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Jhn 1:18Jesus and the NT writers weren’t trinitarians. Reading scripture as if it is transmitting 4th century concepts results in a story that would be unrecognizable to 1st century Christians.
Jhn 1:18
No one has ever seen God, but the one and only Son, who is himself God and[fn] is in closest relationship with the Father, has made him known.
I'm just defending his deity right now, that's what the thread is about.What would that mean to a 1st century Jew who believed that another 1st century Jew was the Messiah promised by their God?
Connection with 4th century trinitarian theology? None.
I'm just defending his deity right now, that's what the thread is about.
Based on scriptureHis deity is his Father, the God of the Shema.
You aren’t defending the historical Jesus. You’re defending a 4th century theological construct.
I wasn't talking about a creed just the divinity of Christ. Paul and John wrote about it.(The Apostles, not The Beatles).How many Nicene Creed affirming Christians were running around Jerusalem (or anywhere in the world) in the 1st century?
I wasn't talking about a creed just the divinity of Christ. Paul and John wrote about it.(The Apostles, not The Beatles).
Based on scripture
How many Nicene Creed affirming Christians were running around Jerusalem (or anywhere in the world) in the 1st century?
I didn't know much about what the Nicene Creed said until recentlyThe Nicene Creed is an important step in the post-biblical formulation of the doctrine of the Trinity.
Church history documents that even many Nicene Creed affirming Christians in the 4th century were unsure about the Holy Spirit.
Binitarians have no problem affirming the Nicene Creed.
I didn't know much about what the Nicene Creed said until recently
They usually have a statement of faith. But if people accept Jesus as Lord and Savior that's usually enough. Statements of Faith were rarely mentioned before the internet.Baptists, as you know, aren’t creedal. I never even heard of the Nicene Creed until attending a Bible study lead by my Baptist pastor.
They usually have a statement of faith. But if people accept Jesus as Lord and Savior that's usually enough. Statements of Faith were rarely mentioned before the internet.
The Church where I was Youth Pastor was non denominational. The Pastor mainly got his sermons from preachers like John Hagee, TD Jakes and Rod Parsley and put his own spin on them. I knew a lot more about the Bible than he did. But he was charismatic and successful. We had people who had come from many different denominations and no one was rejected like that if they believed in Jesus as their Savior. I got too busy with my job on the Drug Task Force and had to give up the ministry job.I accepted Jesus as Lord and Savior. My pastor consigned me to the fire of Gehenna after I rejected trinitarianism. The Church said Amen and we parted ways amicably.
I was allowed to officiate at my grandmother’s funeral at her request - graveside only. The Baptist pastor and his assistant were there, also at my grandmother’s request, but only one member of the Church attended.
One of my relatives later told me, “No one wants to hear the devil preach.”
Jhn 14:16The Nicene Creed is an important step in the post-biblical formulation of the doctrine of the Trinity.
Church history documents that even many Nicene Creed affirming Christians in the 4th century were unsure about the Holy Spirit.
Binitarians have no problem affirming the Nicene Creed.