by jimwalton » Thu Oct 31, 2019 3:17 pm
> Can you make out shapes from ice sculptures? The obvious answer is yes. Can you make out shapes from water? Obviously not. Yet, ice is simply frozen water and no different from one another. One has definite shape and one is not.
The obvious answer is yes, of course, but this illustration is a very different thing than the essential unity of all things.
> That would make you no different from an atheist who only sees the illusion of the material world as reality
I don't have to be an atheist to view the material world as real. Just drive your car into a cement abutment and you'll see how real the abutment is. A denial of the reality of matter is an unreasonable and unrealistic denial.
> Is a mirage real? Not in a sense that there is an actual water there but it is real because you are seeing it.
No a mirage is not real, nor is real because you think you are seeing it. We all know about the realities of the reflections and refractions of light.
> Isn't the claim that Jesus is god himself?
Yes.
> So why would it contradict the idea that Jesus is god's human manifestation?
It depends what you mean. There is a false idea that the Father, Son, and Spirit are not truly distinct, but instead are just different manifestations of the divine essence. This is incorrect. They are separate persons within the Godhead, distinct in their divine action though being of the same essence.
> the church leaders cannot comprehend how does god experience being in heaven and as Jesus at the same time and even talking with one another and therefore it has to be wrong.
Oh, plenty of church leaders can comprehend this. The ones we reject are the ones who postulate different theories than the one taught in the Bible. The Bible is the authority.
> You have two eyes, each eye sees a slightly different perspective than the other but works together to form a coherent image of the one we are looking. That's basically how Jesus and god works.
Actually, this is NOT how Jesus and the Father works. You are misunderstanding the Trinity. The Father and the Son are not just different perspectives working together to form a single coherent image. The two are not interchangeable. The Father and the Son are distinct persons. Love, relationship, and communication are possible between them because of that distinction.
Last bumped by Anonymous on Thu Oct 31, 2019 3:17 pm.