podcast 364 – The God who Suffers: a Response to The Reluctant Theologian Podcast 118 Why did God become incarnate?
Evaluating three proposed reasons why God would be motivated to incarnate.
Evaluating three proposed reasons why God would be motivated to incarnate.
A deep dive on divine attributes, processions, and “social” trinitarianism.
What is “mere” social trinitarianism, and why is it controversial among trinitarian theologians?
Is it the foundational commitment of biblical unitarians that Scripture must be inoffensive to human reason?
Does Inspiring Philosophy’s Michael Jones have a Trinity theory?
A prolific apologist embraces so-called “monarchical trinitarianism,” on which the one God just is the Father, not the Trinity.
Dialogue with an apologist about changes of tritheism and “the doctrine of the Trinity.”
Andrew DeFord undertakes a refutation of the main argument of podcast 248.
What does one do when the search for truth clashes with one’s need to fit in?
Did fourth century Christians come to a consensus about “the doctrine of the Trinity”?
Is there a plausible and biblical “doctrine of the Trinity”?
Is the question absurd? Or does it make sense in light of New Testament teachings?
An ordinary believer with ordinary reading comprehension can see that “Sharp’s Rule” recommends misinterpretations.
No, God needn’t be “multipersonal” to be “perfect in love.”
Is the “Granville Sharp Rule” + 2 Peter 1:1 and Titus 2:13 “fatal to unitarianism”?
Some critical thinking about Craig’s Trinity theories: his Trinity monotheism and his minimal tripersonal monotheism.
Discussing trinitarian vs. unitarian Christian theologies with Dr. William Lane Craig.
A very revealing collection of mid-third-century theological arguments.
Sacrifice to the gods, or die. What would you do?
Does the New Testament teach that Jesus’ exaltation changed him from human to divine?