Well to be honest Elin, to me deabte is a two way thing. Both participants answer each others questions. Yet you never answer any of mine. Even when I just ask your personal opinion of a subject that divides us you deflect and refuse to reply.
So that is no debate is it.
But I do take on board what you continually stress, which I have written below
There is no scripture in the Bible that states Jesus is God
That's a "No, Jesus is not God."
Well, you might want to rethink that.
The divinity (nature of God) of Jesus is a fundamental of Christianity, along with the virgin birth.
It's one thing to get it wrong about the resurrection body,
but it's quite another to get it wrong about the divinity of God's one and only Son, Jesus (Jn 3:16, 18; 1Jn 4:9).
Jesus claimed:
He came from heaven (Jn 3:13, 6:38, 42, 62),
and was sent by God (Jn 5:36-40, 10:36, 13:3, 16:28),
to die as a ransom for the sins of many (Mt 20:28, 26:28; Jn 10:11),
with power to forgive sin (Mt 9:2-6),
to conquer Satan (Jn 12:31; Lk 10:18; Mk 1:23-26, 5:6-13),
to speak for God (Jn 7:16, 8:25-28), 12:44-45, 49-50, 14:10; Lk 9:35, 10:16),
and to judge all mankind (Jn 5:22, 27, 8:26, 12:48; Mt 25:31-33),
as the source of all truth and life (Jn 1:4, 5:25-26, 6:39-40),
and the exclusive way to God (Jn 14:6; Ac 4:12),
the decisive factor in the eternal destiny of every man (Jn 3:18-19, 36, 5:24, 6:40, 8:24-25),
possessing all authority (power) in heaven and earth (Mt 26:64, 28:18; Lk 10:22; Jn 13:3, 13),
equal with God (Jn 5:18, 8:19, 12:44-45, 14:7-9, 16:15, 17:10); i.e.,
doing what God does (Jn 5:19)
--as the Father works, so the Son works (miracles ) - (Jn 5:17)
--as the Father gives life, so the Son gives life (Jn 5:21)
--as the Father is Judge, so the Son is Judge (Jn 5:22)
--as the Father is to be honored, so the Son is to be honored (Jn 5:23)
--as the Father has life in himself, so the Son has life in himself (Jn 5:26)
--as the Father sends with authority and power, so the Son sends (Jn 20:21)
--as the Father confers the kingdom, so the Son confers the kingdom (Lk 22:29)
--as the Father is Lawgiver, so the Son is Lawgiver (Mt 5:23-47, 12:7-8, 19:9, 21:23-27, chp 23)
empowering the apostles to speak for him, as well as for God (Lk 10:16; Jn 13:20),
and to recall and understand all things correctly (Jn 14:26, 16:13-15, Lk 24:48-49).
Jesus said he was speaking exactly what the Father told him to say when he made these claims about himself (Jn 12:49).
In these claims,
Jesus is saying that he is no less than God.
The Jews certainly understood that's what he meant
(Mk 2:3-7; Jn 6:41-42, 10:30-33, 5:18, 8:58-59, 19:7),
which is why they killed him (Ac 7:52).
So why didn't Jesus just say, "I am God"?
To keep from being killed by them before his time by providing them with irrefutable evidence of what they would call blasphemy.
(Jn 5:18, 7:1, 19, 11:53; Mt 12:14, 26:4).
The Jews thought he
did say it (Mk 2:3-7; Jn 6:41-42, 10:30-33, 5:18, 8:58-59, 19:7).