”Now the whole earth had one [Heb. “achat”] language and the same [Heb. “ahadim”] words.”
(Genesis 11:1 ESV)
(Genesis 27:4 ESV)
(Genesis 29:20 ESV)
(Ezekiel 37:17 ESV)
(Daniel 11:20 ESV)
My point is that “echad” is singular.
After looking more closely at these passages and the lexical data, I admit that the singular oneness
does seem to be the case with echad. I will digress on this point and consider the possible error in my understanding of the shema. Thank you for your input.
That you can’t distinguish a mortal category of being from an immortal category of being expressed in scripture is baffling to me.
Sorry to baffle you. If you have that Scriptual support (for there being "2 first and 2 lasts"), feel free to send it anytime. I'm not in a hurry.
I make no such attempts. I affirm unequivocally that God means what he says.
That may be true, but the fact remains: Taking on a role doesn't negate the properties of one's character of being.
When I say "we know this by faith", I mean that we don't have to understand God's way or design for something. The things we don't understand...we apprehend (by faith). E.g. "
By faith, Sarah received the power to bear children even though she was beyond the proper age because she considered Him faithful Who had promised." (
Heb 11:11). She did not understand how God could multiply Abraham's descendants like the stars, but she
apprehended the promise by faith. We would do well to do the same. When God's Word seems to postulate an impossible conclusion, we don't reject its possibility...we instead apprehend the Word from Whom all things are possible.
Many people simply don't understand the Trinity, so they reject the possibility. But with diligent study and meditation, the Holy Spirit reveals wisdom to men who seek them out. "
Search for her as hidden treasure". Since you brought up WLC, Let's see what he has to say about the Trinity:
"(not to sound sacrilegious, but) I think the best analogy for the Trinity would be something like "Cerberus the 3-headed dog" (Greek Mythology).
Purely for the sake of analogy...
We may suppose that Cerberus has three brains and therefore three distinct states of consciousness of whatever it is like to be a dog. Therefore, Cerberus, while a sentient being, does not have a unified consciousness. He has three consciousnesses. We could even assign proper names to each of them: Rover, Bowser, and Spike. These centers of consciousness are entirely discrete and might well come into conflict with one another. Still, in order for Cerberus to be biologically viable, not to mention in order to function effectively as a guard dog, there must be a considerable degree of cooperation among Rover, Bowser, and Spike. Despite the diversity of his mental states, Cerberus is clearly one dog. He is a single biological organism exemplifying a canine nature. Rover, Bowser, and Spike may be said to be canine, too, though they are not three dogs, but parts of the one dog Cerberus. "
Cerebus (a single being consisting of 3 parts)= God (a single being consisting of 3 parts)
Rover (a part of
Cerberus...who may rightfully be referred to as "
Cerberus"
= Father...who may rightfully be referred to as "
God"
Bowser (a part of
Cerberus...who may rightfully be referred to as "
Cerberus")
= Son...who may rightfully be referred to as "
God"
Spike (a part of
Cerberus...who may rightfully be referred to as "
Cerberus")
= Spirit...who may rightfully be referred to as "
God"
You can deny the verity of this implication based on your Biblical view, but you no longer say that "the Trinity doesn't make sense". This illustration is pure wisdom from God given to Cr. Craig. It perfectly describes the anatomy of "God", without stepping outside the bounds of the whole counsel of God.
(my opinion), this is the
best model for the Trinity I have ever heard. Everyone should read this at least twice and consider the pure logic and simplicity and harmony of the Bible, especially the NT (in regard to the relation between the Three).
Where in scripture does God, the prophets, Jesus, the apostles or any biblical author declare the equality of 3 persons in one (plural, not singular) God? No where.
What about when Thomas called Jesus "
My Lord and my God"?
What about when Jesus said to "baptize people in the name of the father, and the son, and the Holy Spirit"? Why not just the Father? Why would he mention the Spirit if the Spirit is the same as the Father? etc
No. See the post-biblical history of the development of the doctrine
The Jews knew the Messiah would be a human person
As many trinitarian theologians have pointed out, no one living in biblical times thought God was 3 persons.
Exactly, It was fully revealed through the entire NT canon. I.e. The people living "in Biblical times" wouldn't have access to the NT canon. Anyone with a complete NT could then connect the dots.
The Jews also believed that the Messiah would only come once, does that mean it was the truth, no. It was hidden from them and revealed in the NT. So when you say things like "The Jews thought of the Messiah as merely a human and not divine"...my response to that is the same: God hid
many things from people living in "Biblical times".
- The Bride of Christ
- The permanent indwelling of the Holy Spirit (Christ in you)
-The second coming of Jesus (as a sepparate event than the first)
- The Incarnation
-The translation (rapture) of the saints
-Israel's blindness
-The significance of Babylon
-etc
So you’re unable to identify by name a single trinitarian Church or denomination which teaches a consistent view of trinitarianism in opposition to Chalcedonian orthodoxy, which you have identified as an inconsistent view of trinitarianism.
As I hear, I judge. If you point out to be a single, teacher/teaching, I can judge that. I cannot speak for an entire denomination. People sometimes stray from the doctrines they afirm. I'm not going to affirm the stance of an entire denomination because one person within that denomination could stray doctrinally, rendering them "inconsistent".
Scripture states unequivocally that the Father is the one true God.
Would you agree that it would be blasphemy to worship any other than the One true God?
How then do you explain the fact that Jesus was worshiped?
Unbelieving Jews were angry that Jesus persisted in claiming to be the Messiah. They didn’t believe he was in line with the Father in word or in deed. They didn’t believe him when he said the Father sent him. They believed he was bearing false witness against his/their God. Hence, their desire to stone him.
"
For a good work we do not stone You, but for blasphemy; and because You, being a man, make Yourself out to be God.” (
John 10:33)
"
The LORD (Jesus) is a Man" (
Exodus 15:3) (iysh="man")...Jesus is rightfully referred to as Yahweh here.
You're not making a Biblical defense here, you're just denying what I am saying. This is what a Biblical defense looks like:
"Lord,
you know all things; You know that I love You.” Jesus *said to him, “tend My sheep" (
John 21:17)
"Now we know that
You know all things, and have no need for anyone to question You" (
John 17:39)
Solomon clarified that "You
alone know the hearts of men."
The active tense of the verbs attributed to Jesus in these verses about His proves that Jesus knows the hearts of men: "Jesus knew their thoughts"...
"knew"=active tense, meaning it was direct knowledge, not knowledge that was given or revealed by another.
If it
was revealed, it would have been a passive verb because the action would be applied
to Jesus (but it wasn't).
"I
saw you under the fig tree" "saw"=active tense.
The Greek is not ambiguous here.
Jesus had
direct knowledge of things He couldn't see with His physical eyes: People's thoughts and intentions, what people were doing several miles away, who was betraying Him the whole time, etc.
"So Jesus, knowing all the things that were going to happen to Him, went forth and *said to them, “who do you seek?”