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In the grand scheme of things remember that a couple of councils needed to debate this. The JW view is more or less a resurgence of Arianism.
ἀπεκρίθη Θωμᾶς καὶ εἶπεν αὐτῷ· Ὁ κύριός μου καὶ ὁ θεός μου.The Greek text which I don’t have in front of me right now and I can’t remember anyway when Thomas says to Jesus “my Lord and my God” says in Greek “the Lord and the God of me”. I mean that’s pretty straightforward.
Which is a terrible translation.NWT changes that to “a god.”
But yeah the New World Translation is not an actual translation I mean there were people who knew a little bit of Greeks that did work on it but it is more or less translated to fit Jehovah’s Witness theologyWhich is a terrible translation.
καὶ θεὸς ἦν ὁ λόγος.
The article before logos indicates that it is the subject of the sentence. Theos is also in the nominative case, though, so the best way to distinguish the subject from the predicate nominative is to put the article in front of the subject and not in front of the predicate nominative. But then John chooses to put Theos as the first noun of his sentence. That wasn’t grammatically necessary. Word order in Greek is used for emphasis.
If it was written as καὶ ὁ λόγος ἦν θεὸς we could properly translate it as “a god,” but not with the actual word order. Add in the I AM statements throughout John and Thomas’ declaration and Johannine thought in general and I don’t see how you can translate differently. There can be no doubt about what the author was saying.
God is not subordinate to anyone or anything."Is there subordination in the Trinity?
There is, apparently, a subordination within the Trinity regarding order but not substance or essence. We can see that the Father is first, the Son is second, and the Holy Spirit is third. The Father is not begotten, but the Son is (John 3:16). The Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father (John 15:26). The Father sent the Son (1 John 4:10). The Son and the Father send the Holy Spirit (John 14:26, 15:26). The Father creates (Isaiah 44:24), the Son redeems (Gal. 3:13), and the Holy Spirit sanctifies (Rom. 15:16).
This subordination of order does not mean that each of the members of the Godhead are not equal or divine. For example, we see that the Father sent the Son, but this does not mean that the Son is not equal to the Father in essence and divine nature. The Son is equal to the Father in His divinity but inferior in His humanity. A wife is to be subject to her husband, but this does not negate her humanity, essence, or equality. By further analogy, a king and his servant both share human nature. Yet, the king sends the servant to do his will. Jesus said, “For I have come down from heaven, not to do My own will, but the will of Him who sent Me,” (John 6:38). Of course Jesus already is King, but the analogy shows that because someone is sent, it doesn’t mean they are different from the one who sent him."
carm.org/what-trinity
It’s one God. You would not be worshipping a subordinated god, you would be worshipping the one God, whose is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. When I pray “Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit,” I am declaring “glory be to God”. We baptize in the name (singular) of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. We do not baptize in the names (plural). This is God, who has revealed himself fully to men through the person Jesus Christ.God is not subordinate to anyone or anything.
That is the definition of a God. Why would I worship a subordinate to God? Take me to the one that create subordinates and I want to worship Him.
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What analogy can you give that enables someone to understand “begetting”?It’s one God. You would not be worshipping a subordinated god, you would be worshipping the one God, whose is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. When I pray “Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit,” I am declaring “glory be to God”. We baptize in the name (singular) of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. We do not baptize in the names (plural). This is God, who has revealed himself fully to men through the person Jesus Christ.
The Son is not created, either. The Father did not create the Son. He begets him, eternally. There was never a moment when God was only the Father. God has always been the Father begetting the Son, with the Holy Spirit proceeding from both of them. There has never been a moment when the Son was not begotten. There has never been a moment when the Spirit did not proceed. The Son and the Spirit are uncreated. Such is God.
Might I just add also that if all 3 persons make up the one God, one should never exclude the others when referring to God. So the phrase “Jesus is God” becomes an inaccurate statement since separating the Persons only serves to introduce the importance of subordination in this distinction.It’s one God. You would not be worshipping a subordinated god, you would be worshipping the one God, whose is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. When I pray “Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit,” I am declaring “glory be to God”. We baptize in the name (singular) of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. We do not baptize in the names (plural). This is God, who has revealed himself fully to men through the person Jesus Christ.
The Son is not created, either. The Father did not create the Son. He begets him, eternally. There was never a moment when God was only the Father. God has always been the Father begetting the Son, with the Holy Spirit proceeding from both of them. There has never been a moment when the Son was not begotten. There has never been a moment when the Spirit did not proceed. The Son and the Spirit are uncreated. Such is God.
Please keep in mind the limits of analogies, as helpful as they may be. The universe was made from nothing. God made it apart from Himself. The Son wasn’t brought forth from nothing. He is begotten of the Father’s own substance, somewhat as a Father and Mother beget a child from their own flesh. That said, for God, this was not a before and after. The Father did not beget the Son (past tense) at some moment in time before the rest of Creation, but the Son is eternally begotten from the Father. God is one being, is eternally one being, and that being is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.What analogy can you give that enables someone to understand “begetting”?
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Well, at the same time, we don’t divide God up into parts. The Father is by nature fully God. The Son is by nature fully God. As is the Spirit. They are all one essence, one substance. There is no difference in the nature between them. The only distinction is in their relationship to each other. We can properly say, “Jesus is God” without saying “Jesus is the Father.”Might I just add also that if all 3 persons make up the one God, one should never exclude the others when referring to God. So the phrase “Jesus is God” becomes an inaccurate statement since separating the Persons only serves to introduce the importance of subordination in this distinction.
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ThankyouPlease keep in mind the limits of analogies, as helpful as they may be. The universe was made from nothing. God made it apart from Himself. The Son wasn’t brought forth from nothing. He is begotten of the Father’s own substance, somewhat as a Father and Mother beget a child from their own flesh. That said, for God, this was not a before and after. The Father did not beget the Son (past tense) at some moment in time before the rest of Creation, but the Son is eternally begotten from the Father. God is one being, is eternally one being, and that being is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
John does not say in the beginning God made the Word, he says in the beginning was the word.
It is hard to get one’s mind around. In fact, I don’t think the mind can get all the way around it from our current perspective. But this is God’s revelation of Himself to us. And just because it’s outside full comprehension doesn’t make it contradictory. And it makes sense that God is not fully comprehensible, doesn’t it?
Sure thingYou’re welcome! I appreciate your asking and trying to understand what we mean better, even if you don’t agree with the conclusion.
Could you provide a source for God’s essence being in everything according to Catholic teaching. I’m aware of “existence” being an action in itself, which God does infinitely, and we finite beings do finitely, but I have heard your particular phrasing before, and I’ve studied some metaphysics/natural philosophy of Catholic thinkers. Catholics do not see God as some substance extending through all space and time. He is immaterial, occupying no space and no time, though he does sustain it.
This section from “The Beauty and Truth of the Catholic faith” published originally in German in 1816, explains this well:Therefore, God is in all things by His power, inasmuch as all things are subject to His power; He is by His presence in all things, as all things are bare and open to His eyes; He is in all things by His essence, inasmuch as He is present to all as the cause of their being.
For Catholics the preservative action of God, wherewith he holds every creature in existence, is identical with His very being or essence.
The Beauty and Truth of the Catholic Church
Vol. IV
Sermon III:
The Omnipresence of God
“For in Him we live, and move, and are.”-----ACTS 17, 28
But how, my beloved, is God everywhere present in all His creatures? He is everywhere present by His Substance or Nature [Essence]; secondly by His omnipresence and thirdly by His omnipotence. God is, first, everywhere present by His Substance or Nature. Wherever we may be, there God is truly and really: “In Him we live, move and are.” Everywhere is His whole, indivisible Godhead, His goodness and love, His mercy and justice, His wisdom and omnipotence, and all the greatness and perfection of His Divine Nature. God is everywhere the same as He is in Heaven, the same, Who created the earth and governs it. If our eyes would be opened we would behold Him here everywhere, and be blessed in this vision. For the Saints in Heaven are happy only because they behold God, and God permits Himself to be seen by them in Heaven and not everywhere, because the blessed cannot be everywhere, and Heaven, not the earth, according to the will of God is the dwelling-place of the blessed…
God is, therefore, everywhere and in all creatures present with His substance, omniscience and omnipotence. As we can conclude from the exterior and visible of man his interior and invisible, his soul, which communicates to the body its being, life and movement, so also we can penetrate with the eye of faith the whole creation and recognize in it the omnipresence of God Who gives and preserves to everything its existence, life and movement.
Again from Fr. John Hardon’s dictionary (he was the founder of Catholic Answers):So, by omnipresence we teach that God, in the fullness of his Divine Essence yet without “diffusion or expansion, multiplication or division, penetrates and fills the universe and beyond in all its parts” as one scholar wrote.
Omnipresence
God being simultaneously wherever he is, since he is present everywhere. The divine omnipresence is twofold, by nature and by grace.
By nature God is present in all things by essence, knowledge, and power. This is the presence of a cause in the things that share in God’s goodness. By his essence, he is substantially in all things, including the created spiritual essences (angels, demons, human souls) as the immediate origin of their existence. By his knowledge, he exercises his wisdom directly in all creation down to the least details. By his power, he operates with divine activity as the First Cause of everything that creatures do.
.By grace, God is further present in the souls in whom he dwells as in a temple. Hence the creature is joined, as it were, to God’s substance, through the activity of mind and heart, by faith cleaving to the First Truth, and by charity to the First Good. He is therefore present by grace as the known is to the knower and the beloved is to the lover. This presence is more than a cause in an effect. It is the possession of God on earth similar to his being possessed by the angels and saints in heaven
They believe only 144,000 will go to heaven (literal interpretation). The rest will live on a paradise earth or be annihilated. There is no limit placed on the number on paradise earth.JW believe only a certaun number if people can be saved. Although most are not saved I always point out to them that salvation is OPEN to ALL!
Jehovah’s Witnesses – Proving to JW’s that Jesus is GodJehovah’s witnesses are one of the few religions that say Jesus was not God but The chief angel. Can this be disproved using the only thing they trust which is the bible?
Jesus Christ is Jehovah, the God of the Old Testament.(Exo. 6:3) In the KJV Christ is named as the God of Moses in the book of Hebrews:Jehovah’s witnesses are one of the few religions that say Jesus was not God but The chief angel. Can this be disproved using the only thing they trust which is the bible?