Siam:
As I tried to explain---mutual exclusivity no longer holds---the updated experiments demonstrate that.
What I've been asking is simple:
Can proposing a theological model based upon a relationship of complementarity between the Uncreated "Word/Memra" of God the Father and a created human body and soul in the ONE human being, Jesus of Nazareth, actually convey intelligible theological meaning? I say yes. I would even posit a form of "wave monism" myself with respect to Divine Omni-Presence (ala panENtheism) but that's a whole different ballgame.
I also like some of the ideas of panentheism---such as the idea that the created is IN the Divine. Such an idea can explain the vastness of Divine-presence without dividing it---so this aspect of panentheism would be interesting in terms of Tawheed.
---are you familiar with Miroslav Volf?---I'm not very--but read a few commentaries of his works---it seems he has the idea of a Tri-unity (apparently based on something the Anglican Archbishop wrote)...that says that the 3 "aspects"/persons of God do not act on their own---that is, they have only one will and all act as a
unit together.
what do you think?
As to the created/uncreated combination----if we take the view that the idea that the created is IN the (undivided) Divine---then such a state/combination cannot be rejected outright----but that brings me to the problem I have with the idea of incarantion. Incarnation is essentially pantheistic--that is, the idea that the "created" has a divinity (or that God is IN all things)---but such an idea seems to divide God into many peices......as if interconnected parts of the divine permeate all things.....This would not work well with Tawheed.
---So ---in reference to your questions---basically, right now I am trying to figure out what parameters would be acceptable to me under Tawheed and which would not....
---I found your statement about a "necessary triune" interesting. ---I am thinking on that.....
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Siam:
inadequate analogy---but I'll work with it....
Unless the CEO wants to abdicate or is incapable---it would be unwise to relinquish authority. Over time the workers will forget the CEO and consider the VP as the head of the company.
unless the CEO is foolish---such a scenario is unlikely
The CEO is not relinquishing authority at all. In fact, it is by the CEO's continuing authority that grounds the delegated authority of the VP. We are not talking about the CEO basically making the VP into CEO. That wouldn't make sense. We are talking about a CEO who promoted a mail room clerk into being VP...and expects his people to respect his authoritatively-made choice as such...and will take disrespect of the VP as an affront to the CEO's authority who exalted, appointed, and authorized the VP.
----That's the problem with the trinity---can never get it right

---so you are saying that the "God-incarnate" is subordinate to God-Supreme?
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Siam:
the angels weren't worshipping (Prophet) Adam (pbuh) as God.
Nope, they weren't. So, are you saying that if Christians "bow the knee" to Jesus in absolute universal lordship being God the Father's chosen Lord and Messiah...but DIDN'T worship him as the Eternal Word/Son of God...then you'd have no problem, right?
---Yes (Depending on how you defined "Lord")---but it's what I suggested previously----and some Christians are actually moving in this direction---I think its called the emerging church or something like that.......
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YO: Ok. Let's just do it like this. Jewishly speaking, is YHWH ever without the "Spirit of YHWH" or His "Memra"? Is there any Jewish adherent that you know or have read that would say this? Well, let's say for the sake of argument that adherents to Judaism would affirm that YHWH is never, ever, ever without the Spirit of YHWH or the "Memra" of YHWH. Doesn't this imply tri-unity, with YHWH as the ground of the tri-unity?
1) YHWH
2) Spirit of YHWH
3) Word/Memra of YHWH
TRI-unity in one uncreated personal reality.
Siam: 'fraid this doesn't work either.....In Judaism the "ruach"(Spirit) is created
The "wind" being spoken about seems to be referring to this..."And the Spirit of God was hovering over the face of the waters."
1) This seems to deal specifically with a literal, young earth creational interpretation of the text. (Which is a debateable issue currently...not as much when and before the article was written) And it was taken to deal with the atmosphere ("wind") that was upon the earth, crucial to life's emergence. See the first part of "Biblical View of the Spirit."
2) At the same time, it is said that the "Divine Spirit" comes directly from God and is inseparable from God's Presence, as in the Shekinah.
3) There is no creative or re-creative activity that God does without his Spirit and Word. That's clear in the Creation account, however it's taken.