| Topic: |
Religions > Bible |
| User: |
"Randy" |
| Date: |
23 Nov 2006 08:03:47 AM |
| Object: |
How you can tell Owd denies Christ's deity |
What does the doctrine of the trinity claim? Basically, it is
the fact that God is One God, manifest in three distinct
persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Owd is quite clear, concise, straightforward, and emphatic
about the fact he believes God is One, so this is not the part
of the doctrine of the trinity, which he keeps attacking and
denying. What is left then? The fact that while there is
only One God, Jesus Christ, and the Holy Spirit are also God,
in the same exact way that God the Father is God. If Owd
really believed that Christ and the Holy Spirit were God, just
as God the Father is God, then he wouldn't keep attacking the
doctrine of the trinity.
It is the deity of Christ, then, that Owd attacks and denies.
He knows this won't fly politically, however, so this is why
he has to keep coming out with these long articles of
sophistry. In order to rob you of a gospel which is of any
saving value, Owd has to actually try and eliminate language
as a medium for conveying truth, by redefining the very
meaning of the word "God".
You can't have a Savior, and a saving gospel, if the Savior is
not God, in the same, equal sense that God the Father is God.
This is why Owd's lies about the deity of Jesus Christ are a
damnable heresy, that will lead anyone who believes what he
says, to eternal damnation.
--
Christ died for our sins, and God raised Him from the dead.
Rely on this work alone to escape hell and receive eternal
life (Jn. 3:16; 1 Cor. 15:1-3; Eph. 2:8-10; 2 Thess. 1:8-9).
.
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| User: "Qadosh Stephanos" |
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| Title: Re: How you can tell Owd denies Christ's deity |
23 Nov 2006 08:21:18 PM |
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On Thu, 23 Nov 2006 08:03:47 -0600, Randy <pulpitfire@gmail.com>
wrote:
What does the doctrine of the trinity claim? Basically, it is
the fact that God is One God, manifest in three distinct
persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
How can your "Holy Spirit" be a "person" and occupy His people?
Perhaps you may want to elaborate on what exactly is a "person".
In math, two things are called "distinct" if they are not equal.
.
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