C
Catholic_Dude
Guest
I’ve been wanting to stay up to date with this thread, but I’m falling behind. I’d like to comment upon this post, because I think some important things need to be cleared up.It is not so much that “Jehovah cannnot be a triune God”, but rather, that the Bible no where reveals the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob as a triune God. The God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob is always revealed as one person, and never as more than one person.
The fundamental distinction that needs to be made, which you don’t seem to be grasping, is the difference between Person and Nature. In a nutshell, Nature addresses for us the “What?” questions, while Person addresses the “Who?” questions. Nature tells us qualities about, Person tells us who is acting. A human father and son are two persons, but they each have a human nature, the father “passing on” his nature to another person, his son. **
In the Trinity**, the Three Persons possess the One Indivisible Omnipotent Divine Nature.
Throughout this response, issues addressing Person will be highlighted in Red, while issues addressing Nature will be highlighted in Blue.
When you say God is “always revealed as one person,” under the historical Christian teaching, that thesis is manifestly false for the fact that under historical Christian teaching, the Three Names of the Three Persons are explicitly and repeatedly stated in Scripture: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Without this distinction, you’re not really getting at what Christians are teaching, nor at the Scriptural evidence they provide. Mat 28:19 Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit
This is one of the strongest and most explicit proofs for The Three Persons in Scripture.
This claim, while very true, shows that what you’re addressing is not the Trinity as historically understood by Christians. What you said here applies to Person, and thus we would very much expect God the Father to “always be distinguished from His Son”! For them not to be distinguished would refute the Trinity doctrine by definition!All through the New Testament, the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob is always distinguished from His son, and His son is not once revealed to be the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. The great spirit of human imagination has been untilized so as to imagine such, assumptions have been formulated into doctrine in order to defend such,
With this in mind, I would suggest you take a fresh look at your argument, for while it might have some logical claims, it is not actually addressing the very doctrine it claims to address.
With the proper Person and Nature distinction in place, what you say should be true as far as the Trinity goes:** God the Father** should never be identified as His Son Jesus!John (John 1:1,2) does not say that Jesus is the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, but John clearly distinguishes the Logos from God whom the Logos was with. John twice says that the Logos was with God, and Jesus identified “God” whom he was with as the “only true God.” (John 17:3,5)
Note that up to this point I’ve pretty much only used Red, not Blue, indicating the issue of Nature is not being addressed. If you are reading Nature into what has been said so far, then it’s likely that you’re misunderstanding the Trinity doctrine, and likely by unintentionally equivocating/conflating the terms Person and Nature into only one notion.
Careful here: Here is an example of where the Person and Nature distinction needs to be made and will be shown. Without this distinction, the doctrine will be misread, and John 1:1 will be misinterpreted. The way the Greek is set up (e.g using the definite article in the first instance), it should read something like this:Word was with The God,What the trinitarian has done is to imagine and assume that
the first instance of “THEOS” in John 1:1 refers to their alleged first person of the triune God,
and the second instance of “THEOS” refers to their alleged second person
of their alleged triune God.
and the Word was **God[like] **
See what’s happening here? The “first instance of Theos” does indeed refer to the First Person, the Father - and the “first instance of Theos” [the Father] is clearly distinguished from the Word.
(cont)