armothe said:
Was man (and woman) created in God's image?
Yes man and woman were made in the image of God. If you say that being in the image of God is physical then there is enough argument against that.
armothe said:
Did God ever get angry? Was God ever jealous? Does God have free will?
God certainly did get angry, jealous and He does have a free will and none of these things are nessesarily a sin for both man and God. There is such a thing as righteous anger, righteous jealousy and Righteous choice.
armothe said:
Our emotions and attributes are a direct reflection of the Master Creator.
I agree but not nessesarily physical attributes. There are many areas to the reflection of the image of God.
armothe said:
Can God sin? Could Jesus sin? What good was Christ's trials in the desert along with his sacrifice on the cross if he didn't suffer, or had the potential to sin.
"Can God sin?" is my question rephrased. Jesus is God and can sin as you have just pointed out in your quetsion of the trials of temptation Jesus went through. Jesus was tempted and giving into those temptations result in sin. Jesus was capable of sin as a man.
armothe said:
God is clear that he is the creator of everything, even (aspects of) evil itself (IS 45:4-7).
God is not saying this at all. God is not saying that He is the creator of evil. Light is good but darkness does not suddenly mean it is evil because darkness also has it's function created by God for good. And the destruction it is talking of in this verse is about the judgment poured out upon those who do evil; Not God doing evil but His judgment of it.
Westermann (in loc.) declares "If the creator of evil and woe is God, there is no room left for a devil."
Thought originated from the Expositor's Bible Commentary on this passage.
armothe said:
The struggle of the Christian life is to look towards Christ, who as a man was able to avoid sin and fulfill his mission. Look towards Christ, look towards God who are indeed perfect being/s - why? Because neither sin.
Jesus did not have the same weakness as Adam. Jesus had the extra divineness that Adam lacked. Jesus knew he was God. Adam was not. Adam wanted to be like God. Jesus knowing He was already God did not have a desire to become like God because He already was.
armothe said:
As Christians we are already made perfect by Christ's atonement- which now allows us to have a relationship with God. However, this relationship; like all other relationships, require effort. We must continue to be more Christlike by doing the best we can to remove all instances of sin from our life. What's the point if we are already clean in God's eyes? Because not only are we to have a relationship with God, but also with other people living in this wonderful creation. The absence of sin in our lives allow us to do just this much more effectively.
Are you suggesting that God did create sin? So there was no
point to creation if Christ did not come?
armothe said:
What are the two greatest commandments? Love the Lord your God... Love your neighbor... Love is where it's at. Sin is the absence of love and love the absence of sin. God is jealous out of love. Christ was angry out of love.
For sure. I agree. But due to the doubts of some of your basis arguments I do not support your usage of this argument to back your stance. It would fit if I agreed on your basis arguments but I do see your point. But the point has not been made without an agreed basis, which of course depends on me and so requires your acknowledgement that I agree with your basis before your point is agreeable unless a well established undeniable basis is formed (which I don't think is always possible because through choice one can agree to dissagree). This is the same for all other points you have made with a dissagreed basis. If you clarify and support your basis further then I can have an opportunity to further evaluate your proposition and hopefully agree on your point if it is made agreeable. It is all about learning and I am willing to learn truth. Hope to see another post from you.
armothe said:
Live your life by the above commandments - observing both the examples of God's love and Christ's life - and you will become the being which God intended to be the salt and light of the world.
You are talking about being transformed into the image of God which is subject to interpratation of how to become the image of God and if we can because of the fall or whether the fall affected us being in the image of God at all, depending on the interpretation of what "attributes" are us being in the image of God and what that means - some thing that is off topic.