I must say, you have a very unique view of things. :)
It's obvious that that's true from where you stand... :)
I know you want to make Jesus God...
What I want is irrelevant. It is what it is. The grass withers, and the flower fades, but the Word of our God endures forever.
...the reason you say "morphe" in Phil 2:5-7 is concrete in nature...
Is because it is.
The doctrine proceeds the scriptures. The scriptures must fit the doctrine.
No, the language is the language, and what it says is what it says. God said what He said, and meant what He meant. It is what it is. I think you mean "precedes." Nothing precedes the Word of God... except the one from Whom it proceeds... having been with Him from all eternity.
The Greek words are not completely different. They are all from the same root. You should really study this stuff before making pronouncements.
Rich, I was very clear, my friend, that the two very different words do have the same root. But still, they are different words, related, certainly, but denoting different things. There are more examples of that than we could get through in a month of Sundays. :)
I have and I've never read anything like what you are saying.
I'm sure that's true. :)
If I deny anything, I am in good company.
You certainly do have... company... :) But I wouldn't call it good... :) But that means nothing.
I'm not saying anything other than what Biblical scholars, including trinitarian scholars, say.
What
some "Biblical scholars"... and maybe
some "trinitarian scholars"... say. But I would have my doubts about any of those scholars being trinitarians. A trinitarian scholar who doesn't believe in the triune Jehovah? Wouldn't that make them non-trinitarian scholars, Rich? Or maybe... non-trinitarian trinitarian scholars? :) Scholar or no, some are wrong, and some are right. So it goes. But, as Paul says in Romans 9, "(God) has mercy on whomever He wills, and He hardens whomever He wills" (Romans 9:18). And again, that applies to scholars...
Poo-poo scholarship all you want...
Nobody's doing any such thing, Rich.
...an academic approach is much better...
And I say an approach informed by the Holy Spirit is better than mere academic, even as well and good as it is. Even so, even academics disagree, and do suggest that my approach is any less academic than yours ~ or that the academic approach of the scholars whose approach I would agree with is less academic than that of the scholars whom you would agree with ~ is very disingenuous, Rich. Quite disingenuous indeed.
...than an emotional, "I want it to be this way...blah, blah" approach.
Mischaracterize me all you want, Rich. It bothers me not. It is what it is.
But one can have the essential nature of God and a servant at the same time?
In the case, of Jesus, yes. That's exactly what Paul says in Philippians 2. It is what it is.
God is spirit (John 4:24). Jesus is flesh (Luk 24:39). The two don't mix (John 3:6).
So now you're ascribing sin to Jesus. I mean, you've really been doing that all along. But that's what you're doing. And also, you're disqualifying Jesus as Mediator between the Father and man, and denying that He and the Father are one, and a whole host of other things. But the first is the main thing, really. As Isaiah says, "Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness, who put bitter for sweet..." I know you're intentions are otherwise, but you know what they say about intentions...
Having God's spirit in Jesus did not make him God any more than Christ in us (Col 1:27) makes us Christ.
No, but that's beside the point, Rich, and I think you know that. Rather, it's totally avoiding the point, which you unitarians are so, so, good at. So be it.
I just happen to have the power of God dwelling within through holy spirit, the gift I got when I was born again.
I hope you have been born of the Spirit; I have been. Like I said, I think it's possible. With God, all things are possible.
Round and round we go... :)
Grace and peace to you.