S
spockrates
Guest
Stylter:Why is it so critical as Christians that we understand God as three persons in one God? You seem to have created a scenario that the three persons are irrelevant. Don’t you accept the premise that each person has a different function? You seem to be implying that each function is ultimately done by all.
Please forgive me for not answering the second question adequately. My answer is that you are quite right.
The Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit can, and sometimes do, take on different rolls. That is, they do, so long as they don’t contradict or disagree with each another. An example would be their rolls during Jesus’ passion: The Father’s roll was to sacrifice His Son for you and me. The Son’s roll was to accept this sacrifice of Himself for you and me. The Holy Spirit’s roll might have been to influence others in bringing this sacrifice to fruition, by (for example) giving the Jewish High Priest the message that God would sacrifice someone to save the Jewish people.
Here we see different rolls, but the same goal. That’s the key, I think that unlocks the door to understanding this. They each have the same purpose in mind–the sacrificial death and resurrection of the Lamb of God who took away the sins of the world.
Now maybe I’m misunderstanding, but I’m thinking that if the Son of God *always *forgives unconditionally, and the Father God does *not *always forgive (for He forgives only conditionally, and not all meet the conditions for Him to forgive) then the two of them have different rolls AND different goals. The goal of the Son would be to forgive everyone. The goal of the Father would be to NOT forgive everyone. The Son, therefore would contradict and disagree with the Father. For the Father would decide that some should not be forgiven, and the Son would persistently not agree, and forgive them anyway! I don’t see, then how they could be one in purpose, if indeed they did not always see eye-to-eye when it comes to forgiving. I simply don’t understand how these words of the prayer of the Son could actually be true:
“My prayer is not for them alone. I pray also for those who will believe in me through their message, that all of them may be one, Father, just as you are in me and I am in you. May they also be in us so that the world may believe that you have sent me. I have given them the glory that you gave me, that they may be one as we are one: I in them and you in me."
(John 17:20-23)
For these reasons, I’m thinking that (when the Father forgives conditionally) the Son must forgive conditionally, too. Their different rolls must *never *override their one and the same goal–which is to be one in understanding and purpose the way they want you and I to be one in understanding and purpose. That’s one reason why I’m engaging in this dialog. See what I mean, my friend?