podcast 335 – Pastor Jeff Deuble’s Christ Before Creeds
“In essentials, unity; in non-essentials liberty; in all things, love.” So far, so good. But, what does Scripture say is essential teaching about Christ and about God?
“In essentials, unity; in non-essentials liberty; in all things, love.” So far, so good. But, what does Scripture say is essential teaching about Christ and about God?
What would we expect to find in the New Testament writings if the authors thought Jesus was a man, a god, or a godman?
A humorous puppet-show about a serious subject: properly understanding what the New Testament teaches about Jesus and God.
Would you stand by your biblical convictions at the cost of your job and your freedom?
A forgotten 4th c. debate: Is the Logos of John 1 a divine being in addition to God, or a power and energy of God?
“Incarnation” means initially that God’s love and power had been experienced in fullest measure in, through and as this man Jesus.
What the priest was thinking in charging Jesus with “blasphemy.”
Is the idea of essence the key to understanding Bauckham’s christology of divine identity?
Many are moving from a trinitarian understanding to a unitarian understanding of Christian theology. But not all of their reasons are good reasons…
Can we establish on historical grounds that the historical Jesus thought that he was God?
Dr. Mike Licona argues that the real, historical man Jesus considered himself to be God.
“…in light of five undeniable facts about the New Testament texts, we can know that the authors of the New Testament thought that the only God was just the Father himself, not the Trinity.”
Dear Christian, I’ve been meaning to talk to you about God and me.
“…in Dr. Craig’s view…the only true god would be something other than the one who Jesus identified as the only true god, as his own god, and as the god of his followers.”
If God is essentially immortal, the answer must be: No. But the human Jesus of the Bible was then mortal.
Can one prove that the biblical Jesus is Yahweh based on his being savior or creator, or his being worshiped?
Adventures in theologically-motivated misinterpretation.
Does Scripture clearly teach that “Jesus is God”?
Why “that’s just Philosophy” is no excuse for a failure of basic critical thinking.