M
mpartyka
Guest
Wow. That’s the first time I ever heard anything of the kind. I have to ask, though, how does that satisfy Jesus’ question to the people, “If the Messiah is the Son of David, how can David, speaking by the Holy Spirit, call him Lord?” If Jesus was originally David’s child, then he was originally beneath David in rank (i.e., a prince ranks beneath a king), not above David (i.e., a king ranks beneath a Lord).I just kind of went along with that not really believing it until I figured out Jesus was born to David and Bathsheba, died, then was resurrected into Mary so in reality he was born a regular man who came to have God’s Spirit dwell in him with all power.
Why, then,. does the Quran deny something neither the Bible nor the Church ever taught? Isn’t it promoting a misconception of Christian beliefs concerning the Incarnation when it asks, “How could He have a son when He has no consort?” (6:101)The Quran just means God didn’t have a son like Zeus siring Dionysus with a mortal, through real sex
On the contrary, the Quran specifically says, “It is not worthy of the Beneficent Allah that He should take to Himself a son. There is no one in the heavens and the earth but will come to the Beneficent Allah as a servant.” (19:93) Indeed, the Quran even goes so far as to deny the principle of adoption: “Allah hath not…made those whom ye claim to be your sons your sons. This is but a saying of your mouths. But Allah saith the truth and He showeth the way. Proclaim their real parentage. That will be more equitable in the sight of Allah. And if ye know not their fathers, then they are your brethren in the faith, and your clients.” (33:4-5) If Allah forbids men the adoption of sons, how then can you claim that Allah will adopt us as sons, especially when the Quran specifically says that all come to God as servants, never as sons?It’s not saying we all can’t be children of God with God’s Spirit.
Then what does Jesus mean when he says in John 17:5, “And now, O Father, glorify thou me with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was”? How could Jesus have been sharing glory with God before the world began if he was not born until, at best, David committed adultery with Bathsheba (according to your theory)? For that matter, why would God have suffered a prophet to be born of adultery?John 1 doesn’t mention Jesus until God’s Word is made flesh, that means God’s Spirit dwells in a human and he speaks God’s Word, a prophet.
John 1:1 reads, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the word was God.” How can the Word be with God and yet be God?Nothing in the Bible says God’s Word is a God dwelling with another God. God’s Word is just the knowledge of God, what He says, what He intends for humanity, His will. It’s not a person.
Again, explain how Jesus – not the Spirit, but Jesus, mind you – claimed to have been sharing glory with God before the world began?God made all things with the intention of an everlasting kingdom of Messiah. It doesn’t mean Jesus was there with God.
We know the person of God the Son as the man Jesus Christ because that’s who God the Son became through His assumption of human nature in the Incarnation. It’s the same person, only that person was divine at first, and not until later both divine and human.Jesus has a human soul. So even if Christian believe that part of Jesus is there in John 1:1, he did not really exist as the real Jesus until he had a human soul, which is the Jesus we know today who is a man.
Except that’s not what the Bible teaches, nor has that ever been the teaching of the Church.1 Timothy 2:5 For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus; So it is better to say Jesus was born a regular human with a human body and soul, and God’s Spirit went to dwell with him forever.
Instead, it would be better for you to accept that the Bible does teach the doctrine of the Trinity and simply admit that you don’t believe what the Bible says, rather than interpret the Bible to fit the Quran. They simply don’t agree, and it’s a waste of time to even try to reconcile them.
–Mike