This is what scripture says...
John 14:10 Believest thou not that I am in the Father, and the Father in me? the words that I speak unto you I speak not of myself: but the Father that dwelleth in me, he doeth the works.
...by the one Spirit...
John 3:34 For he whom God [the Father] hath sent speaketh the words of God [the Father]: for God [the Father] giveth not the Spirit by measure unto him. 35 [God] The Father loveth the Son, and hath given all things into his hand.
They are one by the Spirit of God the Father, the Father dwelling in the Son, by the Father's Spirit. This is God with us! God the Father with us!
Yes, God is with us.
God is trinity. God is Father, God is Son and God is Spirit, the Holy Spirit. The Father is divine, the Son is divine, the Spirit is divine; the Father is not the Son, the Son is neither the Father nor the Spirit, the Spirit is neither the Son nor the Father. All 3 are separate persons with specific roles - yet there is only ONE God. The three are one.
Why? And do you have scripture for this?
Are you saying God died?
I'm saying that no one who is only human can reconcile us to God. There is no specific Scripture, but no one managed it in the whole of the OT - not even Noah and Job who are both described as blameless and righteous. After their deaths, people still remained separate from God, had to offer sacrifices for their sins and they still needed Jeremiah to prophesy that God was going to make a NEW covenant with mankind.
What exactly happened on the cross is a mystery. I don't have an answer or understand it; I don't pretend to.
But if Jesus was
only a man, then he can't have taken the sins of the world upon himself nor given eternal life - how would he have that authority?
Why? And do you have scripture for this?
I know a earthly man can't.
Again, there is the whole of the OT.
No one - not Abraham, Moses, David, Isaiah, Jeremiah etc - were able to reconcile people to God. But they all spoke of Jesus' coming. They prophesied about someone who would be the servant of the Lord, a suffering servant, who would be born of a virgin and called Almighty God, Isaiah 9:6, who would take the throne of David, have a healing ministry, be rejected by his people, suffer and be killed for our sins and who would fulfil the New Covenant prophesied by Jeremiah - signed, sealed and delivered by Jesus.
If you acknowledge that an earthly man can't do this; what's the alternative? Scripture does not say that heavenly beings are able to do this for us, nor that any of them became flesh.
He was the son of God, and son of man. He was flesh, with God the Father dwelling in him. Jesus is the word, the bread that came down from heaven.
The Son of God is also God the Son.
When Jesus was on earth he was 100% man and also 100% God. Again, don't ask me how, but nothing else makes sense. If he had come to earth and immediately said, "I am God", he would have been killed before he could even begin his ministry and teach us anything. But he did in fact say this in many ways, in words and by his actions. John tells us of 3 occasions when the Jews wanted to stone him for blasphemy; they knew what he was claiming.
The Father is truly our savior, this was all His plan and work
Yes, in the sense that it was his plan from the beginning, he sent Jesus, he showed us mercy and grace - but it was not the Father who died on the cross. We have not been reconciled to, and have peace with, the Father through the Father, but through Jesus, Romans 5:1; Romans 5:11; Ephesians 1:6-7; 2 Corinthians 5:18-19. You, yourself, quoted verses showing that we are reconciled to God through Jesus.
Isaiah 43:11 says, "I, even I, am the Lord and apart from me there is NO Saviour". Yet the angel told Joseph that Jesus would save people from their sins, Matthew 1:21, Jesus said that he had come to seek and save the lost, Luke 19:10 and Peter said that there is only ONE name by which we can be saved, Acts 4:12. So who is the Saviour - the Lord God of the OT who spoke through Isaiah, or Jesus?
This says flesh, and blood, not God. Flesh and blood is man, God is not flesh and blood, God is Spirit.
God is Spirit - yet John 1:14 is very clear that the word, who was God,
became flesh.
You have already said that an earthly man cannot forgive our sins and reconcile us to God - that is exactly what Jesus did, so he was clearly not just an earthly man.
Just had that discussion in this thread with someone else. We are told to do this very thing. By the way Jesus lived his life, he had no sin. If you recall at Jesus conception, he was called holy, which means set apart (“different from the world” because “like the Lord”).
Mary was told that he would be called "Son of the Most high" who would reign forever and whose kingdom would have NO end, Luke 1:32-33; Joseph was told that Mary's child was OF the Holy Spirit and that he would be a Saviour, Matthew 1:20-21.
John 1:14 says that the word, who was GOD, became flesh.
And we have the choice to become the sons of God, if we are led by His Spirit.
Not just led by his Spirit, BORN of his Spirit, John 3:5-6.
Jesus spoke to Nicodemus about the need to be born again - born from on high - and told him that he could speak to him of heavenly things because he, the Son of Man, had come from heaven. He also said that he, the Son of Man, would be lifted up, (crucified) for the healing of many.
Later, he made it clear that he, the Son, the Son of Man, would give eternal life to all those who believed in him, and that this was the Father's will.
Martha believed he was the son of God, not that he was that God.
Like I said, Jesus didn't go around saying "I am God". That realisation may have come later - as it did with Thomas when he declared, "my Lord and my God". The risen Jesus accepted that title and accepted worship from his disciples - Jewish men who knew that they should worship no one but God.
May I ask, how did you come to that conclusion? Why is there two Gods?
There is ONE God.
What I am saying is that if you believe that the Holy Spirit - the Spirit of God, the Spirit of the Lord - is divine then there are only 2 alternatives; either the Spirit is one with God the Father, OR there are two Gods.
If you believe that the Spirit is not God, there isn't a problem - except you need to explain who, and what, the Spirit is.
It is the Father's Spirit that is in the Son, there is only one Spirit. Father is the Spirit. There is one God the Father who is Spirit. Jesus is the Son of that God. So, where do you get two Gods? You can't keep saying that, and give no reason for it.
The Holy Spirit is mentioned occasionally in the OT and very often in the New. He is spoken of as a separate person with a specific role.
At creation, GOD created, and his Spirit was present and hovering over the waters. God breathed his Spirit into man and he became a living being, Genesis 2:7. When Saul was anointed king, we are told that God changed his heart and the Spirit of the Lord came on him, 1 Samuel 10:9-10. King David prayed to God and said, "do not take your Holy Spirit from me", Psalm 51:11. Ezekiel spoke of a time when God would put his Spirit in men, and Joel foretold that God would pour his Spirit out on all people.
Jesus said that the Father would give the Holy Spirit to those who asked him, Luke 11:13. He said that we are born again through the Spirit, John 3:3. John the Baptist said that Jesus would baptise people in the Holy Spirit, Matthew 1:11. When Jesus himself was baptised, the Spirit came down, in the form of a dove, to rest on him. Jesus said that whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven, Mark 3:29. Paul says that it is the Spirit who assures us that we are God's children, who intercedes for us, Romans 8:27, who enables us to say "Jesus is Lord", 1 Corinthians 12:3, who gives us gifts to serve God, 1 Corinthians 12:12-30, and bears fruit in us, Galatians 5:22-23.
We are led to Jesus, and convicted of sin by the Spirit, so that Jesus can reconcile us to the Father.
The Father and Spirit are the same, they are not two persons John 4:23-24. The Father and son are two persons.
Scripture says, for example the verses I have quoted, that the Father sends his Spirit, baptises people in his Spirit, leads people by his Spirit, gives people gifts by his Spirit, and so on.
If the Spirit is the same as the Father, why mention him at all? How can the Father send himself, or intercede to himself for us? Why specifically mention the Spirit and all his different roles if the authors really meant the Father? Why not write about the fruits and gifts of the Father? Why would Jesus say that God will forgive all blasphemy except blasphemy against the Holy Spirit? It seems clear to me, and I'm certain it was to the apostles because that is what they taught, that the Holy Spirit is FROM the Father; one with him, yet individual.
There is ONE God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.