Kermit Zarley on “My Lord and my God.”
He said this to Jesus. But was he also addressing the God in Jesus?
He said this to Jesus. But was he also addressing the God in Jesus?
Is the New Testament Jesus “divine,” and is he supposed to have two natures?
Should Dr. Ehrman become a member of “the early high christology club”?
Does a doctrine of divine processions entail that the Son is less divine than the Father?
In this guest post, our friend Mario Stratta expounds the prologue of the gospel according to John. – Dale I believe that the Prologue to John’s Gospel speaks about the Incarnation of God’s Word (Logos) in/as the “man called Jesus” (John 9:11). Where I disagree with the Trinitarians, Subordinationists and Arians, is that the Word had a personal subsistence (hypostasis), distinct from that of God,… Read More »The Incarnation of God’s Logos (John 1:1-18)
The terms “atheism,” “monotheism,” and “polytheism” seem straightforward enough… BUT important ambiguity lurks in the root term “theism.”
A new book on the portrayal of Jesus in the Gospel According to John.
If Jesus fulfills predictions about Yahweh, does this mean that he’s Yahweh?
In this episode of the trinities podcast I answer some of your questions.
Is reforming in light of scripture only acceptable in the distant past?
Is the “Granville Sharp Rule” + 2 Peter 1:1 and Titus 2:13 “fatal to unitarianism”?
In my view, the fourth has been the most misunderstood gospel.
Closing statements: Finnegan: 1:48:43- 1:52:12 Only one Yahweh. Jesus does things God says he can’t do, e.g. die. Jesus affirms Shema. In John 10, Jesus uses a concept of “representational deity” – i.e. calling a being who isn’t God “God” because of some likeness to God in some respect(s). Trinity is confusing, post-biblical. But it is a solution to a non-existent problem, namely, of their… Read More »Trinitarian-Unitarian Debates – 1 Bosserman vs. Finnegan, 2008 – Part 5
In this episode I review the first portion of a recent debate/discussion between Dr. Bart Ehrman and Dr. Michael Bird, held at the at the 2016 Greer-Heard Point Counter Point Forum in February 12-13, 2016 at the New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary.
Discussing trinitarian vs. unitarian Christian theologies with Dr. William Lane Craig.
Can someone with two natures be essentially immortal and die?
0.75x 1x 1.25x 1.5x 2x 0:0000:34:28 podcast 43 – Dr. Stephen R. Holmes on God and humankind Apple PodcastsGoogle PodcastsPlayer EmbedShare Leave a ReviewListen in a New WindowDownloadSoundCloudStitcherSubscribe on AndroidSubscribe via RSSSpotify Is God a self – a being capable of consciousness, knowledge, and choice, like us, but infinitely greater? Or is God a community, or a something-we-know-not-what? Dr. Holmes’s language in his book The Quest… Read More »podcast 43 – Dr. Stephen R. Holmes on God and humankind