Der Alter said:
Before one presumes to lecture another, especially another who has been a Christian for about 2 decades longer than one has been alive, one should know what they are talking about and have their facts straight. You don't. ... If you are going to try to reply, and impress me with your "knowledge" at least do me the courtesy of actually reading what I post? ...
Why all the condescention? I hope my comments don't come accross as rude; I am only sharing my POV, as is traditional on this forum. I respect that you are probably much better read on this topic, and that your understanding of the Trinity doctrines is more vast than mine; I don't claim to have an extensive background, but neither do I think that my understanding is as far off as you claim. I fully expect that I will learn something new from this encounter, but it won't be that the doctrine of the Trinity is Biblical; I find the Bible is too clear on this matter.
Der Alter said:
Please be so kind as to show me where I have interpreted the Bible in the wrong way. In the meantime consider this, from Jewish sources.
...
How does what is taught or infered in Cabala change what is in the OT? My claim centered on the written law, not what oral tradition may or may not have existed way back when, and not on the Zohar that surfaced in the 13th century AD. Consider this, from Catholic sources.
"The doctrine of the Holy Trinity is not taught in the OT.... The revelation of the truth of the triune life of God was first made in the NT, where the earliest references to it are in the Pauline epistles. (New Catholic Encyclopedia, 1965, "Trinity, in the Bible", p306), [quoted elsewhere]
The online Catholic Encyclopedia recognises that there are some who will point to whisperings of the Trinity in the OT, but others take "what would appear to be the sounder view, that no distinct intimation of the doctrine was given under the Old Covenant." ("Trinity in the Scriptures")
Since you asked, from my point of view your position on the OT scriptures you quoted contradicts the Bible because you apparently apply a
homoousios interpretation to scriptures saying there is one God, while Biblical doctrine indicates that a unity of purpose most completely embraces all NT teachings on Deity, and clearly indicates numerical distinction between the members.
Der Alter said:
There are not and cannot be two Gods. That is clearly stated throughout the OT and the NT. I posted most of the OT scriptures in my previous post which you apparently ignored...
"must be done with the knowledge that Jesus and the Father are separate entities." This is called reading your assumptions and presuppositions into the text.
Not at all. Does the NT not also say there is but one God? The NT discusses every core requirement to understanding the Godhead. At least three ways are described: 1) Ultimately to there is only one God: the Father. He is Jesus' God, and our God.(John 20:17; 1 Cor 8:4-6); 2) The Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost are one in purpose. (John 17:11,21-23); 3) The Godhead itself is one body comprised of three separate members, each of which is divine. Most scriptures in both the OT and NT that describe deity are in one of these contexts.
Do you not agree that the NT shines more light on the OT? Though you chided me for my "presumption," I did not see where you disagreed with me. My stance remains unchanged: the OT does not exist in a vacuum void of NT illumination.
Der Alter said:
If we have the NT to help us sort this out then why don't you use it? Instead of just your handful of out-of-context proof texts.... Kneejerk out-of-context proof text. As you clearly noted Jesus prayed, "That they all may be one" "May" is in the subjunctive mood. Look it up.
Are you suggesting that Jesus was praying for something that was impossible? If so I do not share your opinion. The clause in the subjunctive is less important here than that which is indicative: "that they may be one,
even as we are one."(v22)
How exactly is this out of context? These verses are frequently used by Trinitarians themselves to counter unitarians. They clearly demonstrate Jesus' meaning when He declares that He and His Father are one and also demonstrates Their physical distinction. Thus they also quite pertinently provide an alternative interpretation to the OT scriptures in your first post. The kneejerk reaction is your own.
Der Alter said:
And that "oneness" never happened during the disciple's lifetime. Judas betrayed Jesus, Peter denied him. The others ran and hid. Later Paul got in Peter's face because he was shunning gentile Christians. What may or may not happen in the resurrection, with the disciples, cannot prove anything about the then and there unity of Jesus and the Father.
This isn't relevant.
Der Alter said:
If you ever deign to provide a definitive to response to this [OT teachings of multiple gods] let me know. But please read the ECF before doing so. Especially Justin, Dialogue with Trypho. late 1st early 2d century, "True God from True God without abscission." i.e. "cutting off."
There seems to be enough on the plate as is. But a discussion of how or if the OT mentions multiple gods is unnecessary, because all that is needed for the purposes of this discussion is that there are two, dismissing the premise that there is just one.
I was unable to find "True God from True God without abscission" in the Dial. Trypho via an Internet search. Perhaps you can point me in the right direction. I am, however, familiar with Justin's comparison of deity to fire, where he used the term "not by abscission" to mean that the source is not diminished for having generated another; in his analogy, there are in the end two fires.
"Justin wrote that the "first-begotten," the Logos, is the "first force after the Father:" he is "
a second God, second numerically but not in will," doing only the Father's pleasure." Hatch, Edwin, The Influence of Greek Ideas and Usages Upon the Christian Church, p. 268.
"Then I replied, 'Reverting to the Scriptures, I shall endeavor to persuade you, that He who is said to have appeared to Abraham, and to Jacob, and to Moses, and who is called God,
is distinct from Him who made all things,--numerically, I mean, not[distinct] in will. For I affirm that He has never at any time done anything which He who made the world--above whom there is no other God--has not wished Him both to do and to engage Himself with.'" Justin Martyr, Dialogue with Trypho, Ch LVI.
"Thus while really distinct, the Three are from another point of view one; as he expresses it [Dial. Heracl. 2], '
we are not afraid to speak in one sense of two Gods, in another sense of one God.'" (J. N. D. Kelly, Early Christian Doctrines quoting Origen Dial. Heracl. 2). "and these,
while they are two, considered as persons or subsistences,
are one in unity of thought, in harmony and in identity of will. So entirely are they one, that he who has seen the Son, "who is the brightness of God's glory, and the express image of His person,"' has seen in Him who is the image, of God, God Himself." (Origen, Against Celsus 8:12)
As for the ECF, I'm still workin' on them. But with my schedule, it'll be a while.