Are you serious? All the posts here, you come up with this ?
Did not we and I say that it is Jesus alone who saves and all who must believe in him and be saved by grace through faith? As the word of God states in John 3:16-19 and Romans chapter 10:9-11
When did I or anyone else suggest
"
SO TO YOU EVERYONE GOES TO HEAVEN. NO ONE NEEDS TO DO ANYTHING!!"
Now, you are trying to pull a fast one with a narrative I did not say or believe. You are dishonest.
I am not a universalist. You call us hard rock people LOL it is you who are creating false narttivie of Other and trying to chnage the topic because you have not refuted the word of God presented to you.
here you go again
Contextual Response on the Oneness Viewpoint:
Let’s be honest and stay rooted in what Scripture actually reveals. Those who hold to the Oneness doctrine believe that God is one person who manifests Himself in different modes—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—but is not three distinct persons. They argue that these are just different roles or manifestations of Jesus.
However, Matthew 3:16–17 presents a clear moment where all three Persons of the Godhead are present and active at once:
“After being baptized, Jesus came up immediately from the water; and behold, the heavens were opened, and he saw the Spirit of God descending as a dove and settling on Him, and behold, a voice from the heavens said, ‘This is My beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased.’”
Those holding to Oneness theology will
often say that Jesus was speaking to Himself.
But if we are honest with the text, that’s not what it says. The voice came from heaven, not from Jesus. The Son is being baptized, the Spirit is descending, and the Father is speaking.
To claim that Jesus threw His voice to make it sound like it came from heaven is not only speculative—it imposes something onto the text that isn’t there. I
t’s human reasoning trying to patch over what the plain reading contradicts.
This is a good time to apply a sound principle of biblical interpretation:
Where the Word of God is silent, we should remain silent. We shouldn't force doctrines into Scripture when the text doesn't support them.
Sometimes the most faithful answer is, “I don’t know,” rather than crafting elaborate explanations that add to or distort Scripture.