Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
is this able to be used by those advokating[sic] Open theism, for God somehow not knowing all things, learning on the job, so to speak?
We also cannot separate Christ's humanity and His divinity as some do in order to explain away how Christ, being fully God while also being fully man, can not know something.
...yet they are inseparable. The hypostatic union is something we cannot wrap our minds around.We cannot pretend they are the same. Jesus had two natures, not one.
...yet they are inseparable. The hypostatic union is something we cannot wrap our minds around.
...yet they are inseparable. The hypostatic union is something we cannot wrap our minds around.
Except the early Church agreed that in Jesus ARE 2 natures, both God and man NOT co -mingled ,distinct ,but both 100 % in natureThe most common error made in many circles is the concept that Jesus was God and man, when, including the early church he was the God-man, one entity and not a multi-personality. Strong,of 1907 Systematic Theology, wrote: "Christ uniformly speaks of himself, and is spoken of, as a single person. There is no interchange of "I" and "thou" between the human and divine natures, such as we find between the persons of the trinity (John 17:23). Christ never uses the plural number in referring to himself, unless it be in John 3:11, "We speak that we do know", and even here "we" is more probably used inclusive of the disciples.
It ws also record as early as 79-81, that Gloria Patri would give up speaking of the union of God and man; for this, he says, involves the fallacy of two natures. He would speak rather of the manifestation of God in man.
Cheers,
Jim
Sorry, I thought I demonstrated that the early church disputed the two separate natures. Jesus was the God-man, and not God and man.
Cheers,
Jim