U
una_fides
Guest
There are protestant groups that do not believe that Jesus is God. In fact, in the early Church, during the times of Arianism, it has been estimated that a majority of the world’s bishops at the time were heretics and denied the divinity of Christ!The gospel:
Jesus is Son of God, Mary is His mother.
Jesus is God, the Holy Spirit is God.
Jesus lived a sinless life.
Jesus was crucified, He died and rose from the dead.
All who believe in Him will have eternal life.
There are several protestant groups that believe that Jesus is the same person as the father and that the Spirit is just the Father’s Spirit–all one God and one person.
There are protestant groups that believe that Jesus was a mere man and that he had passions like we do to which he succumbed. I even heard a liberal deacon once state that Jesus might have lusted after Mary Magdeline and indicated that lust is not a sin!
There was an early Church heresy that denied that Jesus was a man who was crucified and instead they believed that Jesus was a spirit and it only appeared he died. There are also many protestant groups that deny the resurrection. There are even some very liberal people who consider themselves Catholic who believe and teach that Jesus didn’t bodily rise from the dead.
“All who believe in him have eternal life.” A simple statement but what does it mean? No consensus. Does that mean that one merely has to have faith alone and he will have eternal life? (Sola fide) Or does it mean that a man must have faith and works as St. James clearly taught in his epistle? Is baptism the sacrament of faith in which man enters the Church or is it just an ordinance and a mere symbol of already existing faith? If one has faith, can he loose it? If he looses faith, can he still be saved? Does one also need hope and charity? Faith working through charity to be saved as Scripture also teaches.
The list goes on and on. So far the only statement that you’ve made above that I am not aware of any contrary views–though I’m sure there’s someone out there who teaches or believes otherwise–is that Mary was the mother of Jesus. However, how do you define Mother? Does that mean she gave birth to him? Just raised him? And was it a Virgin birth or did she conceive from a man?
The only consensus so far that you have demonstrated is that there is no consensus.