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Her reasonings are abundantly obvious.Not to be redundant, but that's all I intended to do -- explain their reasoning.
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Her reasonings are abundantly obvious.Not to be redundant, but that's all I intended to do -- explain their reasoning.
Ok, there are also denominations out there that claim that baptism isn't the normal means by which one is saved, and they are called Christian. Which is worse?According to the UPC and other Oneness groups to be "saved" one needs to be baptized in "Jesus' name only" (Trinitarian baptisms are evil and apostate in their view), then to receive "baptism with the Holy Spirit with evidence of speaking in tongues", without glossolalia you aren't saved, you can only be saved if you have received the Holy Spirit with glossolalia.
Yes they expect their congregants to separate themselves from the world to a certain point. In a sense one can call this a from of institutional mortification, which I wouldn't call un-Christian. And quite honestly they are rigorous by any standards. Men are called to be clean-shaven and keep their hair cut short. No wearing of shorts in public, and some but not all call for wearing long sleeve shirts. The women, are called to let their hair grow out and wear dresses or skirts, no pants or shorts. All are called to not watch TV or movies, but radios are ok. Not sure how that would be classified as rigorous. To be honest as bad as television has become, they are probably on the right track protecting their folks from unnecessary temptations.And finally, if one has received Jesus' name baptism and tongues, salvation is entirely dependent on living a life of rigorous obedience; which is also why many of these groups adhere to harsh moralistic and rigorist practices--dictating what kinds of clothes their members can wear, hair lengths for men and women, forbidding wearing jewelry, and generally moralizing and rigorously dictating "holiness standards" to the congregants. And in violation of these standards one's salvation is at jeopardy.
There is only two points above that are heterodox, Jesus name baptism, and speaking in tongues is a required evidence of one's salvation. The rest are not heterodox by any standards.That's heterodox and wrong by any traditional Christian's perspective, whether Catholic, Orthodox, Lutheran, Calvinist, etc.
This additional nature did not have access to the Triune God's full attributes, including omniscience.
I am referring to when the Son lost access during His actual earthly life. By the way, you did not come to answer about Jesus only followed the Father’s will, instead of his will. Let me present to you these verses, of how you could explain this…The union of human nature to the Logos does not result in Jesus losing "access" to anything. He remained truly, utterly, completely, and totally God in all ways.
Yes, it is true that Jesus says that only the Father knows when Christ will return, specifically saying the Son does not know. But note it says "Son" there. The Son is God, He has always been God. It is the Son who takes on human nature in the Incarnation. The problem with attempting to say that Christ, by His humanity, lost access to aspects of His own Divinity is that rather than resolving the difficulty of passages such as this one, it instead introduces much bigger theological problems.
Instead what passages like this can do is highlight the mystery of the Incarnation. How can God who knows all things, not know something? That's a fantastic question, but we don't have an answer. But this paradox runs through the Incarnation, necessarily so: God, who cannot die, died.
-CryptoLutheran
According to Scripture it is God who manifests in the flesh, if it is only the Son who takes on human nature, does it mean not the whole God that manifests in the flesh?It is the Son who takes on human nature in the Incarnation.
-CryptoLutheran
I am referring to when the Son lost access during His actual earthly life. By the way, you did not come to answer about Jesus only followed the Father’s will, instead of his will. Let me present to you these verses, of how you could explain this…
- Mark 14:36: And he said, "Abba, Father, all things are possible for you. Remove this cup from me. Yet not what I will, but what you will." (ESV)
- Luke 22:42: "Father, if you are willing, take this cup from me; yet not my will, but yours be done."
According to Scripture it is God who manifests in the flesh, if it is only the Son who takes on human nature, does it mean not the whole God that manifests in the flesh?
According to Scripture it is God who manifests in the flesh, if it is only the Son who takes on human nature, does it mean not the whole God that manifests in the flesh?
The Son is "the whole God".
Radagast will you agree to the answer of ViaCrucis?It is only God the Son (the Logos) who takes human flesh, not the Father, and not the Holy Spirit:
John 1:1-14: In the beginning was the Logos, and the Logos was with God, and the Logos was God. He was with God in the beginning. All things were created through him, and apart from him not one thing was created that has been created. ... The Logos became flesh and dwelt among us. We observed his glory, the glory as the one and only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth.
Radagast will you agree to the answer of ViaCrucis?
In #47 and #48 answer.Which answer?
In any case, my brother @ViaCrucis and I will agree that the truth is expressed in the Nicene Creed, which you can find on the top-right corner of this page, under "Statement of Faith."
Is the Father included in the whole God?The Son is "the whole God".
-CryptoLutheran
What did you tell to him?I'm not wild about that wording. I know that you don't mean what it sounds like.
If, in going with the title of this thread, you are attempting to explain the view of that small segment of Christianity which is described as "Oneness" and is otherwise Pentecostal in style, it denies the Trinity and so is considered to be unorthodox by almost all other Christian churches. It doesn't just explain the Trinity in a clever way.In Trinity during the Incarnation, the Triune God never changed. Jesus assumed an additional nature in the Incarnation. This additional nature did not have access to the Triune God's full attributes, including omniscience.
Albion will you provide me any who can explain the Trinity in clever way?If, in going with the title of this thread, you are attempting to explain the view of that small segment of Christianity which is described as "Oneness" and is otherwise Pentecostal in style, it denies the Trinity and so is considered to be unorthodox by almost all other Christian churches. It doesn't just explain the Trinity in a clever way.
AlbionAlbion will you provide me any who can explain the Trinity in clever way?
In the past, and still at present, there have been all sorts of groups with an explanation.Albion will you provide me any who can explain the Trinity in clever way?