dan964
what
Begotten=born. Doesn't imply conception through a sexual act.
"What is a son ? From what we know its the birth through sexual acts or through other methods such as IVF. So If God says he has a son that must mean he reduces himself to the lower levels of animal acts. Also why would God create himself ( I personally don't get this? )"
Even the Quran, agrees on the Virgin Birth. Jesus was not conceived by sexual acts, how explicit/obvious do I have to be be?
Maybe looking into why Christians reject Mormonism gives a good indicator, why we also reject Islam on this particular topic.
Also why would God create himself ( I personally don't get this? ). That is what the Gospel explains, e.g. John 6
"For I have come down from heaven not to do my will but to do the will of him who sent me. 39 And this is the will of him who sent me, that I shall lose none of all those he has given me, but raise them up at the last day. 40 For my Father’s will is that everyone who looks to the Son and believes in him shall have eternal life, and I will raise them up at the last day.”
The purpose is to save people from their sins. Now I know in Islam, Allah forgives... but in both Judaism, Christianity in order for God to forgive, their needs to be atonement. Jesus came to provide a once for all, atonement for sins, so that anyone who believes (i.e. follows) him will be saved.
The second thing, which is hard to wrap your head around, Jesus is always the Son, at the Incarnation, he didn't become the Son. Actually the Word became flesh.
Your statement in red, is irrelevant because from both the Quran and the Bible, Jesus was without sin. And Christianity, (because Jesus is God etc.) it guarantees that he will not sin. Secondly, there is no chance, in question.
If God's justice was given, there is no chance, all would perish and go to hell.
But God also is merciful, so there is still no chance, because he is purposeful and intentional to accomplish salvation...
e.g. "For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life."
There were a lot of church councils and creeds and the like, that clarified a lot of the implications of holding to the idea of the Incarnation. Then it ends up with a lot of technical theological language.
The debated part of the incarnation is the nature of the Spirit/Soul/whatever of that flesh in relationship to the pre-existant Spirit of God the Son. The relationship of that spirit of God to the flesh of that baby born is the root of most Christological heresies like Nestorianism, Apollinarianism, and Monophysitism. Here's the "problem" of each:
Apollinarism: Says that the flesh that was created had no mind of its own. The problem with this idea is that God was never actually a man. In its most extreme form docetism Jesus only appeared to be human, and was in fact, merely a 'phantasm' of the flesh - a solid spirit that had no human substance whatsoever. That basically denies the incarnation altogether.
Nestorianism: Says that the flesh was just a normal guy whom God the Son indwelt. In this idea, Jesus was schizophrenic, having two distinct personalities in one body.
Monophysitism: Says that there was only one nature, in that the human nature was so dissolved in the divine that it basically ceased to exist. Of the "heresies" listed, this is probably the closest to Orthodoxy, but fails insofar as it denies the existence of a human will.
====
The orthodox position is the so called hypostatic union. It says that Jesus was fully God and fully man**. It's a bit tricky, but the basic idea is to ensure that any Christology recognizes that Jesus was fully able to fully be both things to fully accomplish what he was sent to do.
{As a sidenote, at this point, the same kind of concepts that lie behind the Trinity, lie behind this. So it is understandable if you reject both from your position; odd if only one is rejected.}
====
"What is a son ? From what we know its the birth through sexual acts or through other methods such as IVF. So If God says he has a son that must mean he reduces himself to the lower levels of animal acts. Also why would God create himself ( I personally don't get this? )"
Even the Quran, agrees on the Virgin Birth. Jesus was not conceived by sexual acts, how explicit/obvious do I have to be be?
Maybe looking into why Christians reject Mormonism gives a good indicator, why we also reject Islam on this particular topic.
Also why would God create himself ( I personally don't get this? ). That is what the Gospel explains, e.g. John 6
"For I have come down from heaven not to do my will but to do the will of him who sent me. 39 And this is the will of him who sent me, that I shall lose none of all those he has given me, but raise them up at the last day. 40 For my Father’s will is that everyone who looks to the Son and believes in him shall have eternal life, and I will raise them up at the last day.”
The purpose is to save people from their sins. Now I know in Islam, Allah forgives... but in both Judaism, Christianity in order for God to forgive, their needs to be atonement. Jesus came to provide a once for all, atonement for sins, so that anyone who believes (i.e. follows) him will be saved.
Note: Appealing to human standards of fairness, are irrelevant; when if God was just, he could just wipe us all out for rejecting him. Thankfully he doesn't... And I don't get your argumentation entirely but....Why would God create a creation such as a son which automatically makes Him love the son more than me and favour him over me ? Don't you think this sounds unfair ? No matter what a son does the parent would always love him so thus I have to be more careful than the son and I have a more likely chance of going to heaven then that son and have a more likely chance of going hell than that son.
The second thing, which is hard to wrap your head around, Jesus is always the Son, at the Incarnation, he didn't become the Son. Actually the Word became flesh.
Your statement in red, is irrelevant because from both the Quran and the Bible, Jesus was without sin. And Christianity, (because Jesus is God etc.) it guarantees that he will not sin. Secondly, there is no chance, in question.
If God's justice was given, there is no chance, all would perish and go to hell.
But God also is merciful, so there is still no chance, because he is purposeful and intentional to accomplish salvation...
e.g. "For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life."
There were a lot of church councils and creeds and the like, that clarified a lot of the implications of holding to the idea of the Incarnation. Then it ends up with a lot of technical theological language.
The debated part of the incarnation is the nature of the Spirit/Soul/whatever of that flesh in relationship to the pre-existant Spirit of God the Son. The relationship of that spirit of God to the flesh of that baby born is the root of most Christological heresies like Nestorianism, Apollinarianism, and Monophysitism. Here's the "problem" of each:
Apollinarism: Says that the flesh that was created had no mind of its own. The problem with this idea is that God was never actually a man. In its most extreme form docetism Jesus only appeared to be human, and was in fact, merely a 'phantasm' of the flesh - a solid spirit that had no human substance whatsoever. That basically denies the incarnation altogether.
Nestorianism: Says that the flesh was just a normal guy whom God the Son indwelt. In this idea, Jesus was schizophrenic, having two distinct personalities in one body.
Monophysitism: Says that there was only one nature, in that the human nature was so dissolved in the divine that it basically ceased to exist. Of the "heresies" listed, this is probably the closest to Orthodoxy, but fails insofar as it denies the existence of a human will.
====
The orthodox position is the so called hypostatic union. It says that Jesus was fully God and fully man**. It's a bit tricky, but the basic idea is to ensure that any Christology recognizes that Jesus was fully able to fully be both things to fully accomplish what he was sent to do.
{As a sidenote, at this point, the same kind of concepts that lie behind the Trinity, lie behind this. So it is understandable if you reject both from your position; odd if only one is rejected.}
====
Last edited: