Yeah, let's not forget what scripture says: God is not man, that he should lie, or a son of man, that he should change his mind. Has he said, and will he not do it? Or has he spoken, and will he not fulfill it? [Num. 23:19]
And also the Glory of Israel will not lie or have regret, for he is not a man, that he should have regret. [1 Sam. 15:29]
I will not execute my burning anger; I will not again destroy Ephraim; for I am God and not a man, the Holy One in your midst, and I will not come in wrath. [Hosea 11:9]
For he is not a man, as I am, that I might answer him, that we should come to trial together. [Job 9:32]
...and scripture says God is not a man.
When those were written, God had not yet become a man. And the point being made in these passages is that man is sinful, God is not. Man is weak, God is not. Man has regrets and failed plans, God is/does not.
These passages do not tell us that God will not become a man, in Jesus Christ, and live the life that we could not.
Nope - in 1:26 there is a discussion going on which doesn't involve participating in the creating .....
Yes, Gen 1:26 is referring to creation. God said, "Let us make man in our image." God is talking within Himself about what they will do next: make Man in their own image. God made man's body from the dirt (not creation, but reforming what was already created), but then He breathes into the body (flesh) the breath of life (spirit), and that is creation.
(You cannot say that the angels weren't in the image of God - what is the image of God? Isn't God spirit? Aren't angels spirit beings?but you cannot state for a surety because scripture doesn't come out and say that).
Man is the only part of God's creation that He said He would make in His image. There is great emphasis on the fact that mankind was made in God's image. There is not even a hint at any other being (angel or whatever) also possessing His image.
.............. in v27 the creation is taking place:
So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them.
The noun
elohim although a plural noun is used in a singular sense here --- in Hebrew, singular verbs and singular pronouns accompanying the plural noun
elohim make it function as a singular term for the one God.
I don't think anyone stops to consider how dissociative it makes God seem to be speaking to two other persons within Himself. Wouldn't that be considered having a split personality complex where God - having two distinct identities in Himself carries on conversations with the other two alter egos?
When you talk to your wife, have a discussion with her, argue with her, etc.; does that mean you have a split personality complex?
God is condensed into ONE being because each are God - God the Father, God the Son, God the Holy Spirit - yet ONE God. Three persons being ONE is condensing the three persons into ONE BEING.
No, not one BEING, but one GOD.
The biggest contradiction here is - One is three and three is one.
NO HERD OF CATTLE = ONE COW; herd in and of itself is more than one.
NO CLUSTER OF GRAPES = ONE GRAPE; cluster in and of itself is more than one.
NO COUPLE = ONE PERSON; a couple in and of itself is more than one.
God, the creator of the universe, is more than one being.
Herd is singular. Herds is plural.
Cluster is singular. Clusters is plural.
Couple is singular. Couples is plural.
If words, grammar and language mean anything singular pronouns, verbs and adjectives identify singularity.
Not when the singular refers to plural parts within it.
Correct, there is no contradiction in Scripture and scripture does not describe God as a Triune being - God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit as ONE God. God is ONE and God ALONE is God.
Yes, Scripture does describe God as being triune. The Father, whom no one disputes is God, is God. The Son, Jesus, is God also (John 1:1-3, 14, Isa 9:6, John 20:28, Tit 2:3, Col 1:15, Matt 1:23, Rev 1:8, and many others). The Holy Spirit is also God (Acts 5:3-4, 2 Cor 3:17, 1 Cor 2:10-11, Matt 28:19, Gen 1:2, and many others).
I am married - I am not my husband
Ahh, forgive me. I have been saying your wife. You are the wife; I didn't realize you were a woman.
and he is not me so we are not literally ONE PERSON, ONE FLESH. We are one flesh because of intimacy and we are one in purpose and intent in regard to our family.
Oops they are not ONE mind - One mind would be one will - Jesus, the Son of God always submitted his will to that of God his Father.
Jesus did submit to the Father, when He emptied Himself and became a man (indicating His preexistence in Heaven before He became a man).
This was a unilateral covenant which is why you do not see Abraham walking between the animals but only the presence of God represented by the smoking fire pot and flaming torch. God's promise of the land and offspring were to Abraham - God gave his covenant commitment to live up to his promises.
That is a popular opinion, but the covenants with Issac, Jacob, and Moses are nothing more than a renewal and extension of the covenant with Abraham.
Jesus Christ is not God nor does Genesis 15 indicate such. Give me a section of the context that indicates this.
All of Scripture points to Jesus Christ being God.
Where do you get that understanding? Give me the section of the context that indicates this.
This comes from understanding the culture in which the covenant was made. It is not stated explicitly in Scripture.
Correct, Abraham did not pass through the animal parts ONLY the presence of God represented by the smoking fire pot and flaming torch which makes it a unilateral covenant.
No, it does not make it unilateral. As has been stated, usually only the lesser party had to pass through. If a king made a covenant with a peasant, the king would probably not pass through (although in some cases they did), but the lesser party had to pass through. This did not make it unilateral.
Did God owe himself for the transgressions of humanity or did humanity owe God?
Humanity owed God. But there is no possible way for man to pay the debt to God we owed. But God wanted the relationship with us so much, that He came down in Jesus Christ to pay that debt for us. To pay that debt, He had to be one of us (Human)(Lev 25:25, Heb 2:11, 14, 17). In essence, Jesus is our Kinsman-Redeemer because He became our "brother" (Heb 2:11) and paid the ultimate price (His blood) to redeem us from the curse of sin, securing our eternal inheritance as His bride, the Church (Eph 5).
Adam's disobedience is what happened - Wherefore, as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned: [Romans 5:12]
Now humanity owed God because - For the wages of sin is death; [Romans 6:23a]
It took the obedience and death of a man to redeem humanity - For as by one man's disobedience many were made sinners, so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous. [Romans 5:19] That as sin hath reigned unto death, even so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord. [Romans 5:21] = but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord. [Romans 6:23b]
Jesus Christ was our pure sacrifice.......He never sinned. We were redeemed = ..... with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot: [1 Peter 1:19]
Man is not capable of keeping God's Law perfectly. There has never been, nor can there be a man who does so. So it took God stepping in and becoming a man, living a life like ours, with all of the temptations, trials, suffering, etc. yet without sin to become the perfect sacrifice to pay the price for our sin. Jesus was not just a "good man". He was God in the flesh.