Hello hopesprings,
I don't even really know how to respond to your last post. You are repeatedly doing something that I politely said you shouldn't be doing...assuming that I pre-suppose Jesus is God. I may think that you pre-suppose, or are indoctrinated, with what you believe but I haven't said that about you because it is an assumption, and one that neither of us has any right to make.
That is my
opinion. I've stated clearly the reasons why I've come to this opinion based upon the types of arguments upon which you are rely, which don't in themselves prove that Jesus is God, but require that belief beforehand. I apologize that I've offended you; I won't state that opinion any further.
The whole context of Paul's speech in Phil. 2 is humility, not the difference between humility and selfish ambition. He gave an example of humility, not an example of the difference between humility and selfish ambition.
Here's the lead up again:
"Do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility count others more significant than yourselves." (Philippians 2:3)
There's clearly a contrast made here:
reject selfish ambition, embrace humility. How can this be done? Paul continues:
"Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped [or seized], but emptied himself, by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men." (Philippians 2:5-7)
This very same contrast, rejecting selfish ambition and embracing humility, was found in the case of Jesus when he rejected seizing equality with God and embraced taking the likeness of men. This is a very simple and clear analogy.
You can give all the examples you want of the word "grasped" and how it is used in only one sense in scripture, but considering the word (yes - even the Hebrew word) has two meanings, then that does not automatically mean it is being used in the same sense here.If there was not the possibily of that word being used in the other sense (holding onto something), then that definition wouldn't even be there.
hopesprings, please point out
where in scripture that word means to 'hold onto something'. I asked you for this evidence last time, and you just repeated your assertion without proof. It
never means that! It always means to seize or grasp at something not in one's possession.
I read through your post and thought about replying more specifically to it, but you lost me when you said that there is more then One God.
Then we should have begun with that--I thought you had read through at least some of the previous posts in this thread that made that clear; so perhaps that's the root of some of our misunderstandings. Even the passage you and I have spoken of here proves this:
"I said, 'You are gods, sons of the Most High, all of you.'" (Psalm 82:6)
That's Jehovah God speaking. In John 10, Jesus cites this passage as support that he can take on similar titles, 'god' and 'son of god', since he too, like those judges, has been entrusted with God's authority.
I would like the reference, page number included, to where Mounce's Dictionary says that there is more then One God. I would also like the references to Bible Commentators that say the same thing.
Sure, that's
Mounce's Complete Expository Dictionary of Old and New Testament Words, p. 297.
Here's what I quoted Dr. BeDuhn on earlier in this topic: "To many modern Christians, living in their safe, homogenous world of like-minded believers, the issue seems straightforward. There is the one God, and on the other side of a great gulf are all of the creatures. But in John's world, the god-category was not as sharply distinguished as it is for modern Christians, and there were all kinds of beings occupying the gray area between God and mortals. There were various angels and demi-gods to consider."--Truth in Translation, p. 130.
Bible commentator Matthew Henry writes of Exodus 7:1, "
I have made thee a god to Pharaoh; that is, my representative in this affair, as magistrates are called
gods, because they are God’s vicegerents. He was authorized to speak and act in God’s name and stead, and, under the divine direction, was endued with a divine power to do that which is above the ordinary power of nature, and invested with a divine authority to demand obedience from a sovereign prince and punish disobedience."
The
Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament says this of Psalm 82, "When the celestial Lord of the domain thinks upon this destruction which injustice and tyranny are bringing upon the earth, His wrath kindles, and He reminds the judges and rulers that it is His own free declaratory act which has clothed them with the god-like dignity which they bear. They are actually elohim, but not possessed of the right of self-government; there is a Most High (עליון
to whom they as sons are responsible. The idea that the appellation (elohim), which they have given to themselves, is only sarcastically given back to them in Psalm 82:1 (Ewald, Olshausen), is refuted by Psalm 82:6, according to which they are really (elohim) by the grace of God."
The Darby translation of the Bible has this at Exodus 21:6, "then his master shall bring him before the judges..." The footnote for the word "judges" reads, "Lit. 'gods' elohim: so 22:8,9, etc. See John 10:34,35, and Ps. 82."
And, please, feel free to let me know what sources you researched to come to the conclusions that you have.
First and foremost the Bible. I've read Watchtower publications against the Trinity, Catholic and Protestant publications for the Trinity, the historical works against the Trinity by John Milton, Isaac Newton, William Whiston, Thomas Emlyn, Henry Grew, etc. As for these men, all of them recognized the very points I'm making here; they've been published at least as long as the Bible has been in the language of the people. The famous Erasmus, known especially for his critical-edition of the Greek New Testament that helped spark the Reformation, was accused of being anti-Trinitarian
because his reconstruction of the orginal New Testament greatly weakened what little proof there was for the Trinity in the Bible by removing the little additions made over the centuries to support the Trinity (foremost among these is the spurious addition to 1 John 5:7). I've been in countless discussions over these matters and studied the evidence from both sides.
Also, I would like to know where you are getting your information regarding Jeremiah 32:18.
Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia. The NWT is helpful because it's a literal translation: "the [true] God, the great One, the mighty One, Jehovah of armies being his name."