Mathetes the kerux
Tales of a Twice Born Man
- Aug 1, 2004
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Trinitarian theology is not laid out in the Bible. How can you have any confidence that the Christians who formulated the creed got it right? You're basically saying that supporters don't claim to fully understand the Trinity, but at the same time you fully believe that the underlying theology is accurate. There is no basis for this.
Back to the temptation issue: It sounds like most of you are saying that it makes sense because Jesus' human nature was tempted to take the world from Satan. This is really damaging to his God-nature. Unless he just has a memory lapse and forgets that he is God, your solution is untenable. Introducing a concept of %100 human and %100 God gets so complicated that you should have no confidence that it is correct.
It is Phil 2. He laid aside the attributes of deity to be human. He did not cease to have them . . . but He ceased to use them outside of dependance upon the power of the Spirit and will of the Father. He was made like us . . . that we may be like Him.
It really is not that complicated.
As for a Trinitarian dogma . . . well it really did not exist until the 3rd Cent. but that does not mean that it is not biblical.
The Scriptures affirm that there is ONE God.
The Scriptures affirm that the Father is God.
That the Son is God
that the Spirit is God
and that these three are distinct (NOT SEPARATE)
From here, if one seeks to maintain the integrity of the Bible one arrives at a thoroughly biblical statement of
There is ONE God . . . within the one God there are three persons called Father, Son and Holy Spirit who are co-existent, co-eternal and co-equal.
That is the foundational Trinitarian affirmation.
Many have sought interesting ways of articulating this further . . . some have merritt . . . some are inane.
But to affirm this statement . . . and to affirm the mystery held within (namely how can three be one and one be three) is not a problem.
I personally am comforted that there are things within God that He has seen fit to reveal to us but not explain in satisfactory terms to us because it leaves me understanding His immensity. If we were honest, if we used your same criteria and applied it to the eternality of God we would come to the same place. As time-space creatures any concept of non-beginningness is irrationale to us. Yet the Bible teaches it quite clearly.
Same goes for Trinity.
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