by jimwalton » Mon Mar 05, 2018 2:02 pm
> Without a sacrifice.
Of course. It's a parable, not an allegory or theology. It's a parable about the willingness of the father to take back the son despite his sin, and the joy he has when the son returns. You can't read every piece of theology into it, or claim something is not theologically accurate because it's not in the story. That's neither the purpose nor function of parables.
> Where does it say this in the Jewish Bible?
- Isaiah 53
- The Messiah will be rejected by people (Ps. 118.22-24)
- He will die but not decay (Ps. 16.10; Ps. 22 [ancient Jews regarded Ps. 22 as messianic]; Ps. 118.17)
- Daniel 9.24-27: put an end to sin, atone for wickedness, bring in everlasting righteousness.
> [The Trinity] ...isn't in the Bible.
Sure it is.
- Psalm 2
- Psalm 110
- Daniel 9.9-14
And, of course, it's all over the New Testament.
- John 1.1
- John 8.58
- John 10.30
- Colossians 1.15-17
- Hebrew 1.3
- 1 Cor. 12.4-6 mentions all three as equals.
- In 1 Cor. 12.1-3; Gal. 4.4; Rom. 1.3-4; 8.11 Paul sees the Spirit's identity as defined by how the Father and Christ have sent him, and likewise the identities of the Father and Christ as "in part" determined by the Spirit.
- Ephesians 2.18 shows that Jesus gives us access to the Father by means of the Spirit. So Jesus's blood is them means of access, but the Spirit is also the means of access. The result is that by reconciling people to Himself, Jesus reconciles people to God.
- For that matter, all throughout Paul's writings God and Christ and Spirit are mutually defining and reciprocally implicating. That is, God's identity is defined in/through/by his relationship to Christ/Son, and vice versa, and also with regard to the Spirit, as listed above.
- Romans 8 is infused with Father, Son, and Spirit working as equals and with equal authority, power, and presence. They are one undivided divine essence with different actions appropriate to their persons.
- Titus 3.3-8. All three Persons of the Trinity are present and cooperating in the act of grace. Each Person has His function in the salvation of our soul.
- There are also plenty of the places where the Father is equated with the Son, and the Son is equated with the Spirit. So if the principle holds that if A1 = A2 & A2 = A3, then A1 also equals A3.