J
JB_Brother_4446
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I guess saying Truth is bashing then.We’ve had 55 pages now bashing these people’s faith. Are we even allowed to be friends with them?
I guess saying Truth is bashing then.We’ve had 55 pages now bashing these people’s faith. Are we even allowed to be friends with them?
By the 55th page its bashing IMHOI guess saying Truth is bashing then.
Synonyms in LDS teaching.There is a differentiation between “in the beginning” and the “beginning of the universe” as I understand it?
lds.org/scriptures/bd/christ?lang=engLDS definitely consider Christ to be 100% divine, the Son of God, the Savior of the world.
Incorrect.end quote
Quote:
Originally Posted by JMM1957 View Post
Mormon’s don’t pray to Jesus, only the Father.[end quote]
Which is exactly what Christ asks us to do.
ADDED BY PJM
**John 10:30
I and the Father are one.
John 17:22
And the glory which thou hast given me, I have given to them; that they may be one, as we also are one:**
Quote:
Originally Posted by JMM1957 View Post
Calling upon Jesus is praying to Him. Asking Jesus to come into your heart to be your Lord and Savior is a prayer, and He hears you.
A) Proselytizing is against forum rules.
B) I assure you that I already let all of God into my heart and life
No, far from it. LDS consider Christ the divine Son of God. It is my understanding that JW consider Christ to be the angel Micheal (granted a JW could probably explain that far better than me).So are JW’s a LDS the same?
English needs more pronouns.Your statement has an abidance of "you"s in it, hence the conclusion ti was referring to me:
Asking Jesus to come into your heart to be your Lord and Savior is a prayer, and He hears you.
It also seems that Mormons use the words “begotten” and “created/born” as synonyms, which causes some confusion when they claim to have Christian beliefs.Adding my thoughts:
Yes, it does mean that the Son was created, as it is believed that Jesus is a literal spirit child of God (and Heavenly Mother), as we all are. He is literally the first born. Now, Mormons also believe that there is an eternal aspect to all of us, an eternal “intelligence”, that wasn’t created.
From LDS.org:
Intelligence has several meanings, three of which are: (1) It is the light of truth which gives life and light to all things in the universe. It has always existed. (2) The word intelligences may also refer to spirit children of God. (3) The scriptures also may speak of intelligence as referring to the spirit element that existed before we were begotten as spirit children.
lds.org/scriptures/gs/intelligence-intelligences?lang=eng
Every Christian word and phrase that Mormons use has been redefined to mean something that a Christian would not recognize. Starting with the word God.It also seems that Mormons use the words “begotten” and “created/born” as synonyms, which causes some confusion when they claim to have Christian beliefs.
The LDS Church teaches that Jesus became 100% divine, meaning that it teaches that he was not always 100% divine. Plus, what “divine” means in LDS teaching is kind of fuzzy. By this I mean, teachings that “God” is a title, that one aspires to. More of a priesthood office. The title/office comes with privileges, such as being divine…whatever divine means.LDS definitely consider Christ to be 100% divine, the Son of God, the Savior of the world.
I seem to remember you being a part of this conversation a while back also, and now you are pointing fingers?We’ve had 55 pages now bashing these people’s faith. Are we even allowed to be friends with them?
It seems Mormons believe Christ was “created” and due to their understanding of God, “begotten” has no meaning.Every Christian word and phrase that Mormons use has been redefined to mean something that a Christian would not recognize. Starting with the word God.
Or reversed. Everyone is begotten in Mormon teaching and no one is created.It seems Mormons believe Christ was “created” and due to their understanding of God, “begotten” has no meaning.
I have to agree. Because of Joseph Smith, existing Christianity was reworked. The most fundamental beliefs about the Godhead that were held for 1800 yrs. were incorrect.Every Christian word and phrase that Mormons use has been redefined to mean something that a Christian would not recognize. Starting with the word God.
The scripture you quoted puts Christ into a different category than “the one God.” By itself, it would be perfectly compatible with a “Monarchical Monotheism.” LDS, myself included, have significant “Monarchical Monotheism” within their/our thoughts. Catholics have purged most of this, but in concert with the increased discussion of Trinity, there are discussions of this Monarchical view. And Catholics do not go so far as John Calvin did. No Catholic scholar I know of claims Christ is “Auto-Theos.” Catholics simply must admit there is one God who is non-begotten and non-proceeding. LDS, myself included, are quite clear that Jesus Christ is subordinate to God the Father. LDS would not say Jesus Christ is “co-equal” with God the Father. All pre-Nicene Father’s were subordinationalists and I do not think you will find the term “co-equal” until Athanasius (I might be wrong about this).I quoted that passage to indicate that Christians believe that there is one God, i.e. there exists one God. If there existed two, three, four or more gods the Scripture couldn’t say “there is one God”. It would have been false otherwise.
Don’t you believe that other gods apart from the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, exist? According to your beliefs, does not the Father have relatives who are gods in the true sense? What about his wife or wives? What about past unknown gods and future new gods? Aren’t they other gods in existence? Then there is a contradiction between what you believe and what the Scripture says.
Why did Isaiah and the Deuteronomists not mention the Triune nature of God? Why did they not mention the Council of Gods in Psalms (and less clearer in Kings or Job). Why did they not say a lot of things?I have not a single doubt that the Bible teaches about one supreme being, who is alone and unique, eternal, above all, without equal, uncreated. God says he does not know about other gods; no other gods were formed before him, no others will be formed after him:
Is 43,10: 10 …Dt 32,39: 39 …Dt 4,39: 39
Why did he say that, if it is not true, if he knew his Father, his wives and the others?
I think your Isaiah passage aligns well with Islamic, modern Jewish, and Bahai monotheism. I think it aligns better with Oneness Pentecostals (modern modalists) than with Catholicism. And, if God is Triune, and Isaiah had such a truth in his mind as he wrote his inspired words (or words that came from His inspiration), Isaiah would have said something different than he did. So I reject that it is some plain definition of Catholic monotheism and I considered it compatible with LDS monotheism! If you want to isolate this passage from the rest of the Bible, your Trinity is farther from truth than Monarchical Monotheism within my tradition, but neither of us take our theology from a single Biblical passage.How could the Bible teach clearer that there exists one God than to say exactly that and plainly as it does?
I think your “idols or false gods” is just a MODERN and flawed understanding. Psalm 82 is discussed by the ECF. From St. Justin to St. Augustine, I do not believe you will find a single ECF who believes your “idols or false gods.” I suspect this is because they know that Jesus spoke positively of Psalm 82 and to dismiss the “gods” mentioned in Psalm 82 as “idols or false gods” would make Jesus’s words silly. Daniel Keating a Catholic scholar in Deification and Grace specifically speaks against your view concerning this scripture. Your view is more Protestant anti-cultist than it is Catholic precisely because so many ECF spoke positively of Psalm 82 as they advocated deification.When the bible mentions “gods”, these are idols or false gods (then they are not truly gods). Or they are humans/angels with delegated authority from God or with the divine-filiation grace (then they are not fully what God is by nature). Or are you saying that the wicked people mentioned as gods in the passage of the council of God are truly other gods (Psalm 82)? Besides they are clearly described in a position infinitely inferior to that of God.
I have read a great deal about the dual nature of Christ. I do not think it is Biblical until you ascribe Immutability to God. Pelikan was quite clear that the Biblical authors and early Christians didn’t believe God’s unchangingness was immutability. This was a development. “Immutability became axiomatic.” I believe it was a false development. 1 Tim 2:5 can be explained by some dual nature theory, but it certainly does not demand a dual nature theory. I know of nothing that suggests a dual nature theory unless you bring Immutability into your conception of God and the earliest Christians often didn’t. It together with many scriptures are easier to explain via some subordinationalism. Why did Christ speak of being inferior to God? Because Christ meant that the nature of the single person Christ that was human was inferior to God the Father, but the nature of the single person Christ that was divine was not mentioned? This is laid over scripture as centuries passed without God’s revelation guiding the church. It is not in scripture. I find the attempt to remove all subordinationism to be non-Biblical also.The passage of 1 Tim 2:5 doesn’t put Christ in another class respect God. It puts him in the same class of God, and at the same time in the same class of human beings. Only that way he can be the mediator between God and man, because he is God and man, he has the two natures.
Justin speaks like this because he was thoroughly a subordinationalist. The Monarchal Monotheist present within the Bible and St. Justin recognizes the unity associate with God the Father as FOUNT of Divinity. Christ is distinct and subordinate.Justin also states at the beginning that there is one God (the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob): “There will be no other God, O Trypho, nor was there from eternity any other existing” and “Nor have we trusted in any other (for there is no other), but in Him in whom you also have trusted, the God of Abraham, and of Isaac, and of Jacob.” (Dialogue with Trypho, chapter 11).
Then he applies to Jesus the “another God and Lord” (chapter 56).
I think he doesn’t mean that he is a distinct God from the Father, but that the Son is “another who is God and Lord”, otherwise he would be in self-contradiction with his previous assertion “there exists no other God”.
I find the union of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit to be a remarkable truth. I subordinate the Son to the Father and the Spirit to both. I do not think Tertullian was an inspired author, but I am not convinced any of these analogies should be rejected by me. Also, you do know that the Filoque clause, “from the Father and the Son” is rejected as a perversion of the Western church by the Eastern church.For example, the Spirit is said by Tertullian in your quote as “from the Father and the Son”. In your theology he is another spiritual child of god and not “from them”. Other instances are: the father as unbegotten. The comparison about the river, the tree, the sun, etc. are clear evidences of Tertullian trying to explain (in nowadays terms) that they are different persons but same being.
There are numerous authors who utilize these terms. Catholics, Trinitarian believing Protestants, and rejecters of the Trinity.But I need you to explain to me what you mean when using that of “numeric sense” and the “generic sense” (for the other posts), because I don’t understand that. Next time try to focus on one single “topic”, this posts are too long to address…
The whole article is good and explains why “metaphysical monotheism” is not something “Social Trinitarians” can embrace.I agree completely. Three human persons are united by unity of type and/or by functional unity (e.g. team), or organic unity (e.g. a lineage), or by hierarchical unity (e.g. a family), or in an even greater way in the Mystical Body (which includes all the unities I just mentioned). But the three divine persons are numerically the same being and essence. This is a unity that we cannot even comprehend. It is not only a unity than which none greater can be conceived; this unity itself cannot even be conceived. We grasp things intellectually by dividing them (into genus and species). So a Being that cannot be divided even formally is unintelligible to us. Before we seek to understand the doctrine of the Trinity, we first have to recognize the incomprehensible unity within which the Son and Spirit process.
calledtocommunion.com/2009/09/social-trinitarianism-and-the-catholic-faith/