Quote:
Originally Posted by Ohio
What is too extreme to face?
Is that your response to legitimate questions? That they are "endless and unanswerable for the most part because they are based on a trinitarian supposition, which is not scriptural?" That's how you dodge the issue?
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The extreme understanding would be that God became FLESH. The way around this by the triunes is that he is fully God and fully man, this splitting the person of Christ Jesus into two separate but coexisting, in some manner, being. Thus, saying God became FLESH can be rationalized. As I pointed out with the Cornelius gospel Peter told him For God was WITH him- a far cry from God BECAME FLESH, wouldn’t you agree? It’s why it’s hard to discuss this with the triunes because they dance back and forth using the Fully argument.
When all else fails it usually results in a Oh, God is too mysterious to understand statement, which who can argue with that? The real problem is not accepting the scripture of One God the Father and replacing it with trinitarian thought. Our faith becomes clearer and scriptural when we follow what Jesus and Paul told us about One God. And actually, calling God Father, and relating to God in this most humanly understanding is a major revelation in the scripture; it might be THE major revelation considering Revelations