podcast 193 – Review of Sanders’s The Deep Things of God – Part 2
What, according to Dr. Sanders, is the crisis in contemporary trinitarian systematic theology, when it comes to the Bible?
What, according to Dr. Sanders, is the crisis in contemporary trinitarian systematic theology, when it comes to the Bible?
The real question, I think, is whether or not this idea about “God” is consistent with biblical teaching.
“The Gospel is Trinitarian.” What does this mean, and is it both true and non-trivial?
Kimel lampoons the biblical unitarian historical narrative, and urges that Irenaeus is a big problem for it.
Synopsis: I’m not Eastern Orthodox, so am incompetent to discuss the Trinity, and I’m somehow missing the whole point.
Dr. James White’s stated reasons for not debating me are based on misunderstanding.
Some unitarian Christians believe that Jesus existed before he was a human, while others deny it.
Dr. White vs. John on the thesis of the 4th gospel.
The gospel commits us to more than: “Jesus died” is (somehow or other) true.
One’s theology can lead one to deny obvious facts about the New Testament.
Is this a powerful, state-of-the-art biblical argument for the Trinity?
Dealing with this inconsistent triad can be hard!