DaveXR650
Well-Known Member
@Ascetic X. I think some of what you are saying there is correct. But the whole point of theology is to do exactly what you say was happening here:
I would think it would be worth trying to explain this, wouldn't you. And, using only scripture, you have verses where Jesus says "If you have seen me you have seen the Father". Or "I and my Father are one". Other verses Jesus seems to clearly say he came to do the will of his father. It's not just that they wanted to be philosophical, but that they used what they had. Do you not believe that Jesus is both man and God simultaneously? If you do then how would you explain it without drawing on anything but scripture.That happened, notoriously so, in the attempts of the church fathers to explain how Jesus could be both man and God simultaneously. If you look at the explanations they give and the terms they use, they are the terms borrowed from Aristotelian philosophy. They were the only categories of thought open to them at the time, if they wanted to be philosophical.