YieldedOne
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Re: Christians think that Jesus can be Immortal and Mortal at the sametime they say w
Follow closely, Naidamar. I'm going to try to do this step by step...ok? Following the Creed I just posted...
1) Is Jesus of Nazareth the ONE GOD spoken of clearly in the of the Jewish Shema and the N-C Creed?
NO. Only God the Father is the ONE GOD of the Shema. God the Father is Jesus' God.
2) Is Jesus of Nazareth divine insofar as he is the embodiment of the Son/Word of the ONE GOD?
YES. The Son/Word of God comes FROM God the Father, is always WITH God the Father even sans Creation, meaning that the Son/Word is of the same uncreated nature AS God the Father. Hence, the language of the N-C Creed.
Siam. Please help me explain this to our brother, dude. It seems that YOU understood at least the gist of the "necessarily truine" activity of God the Father in self-relationship that I've been describing.
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I really, really don't want to get off track with the main point of this thread: How is it that Christians can think that Jesus can be "Immortal" and "Mortal" at the same time? I have been trying to give a THEOLOGICAL MODEL (using the principle of complementarity between the uncreated "Word/Memra" of God and a created human soul/body) that can intelligibly, consistently articulate that belief.
Follow closely, Naidamar. I'm going to try to do this step by step...ok? Following the Creed I just posted...
1) Is Jesus of Nazareth the ONE GOD spoken of clearly in the of the Jewish Shema and the N-C Creed?
NO. Only God the Father is the ONE GOD of the Shema. God the Father is Jesus' God.
2) Is Jesus of Nazareth divine insofar as he is the embodiment of the Son/Word of the ONE GOD?
YES. The Son/Word of God comes FROM God the Father, is always WITH God the Father even sans Creation, meaning that the Son/Word is of the same uncreated nature AS God the Father. Hence, the language of the N-C Creed.
Siam. Please help me explain this to our brother, dude. It seems that YOU understood at least the gist of the "necessarily truine" activity of God the Father in self-relationship that I've been describing.
-----------------------
I really, really don't want to get off track with the main point of this thread: How is it that Christians can think that Jesus can be "Immortal" and "Mortal" at the same time? I have been trying to give a THEOLOGICAL MODEL (using the principle of complementarity between the uncreated "Word/Memra" of God and a created human soul/body) that can intelligibly, consistently articulate that belief.
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