T
TxGodfollower
Guest
You presume incorrectly, I don’t accept either their NT or OT lists.How about this Church council pronouncement: these are the books that belong in the New Testament and are theopneustos:
usccb.org/bible/books-of-the-bible/
I presume that you accept this, yes?
Christ spoke quiet extensively about it in Matthew. “I and my Father are one.” The two of them (Father and Son) obviously have similar natures. By the phrases Christ uses to describe the Spirit, plus the Great Commission and 1 John, it is clear that the Holy Spirit is on the same level.And where does it state that the 3 Persons are co-eternal and co-equal? Where does it say that there is one nature in God? That there are 3 persons in one God?
So are there two distinct persons in the Incarnate Christ, one human and one divine or one person with two natures? How do you know which one is the correct one based upon the scriptures that you quoted?
Does Christ have one or two wills? How did you determine that?
Is Mary the Mother of God or the mother of a human being conjoined to God?
If you don’t know the church pronouncements, how do you know when to celebrate Easter and Christmas? And why do you celebrate Easter/Christmas? Because the Church says so and not the Bible.
If you do not know Church Council pronouncements , where do you think your Nicene/Apostle Creed comes from? And the Bible too as the other poster have pointed out.
And why do you go to Church on Sunday and not on Saturday the Mosaic Sabbath day?
Two natures: The verses I quoted were pretty clear, he is divine and human at the same time. Also 1 Timothy 3:16.
I am not sure I understand your question about one will vs two wills? Could you elaborate?
“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was God.” God has no mother. Mary gave birth to Jesus, the Word so God could become man, but Mother of God I don’t believe to be an accurate phrase.
Christmas/Easter: You make the assumption that I celebrate Christmas and Easter. I view them as merely reminders and something to bring to mind points in Christ’s life.
I believe the creeds are good summaries of Christian doctrine, but I don’t hold them to be any more doctrinal than the works of C.S. Lewis.
Saturday vs Sunday: See Romans 14.