cannot be separated from Christ.
God the Son is not united to Christ. God the Son is Christ.
The subsistent person of God died on the cross.
It's what I meant. He become Christ, and thus can't in anyway be thought of as separate. United was a poor choice of words as it indicates 2 persons coming together. It can happen to the worst of us.