Is Jesus the Christ a human Person?

Aren’t you the same person who told me just a couple of days ago that you couldn’t care less about what I think? Why are you asking me to explain to you how I read the passage?
I said that about SHURF, not about anything else you said.
Have you never heard before how a Jewish monotheist understands the passage?
I would like to hear how your view of monotheism is different than the Pharisaic view of monotheistic as manifested in John 8:58-59.

You are totally free to avoid telling us how you view John 8:58-59. I totally understand.
 
Christ is the Uncreated Creator of all things who is the Supremer Ruler over all things submitted to the Father and Spirit in becoming a man for the sake of redeeming humanity through suffering the payment of humanity's sin against God and defeating the power of death, who will come back to this earth, judge his saints and trample all the nations with the wrath of Almighty God who are not found inside his covenant of redemption.

He is not "God's little boy."

The child in the story was around 7 years old. She had been taught the Apostles’ Creed by her trinitarian parents. The Apostles’ Creed explicitly stated that God the Father is the creator of the heavens and the earth.

The little girl also knew the story about Jesus being born in a manger. In her young mind, Jesus is “God’s little boy.“
 
I said that about SHURF, not about anything else you said.

What would lead me to believe that your attitude about that (an acronym for words spoken by Jesus in the parable of the sower) isn’t, or wouldn’t be, the same about this?

I would like to hear how your view of monotheism is different than the Pharisaic view of monotheistic as manifested in John 8:58-59.

It does, but why do you want to hear it?

You are totally free to avoid telling us how you view John 8:58-59. I totally understand.

Do you? Given how you’ve acted when I’ve explained other things on this forum, tell me why I should cast my pearls before you?
 
Eh.

I've been abused by authority figures.

Let's lay the blame on entire groups of people that makes sense.


God is very merciful to misled children.

What have other trinitarians on this forum done to the little girl in the story? They abused her.

What did they do to me for sharing her story with them?

What did they do to me for sharing with them how I gave a 4 year old a bedtime story in language which a 4 year old could understand?

And now they want me to explain John 8:58 to them?
 
Who has told you that you are “NEVER allowed to disagree”?

You‘re allowed to disagree. You do disagree. You should disagree with anything you don’t agree with.

You disagree with orthodox trinitarianism. So do I.

So do about 9 out of 10 trinitarians when they are confronted with what orthodox trinitarianism teaches us about the person of Jesus the Christ.

They aren’t confronted with it in the orthodox trinitarian churches they sit in week after week, month after month, year after year.

Those churches will one day sit empty. Forever.
 
What have other trinitarians on this forum done to the little girl in the story? They abused her.

What did they do to me for sharing her story with them?

What did they do to me for sharing with them how I gave a 4 year old a bedtime story in language which a 4 year old could understand?

And now they want me to explain John 8:58 to them?
no they corrected the parents false teaching big difference- still equivocating I see.
 
The Apostles’ Creed hasn’t misled children. The creeds of orthodox trinitarianism have.
For the guests and readers to understand the truth from error this person is promoting. I must correct him again with his false beliefs and misrepresentation of the Creed.

The Apostles' Creed (Latin: Symbolum Apostolorum or Symbolum Apostolicum), sometimes titled the Apostolic Creed or the Symbol of the Apostles, is a Christian creed or "symbol of faith".

The creed most likely originated in 5th-century Gaul as a development of the Old Roman Symbol: the old Latin creed of the 4th century. It has been used in the Latin liturgical rites since the 8th century and, by extension, in the various modern branches of Western Christianity, including the modern liturgy and catechesis of the Catholic Church, Lutheranism, Anglicanism, Presbyterianism, Moravianism, Methodism, and Congregational churches.

It is shorter than the full Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed adopted in 381, but it is still explicitly trinitarian in structure, with sections affirming belief in God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.[1] It does not address some Christological issues defined in the Nicene Creed. It thus says nothing explicitly about the divinity of either Jesus or the Holy Spirit. For this reason, it was held to predate the Nicene Creed in medieval Latin tradition.wiki

hope this helps !!!
 
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