> He was quoting and affirming Deut. 6.13-14, prohibiting the worship of any God but Hashem Elokim.
Interestingly, he also skipped over 4-9, which tells us that the Lord is one and just how important his instructions are.
> I don't know what text in Deut. you're referring to here.
See Deuteronomy 28. I know that there is another more explicit one but I can't find it right now.
> His figures , in reality, have a modicum of credibility, but don't begin to tell the whole story.
I can't argue this anymore, since I haven't studied Christian early history in depth.
> Now this is just ludicrous.
I'm speaking of the general population, not its great minds. What percentage of the Christian population outside the clergy know their texts in the original language? Has read through all of scripture every year? Studies commentaries from the past 2000 years on their texts instead of reading it by itself? I'm pretty sure it's a miniscule amount, far below Judaism and Islam. Christianity emphasizes faith in Jesus, Islam emphasizes submission to God, and Judaism emphasizes the covenant with God (it shows in all the names). This is not an insult, just a description.
> C.S. Lewis
You will have to summarize it for me, since I don't think I understand his viewpoint enough to get this text.
> Plural pronoun "us" used several times in Genesis, as well as Isa. 6.8
Elohim is plural used with a singular verb.
Ps. 110.1
Isa. 9.6
Ps. 2.7
Dan. 7.13-14
Only once, and the Jewish understanding is that God is speaking to the angels.
1. So? It's to distinguish it from El, to show that god is not like pagan gods, to be confined to a singular place.
2. So David, or whoever wrote this, believed in the Trinity?
3. Good Jewish response on Isaiah 9
4. God calls David his son in [2 Samuel 7:14]
5. ...I see nothing here about multiple parts of God.
Also note that none of these actually say anything about the Trinity, aka 3 in one.
> Adherents became so afraid of transgression that they piled on more requirements to avoid getting close to infraction that they created a system of impossible conformity.
Not true, I don't see Orthodox Jewry today as a system of impossible conformity. It seems to work pretty well.
> It turns out to have been impossible. No one was able to keep the whole law all the time without flaw.
Why is "without flaw" a requirement? And don't quote "the wages of sin are death." Something from the OT please. And if God knew it would be an impossibility, why was it assigned?
Counterarguments to without flaw as a requirement and keeping it becomes an impossibility.
1. The Torah knows that people will transgress, and it sets up a system of repentance for when it happens.
2. Rabbinic ordinances are never punished on the same levels as commandments from the Torah, if they are punished at all.
resurrection
Since resurrections are so important, what was the resurrection in 2 Kings 4 about? Was there a sacrifice for something? I think you already know my rejoinder for Isaiah 7:14, and my refutation of Isaiah 53 as messianic can be found in this thread.
> The covenant expressed to Noah built on the one given to Adam, to Abraham built on the one given to Noah, to Moses built on that one,
And what is the similarity between all of these? Commandments are added, not taken away. David is promised kingship, there is no covenant. And I don't see anyone accept anything with Jesus, which is what a covenant (contract) requires.
> It's the nature of the covenant to be be filled up until all is complete.
What does this mean? What is filled up? Where is this nature described? What is "all" of a covenant? How can a contract with no expiration be completed? Or changed?