Gina,
Well, regarding "another Jesus" there was a problem even in the 1st century of "docetism." John wrote his 1st letter it is believed IOT fight it. A man named Cerenthus was espousing it.
As the story goes, once when John was in a bathhouse in Ephesus he was told that Cerenthus had just entered the public bathhouse - which were common Ephesus. He immediately got up and supposedly ran naked down the street proclaiming that he would not remain in the same building as that heretic.

That may well just be an urban legend, but that John was strongly opposed to Cerenthus is not. At least that's what some 2nd century writings say. Polycarp said that John said something like, "Let us flee lest the building fall, since Cerenthus, the foe of the truth, is within it!"
Basically Cerenthus taught that Jesus was a very good man - but just a man. However, when Jesus was baptized by John the Baptizer, and the Holy Spirit descended on Him while the Father spoke, Cerenthus taught that at that moment he was indwelt by the Son and became the Christ (the Messiah). This was why He was not able to perform miracles earlier. From this point on it was taught that Jesus the Christ lived sinlessly and was God. However, at His crucifixion, when he gave up the spirit, Christ left Jesus (I know, sounds really weird. Cerenthus may have taught that the Spirit left Jesus just before the crucifixion) and so Christ never really was resurrected - but only in a spiritual sense.
This was obvious heresy. It was a form of gnosticism. Basically it taught -> "flesh, bad; spirit, good." So none of us really sins since we have this new nature. It resulted in believers saying that they could do whatever they wanted, since the flesh is not of God. It doesn't really matter, he taught. You can live like the devil since it can't affect our inner being.
So you can see why John wrote many of the things he did in this letter, including saying in chapter 2:22, 23 that anyone who denies the Son also denies the Father, and that this is the spirit of the antichrist.
Remember that John started out this letter (1st John) in a similar manner to his gospel with
"That which was from the/a beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have beheld and handled with our hands, concerning the Word of Life..."
So then, just why did John express it like this? It only makes sense IMO in view of the Cerenthus heresy which was going around at the time. Those words are a clear reference to Jesus in the flesh - they saw and touched Him. And John's use of "beginning" here negates Cerenthus' claims that the man Jesus had a beginning and that he was not always the Son of God.
Anyway, my guess would be that Paul was dealing with those who taught not a completely different person - Jesus - but some things about Jesus that were just plain not true.
Now regarding the different gospel, in Galatians 1 Paul says that there is only one gospel, and that if anyone proclaims a different gospel than that which he had brought them - even an angel from heaven - they were to reject it.
In 1 Corinthians 15:1-4 Paul gives the basic gospel: that Jesus died for our sins, that He was crucified and was buried (genuine death) and physically raised from the dead and then ascended into heaven.
The gospel is simply the good news that we gain eternal life through faith in Jesus Christ - trusting in His death in our place. Any gospel that asks us to trust in something else is not the gospel. Later in Galatians chapter 3 Paul addressed some of the ways that the people he was writing to were trying to change the gospel...
Galatians 3:1-7 You foolish Galatians! Who has hypnotized you, before whose eyes Jesus Christ was vividly portrayed as crucified? I only want to learn this from you: Did you receive the Spirit by the works of the law or by hearing with faith? Are you so foolish? After beginning with the Spirit, are you now going to be made complete by the flesh? Did you suffer so much for nothing--if in fact it was for nothing? So then, does God supply you with the Spirit and work miracles among you by the works of the law or by hearing with faith?
Just as Abraham believed God, and it was credited to him for righteousness, so understand that those who have faith are Abraham's sons.
See the contrats Paul makes between becoming a child of God through hearing with faith vs. the works of the Law? He gives Abraham as an example of someone who was declared to be righteous by God based on his faith alone.
So a different gospel would be one which placed an emphasis on works instead of faith.
Also, the Greek is interesting here in these 3 things...
another Jesus - ἄλλον (ALLON - from ALLOS)
another Spirit - ἕτερον (hETERON - from hETEROS)
another gospel - ἕτερον (hETERON - from hETEROS)
Now ALLOS means
"another of the same kind," while hETEROS means
"another of a different kind." IOW, Paul was referring to another Jesus of the same kind, and a different Spirit and a different gospel.
It could have been translated as...
For if a person comes and preaches another Jesus, whom we did not preach, or you receive a different spirit, which you had not received, or a different gospel, which you had not accepted, you put up with it splendidly!
I noticed that the HCSB did just that. Good job, guys. Now earlier I suggested that this Jesus which Cerenthus preached was not a completely
different person (Jesus) but some things about the Jesus they taught were just plain not true. He taught the same Jesus - but in a manner that was false.
FA
Gina L said:
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I'd like to hear from the "experts".
What is meant by another Jesus?
What is meant by another spirit?
What is meant by another gospel?
My belief, as of today but it could change, is that....
Another Jesus: Another person who saves. Not that they take the literal Jesus Christ who walked on earth and lie about him or try to change the truth, but that they say there is a different savior.
Another spirit: Another way of gaining what the Holy Spirit gives us...peace, joy, etc.. In other words a set of laws, or a perscribed set of actions, or even another said "annointing" from someone other than God.
Another gospel: not the bible, or the part which is added or taken away from the bible. [/FONT]