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figmentPez -> RE: Do we Believe in the same God? (5/3/2008 2:39:22 PM)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: faithfulservant1 I believe the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are one God. The bible says that "God is one." So here is my question for a Trinitarian. If God was actually "Three Divine Persons" then how come God didn't acknowledge this in the bible? In other words, why wouldn't God just say "I am Three Divine Persons" or "I am a Trinity" or "I am Triune?" Isaiah 6:9 He said, "Go, and tell this people: 'Keep on listening, but do not perceive; Keep on looking, but do not understand.'" God says a lot that those who aren't willing to seek won't ever hear. The Bible never says "Jesus Christ is God" in those exact words, but it declares Him to be God none-the-less. Let me give some speculation about why God doesn't say "three divine persons". First, there's the problem that such a phrase is meaningless without further description. You yourself have been fooled into thinking that a one line description of "trinity" from the dictionary is somehow adequate to define the doctrine. That is simply foolishness! Scripture defines doctrine, not dictionaries. Furthermore, it's likely that simply saying "three divine persons" wouldn't survive the translation from Greek to other languages. There must be study of what God says about His nature to be able to understand who HE IS. God wants us to read scripture, and to study it to find out all that He has said about Himself, not just what can be summed up in one-line sound bites. quote:
I reject the Oneness Doctrine and the Modalism Doctrine. So please do not accuse me of believing in those false doctrines and please do not associate me with those false beliefs. I am innocent. I was just trying to get some common sense answers from a Trinitarian. What do you believe? You've been remarkably cagey about telling others what you do believe in. You've been involved in several threads where I've asked "Who do you say that the Son of Man is?" Why haven't you ever answered that question? quote:
God is one. ("one" should not be capitalized). Because God has 3 divisions. I believe these 3 divisions are the "image of God" found in the book of Thessalonians. (spirit, soul, body). 1. spirit = Holy Spirit 2. soul = Father 3. body = Jesus Christ This would qualify for one of the Webster's Dictionary definition of the Trinity. (Definition #2: A set of three persons or things that form a unit). Webster's is not a theological dictionary, even if it were, dictionaries do not serve to fully define technical terms. Trying to build doctrine around the dictionary definition of the word "trinity" is like trying to build a carburetor from the entry in the Random House Unabridged Dictionary. (Which is, "a device for mixing vaporized fuel with air to produce a combustible or explosive mixture, as for an internal-combustion engine." Note that a fuel injector also fits this description, but a fuel injector is not a carburetor.) Also note that your selected definition #2 is not a theological definition. Since the term "trinity" was coined to describe Biblical doctrine in a single word, the term has been corrupted and used by the secular world for any number of things (including the "trinity" of carrots, onions and celery). Just because the dictionary recognizes these bastarized uses, does not mean that they are applicable to Christian doctrine. Your claims do not line up with scripture, or with statements of trinitarian doctrine like the Apostle's Creed, the Nicene Creed and others. Your claim is that Jesus Christ is the body, and the Father is the soul, apparently equating them with humanity. The problem with this is that the human soul is NOT the father of the human body. There is not father/son relationship within a single human, as there is a Father/Son relationship within the eternal God.
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