Larry Hurtado on early Christians’ worship of Jesus
If the earliest Christians’ answer (re: how one can be a monotheist and yet worship both the one God and Jesus) was a good answer then, why isn’t it a good answer now?
If the earliest Christians’ answer (re: how one can be a monotheist and yet worship both the one God and Jesus) was a good answer then, why isn’t it a good answer now?
He argues cogently that even in the earliest parts of the New Testament, the religious worship of Jesus is presupposed, such as in Philippians 2.
“Ok, I’ve finished watching your presentation, and below is my careful critique of it. … Enjoy.”
Who needs the Bible when you can gesture at some philosophical speculations?
An important post by the Golf Pro from the Moon. He answers the above question, in part: Yes…
Do Genesis 48, 1 Samuel 3, and Jeremiah 1 refute biblical unitarian views on God and Jesus?
Since the beginning, Christians in one God who is one perfect self, the Father.
A leading Roman Catholic scholar looks at the use of “God” in the New Testament.
“For the New Testament, as for the Hebrew Bible, the principle of unity is clearly the one God…”
God can’t be “perfect in love” unless he is multipersonal?
Origen sez: you must say that Father and Son are “one God.” But does he think they are?
He assumes that necessarily, any human, as such, is subject to God.
What I would expect to see, if Yahweh himself were to be a man, would be…