DaPastor said:Mark C said:Hey Ed, I got into a big argument about trinitarianism on facebook thanks to you...I wouldn't mind hearing from Mark, DJ, and Ray for their views on the issue too, not a bad topic for other biblical issues.
I've always been a lot more inclined to debate about what we should DO as believers rather than how we internally picture certain abstract concepts. I do enjoy a lot of esoteric discussions (I'll have to complete the post I started and referenced a while ago about the "alef-tav" shortly, too ) however, so here's my favorite example -- one of the few I use that I think I can claim as truly original: :lol:
What is "time"? Is it echad?
Yet we use THREE separate names to describe it - and comprehend them as separate concepts:
Past, Present, and Future.
We, I will note, can only directly perceive the Present. We remember the Past, and can generally only prophecy about, or "wait on", the Future.
I won't get too hung up on how another person perceives time a bit differently than I do, or whether they call Time "one" or "three".
I'm not a "Timetarian", in other words...
Blessings,
Mark
Hello,
If we are going to discuss the Godhead issue, then let us start another thread. In fact, I will do that...
One must be able to see God as one, one may see him as three or triune. The oneness is an absolute necessity, [note: The Sh'ma: Deuteronomy 6:4+] the threeness is not de facto outlined by scripture, so is not mandatory.
The meaning is more along the lines of pay attention, understand, and obey...
The pivotal word in the Shema is echad. It is probably better translated as "unity" rather than "one".
Edward the Elder said:Just stepped out of shower and browsed this. I would love to discuss the Godhead with folks here, some time but current domestics would not afford me the time at this point. Some reading material, should you decide to accept:
http://apostolicarbiter.multiply.com/jo ... CAL_BIGAMY
Okay, Mark, let's look at what is so horrible about the verse in Acts 4:12. Why shirk it?
Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved.
Should we be so hung up on the text or the pronounciation of a name to claim that unless it is spelled "correctly" or uttered to another person's satisfaction that we cannot find salvation?
PS> This reminds me that I have never posted the summary of a midrash I remember about the "alef-tav". It's not to imply that Yeshua/Jesus didn't mean He was the "beginning and the ending" in Rev. 1, just that John probably had and recorded the conversation in Hebrew, and there is some wonderful additional meaning in the Hebrew word "et", spelled alef-tav. For one, "the Word [et]" literally appears IN THE BEGINNING, Genesis 1:1. And THEN when we read JOHN 1:1, there's a whole new layer of miraculous understanding there...
My, my, so much unecessary legalism over the pronounciation of a name that was suffice for centuries among the English speaking peoples.