1689Dave
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2022
- Messages
- 1,871
- Gender
- Male
- Religious Affiliation
- Baptist
- Marital Status
- Married
- Acceptance of the Trinity & Nicene Creed
- No
Prove it. Or be found a liar.No, you don't.
Prove it. Or be found a liar.No, you don't.
I've already proved it many different times.Prove it. Or be found a liar.
Not once. You need to quote from the creeds where I'm off.I've already proved it many different times.
Already done it.Not once. You need to quote from the creeds where I'm off.
Here's what you need to do to prove me wrong. I say God is indivisible, of one Divine essence. You need to prove He is not.Already done it.
You say that now and only for the purpose of this exchange between the two of us, but you have many times given your own definition of the Trinity and it is at odds with what you are trying to pass off here as your belief.I say God is a trinity of persons, indivisible, of the same divine essence. You need to prove he is not.
I've always said this for decades after first studying it. Prove your point using examples of my posts.You say that now and only for the purpose of this exchange between the two of us, but you have many times given your own definition of the Trinity and it is at odds with what you are trying to pass off here as your belief.
Clearly you do not align with the creeds. None of the creeds declares, as you have done, that Jesus Christ is the name of the Blessed Trinity. No Christian Creed declares that the Father is Jesus Christ, none declares that the Holy Spirit is Jesus Christ. Your statements confuse and confound the incarnation by failing to state that Jesus is God incarnate and quite completely unique in the incarnation. And because you confound the incarnation your teaching undermines the doctrine of salvation. In the doctrine of salvation one sees how the incarnation raises the faithful to the beatific vision by incorporating the faithful into the body of Christ. Becoming partakers of the divine nature is a fruit of and blessing of the incarnation yet your doctrine disturbs and unsettles what is revealed in the scriptures.If you are familiar with the Ecumenical Creeds, I align with them.
Spell it out. Copy and paste what you think doesn't agree with me. I'll consider you grossly uninformed until you do so.Clearly you do not align with the creeds. None of the creeds declares, as you have done, that Jesus Christ is the name of the Blessed Trinity. No Christian Creed declares that the Father is Jesus Christ, none declares that the Holy Spirit is Jesus Christ. Your statements confuse and confound the incarnation by failing to state that Jesus is God incarnate and quite completely unique in the incarnation. And because you confound the incarnation your teaching undermines the doctrine of salvation. In the doctrine of salvation one sees how the incarnation raises the faithful to the beatific vision by incorporating the faithful into the body of Christ. Becoming partakers of the divine nature is a fruit of and blessing of the incarnation yet your doctrine disturbs and unsettles what is revealed in the scriptures.