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WesleyF
Guest
How is my point contradicted? I said that they worship one God but they don’t know so much about him. That is what Paul tried to do. To tell them more about that same unknown God. What therefore you worship as unknown, this (same unknown God) I proclaim to you. Tell me what “this” is referring to? And Paul never gave them the example of any statue, he only saw an altar with that inscription.But your whole point is contradicted with the fact that Paul sought to convert them to Christ. If he had no problem with their belief he would have let them go, but he was merely using the example of the statue to talk about who that “unknown God” is, and that they should worship Him now.
Please provide the exact quote.Incidentally, there is an excellent part in Justin Martyr’s Dialogue with Trypho where he meets a Jew who says the exact same thing you said: the Greeks believe in the same God as the Jews. Justin, himself a Greek convert, turns that argument on its head and shows, in fact, the Greeks have only a vague concept of God, and do not believe in the true God. It was never an argument of the Church Fathers that universalism or any other version of it was valid.
Romans 1:22-32 condemns people for what they are doing at present, not for what they think they will do in paradise. So your assertion is not valid.Actually sounds fairly accurate to Islam if you study their rules for morality and their concept of Paradise![]()
The Jews worship the same God whom people of the Old Testament worshipped. Do you claim that the God of the Old Testament is a different God than the God of the New Testament?I’ve already spoken on this many times before on this forum: yes, the Jews don’t worship the same God we worship because they deny Christ who is God.
He will reject those who reject him, but to reject him you should first know him. The Jews, whom Jesus Christ spoke to, knew him and then rejected him. But what about their descendants who never heard him?The Trinity is not a buffet - you can’t say, “Well I’ll pick the Father but not the Son and Holy Spirit.” Each Person within the Trinity represents the fullness of God, and They are united in Three. To deny one is to deny all. This isn’t something you can just say “so what” to, when Christ says He is the only way to the Father (John 14:6) and, as I quoted before, He will reject those who reject Him (Matthew 10:33).
What I wanted to convey was this: based upon your assertion, the Jews don’t worship the same God that we do. That means they are pagans. Now does God keep covenant with pagans? No. Does God make promises to pagans? No. But God has made promises to the Jews and he is going to fulfill them by bringing all the Jews back in Israel and then they shall convert to Christianity. So that means God doesn’t regard them as pagans. In other words they worship him.I don’t know what you refer to in the restoration of Israel, unless you mean Revelation. Just remember that the Jews who see Christ will believe in Him…in other words, they’ll convert to Trinitarian thinking.![]()