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Old 09-26-2006, 12:27 PM   #31
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Originally Posted by dzim77
He's putting himself on the 'level' of God.


In the eyes of the Jews.
Yes, in the eyes of the Jews, to whom he was making the statement. And in the eyes of the author of the book. Doesn't this constitute a claim to divinity? Doesn't reading the text in context mean to understand what the author was intending to state within the cultural context?

I see that you are asserting that the Jews misunderstood Jesus, that he wasn't really making a claim to divinity. I disagree... as I said in my previous post that the immediately following context supports this (as well as the context of the whole book of John).

My question is, if Jesus wasn't claiming divinity then what, exactly, was Jesus saying?



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Originally Posted by dzim77
In fact, your premise in this whole thread is to compare the idea of 'oneness' in the book of John by looking at John 10 and John 17. We are using the book of John as context, examing his using of certain ideas ('oneness') in order to show that the Trinity is not found in John 10. I think it is perfectly reasonable to use the context of John 10:30 to show that the verse is a viable support to the doctrine of Trinity. Specifically, that Jesus not only claimed oneness with the Father but that he claimed a special, unique status with the Father - different from any of Jesus' followers - in the same discussion.


So? How are you arguing that the notion of being one in the two cases is different??
First of all, this is not the case I was making in the previous two posts. The case I was making is that Jesus' statement in John 10:30 is a claim to divinity which supports the doctrine of trinity.

But, to answer your question.... Jesus' oneness with the Father is a oneness of essence. They are both God in essence and divine substance.

As followers of Jesus, our oneness with Jesus is a oneness of Union. We are united with Jesus in spirit. We are not divine in essence, but we are united with Christ in spirit. The Bible describes this Union as being 'children of God', 'the bride of Christ', etc... Jesus' prayer in John 17 then is that the unity of his followers would reflect the kind of unity he shares with his Father, and also that Jesus' followers would experience this spiritual Union with Jesus and his Father.

This, of course, cannot be seen by reading only John 10 and 17... it is necessary to take into consideration the context of the whole gospel of John to reach this understanding.


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Originally Posted by dzim77
The text supports the idea that Jesus is divine.


No, it doesn't. Your wayward reading does. It is not based on the text.
If you feel that I am misquoting, let me know and I will stop, but earlier in this thread you said....
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I took the idea for the Jews in the passage as demeaning god by putting oneself on the same level with god to be in agreement with him. Only a god can be in accord with a god. Mere people accept a god's announcements.

spin

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Originally Posted by dzim77
He is the unique Son of God. Making him equal with God.


He's a unique son of god. How does that make him equal with god. The Jews had one father, god. They were sons of god. They were not equal with god. What are you on about?
The Jews wanted to kill Jesus because he was putting himself on the same level as God by claiming to be one with the Father - as you keenly oberved earlier. (even calling God his 'Father' is a no-no). Of course they didn't understand Jesus to be talking about the idea of "Trinity", but they knew he was claiming to be equal with God.

The idea of being the unique Son of God is ... well, unique It's a new idea by Jesus in the way he claimed it. The book of John expounds on this concept with beauty. This is what the Trinity serves to explain... that Jesus is the unique Son of God means that he is in essence God... he is one in essence and being with the Father yet he is a distinct person from the Father.

In light of the book of John, how would you explain Jesus claim to be the unique Son of God apart from the trinitarian explanation?

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by spin: Let me however repeat, as the same language is used about the oneness of Jesus with god and about that between the followers of Jesus, you go on to say that despite the same langauge they mean different things.
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Originally Posted by dzim77
1. God is one
2. God the Father is God
3. Jesus the Son is God
4. The Holy Spirit is God
5. Father, Son, and Spirit are distinct persons

This is the trinity in a nutshell... John 10:30 adds weight to point 3 and arguably to points 1 and 2


by spin: We already knew that.

Of course one can make Jn 10:30 support the trinity. When you decontextualise statements, you can get them to say whatever you can twist them to mean. Jn 10:30 is a prime example. You are merely distorting the text and misrepresenting it, when you decontextualise it and try to make it mean what it clearly doesn't.

spin
You are now accusing me of decontextualising...

First off let me say that I really like what you are doing in this thread. You are using the context of the book of John to interpret and clarify the meaning of certain verses in the book. You are using John 17 to clarify and interpret what Jesus meant in John 10 when he said "I and my Father are one." That's cool. But why should we have to limit the context to John 17? Why should we not include the whole book of John as context? Why should we not examine John's view Jesus' divinity/non-divinity, John's view of the relationship between Jesus and the Father, John's view of the Holy Spirit and bring that contextual understanding to bear on our interpretation of John 10:30?

Otherwise, you are using context (John 17), but you are strictly limiting what context we can use - seeimingly in order to justify a certain interpretation. I propose that if you limit your context to John 17, then John 10:30 does not appear to support the doctrine of Trinity. However, if you allow the whole book of John as context, and even the surrounding verses of John 10:30 as context, then the verse indeed supports the doctrine of Trinity.

Now in order to contextualise, let's look at the rest of the passage in John 10:

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22Then came the Feast of Dedication[b] at Jerusalem. It was winter, 23and Jesus was in the temple area walking in Solomon's Colonnade. 24The Jews gathered around him, saying, "How long will you keep us in suspense? If you are the Christ,[c] tell us plainly."
25Jesus answered, "I did tell you, but you do not believe. The miracles I do in my Father's name speak for me, 26but you do not believe because you are not my sheep. 27My sheep listen to my voice; I know them, and they follow me. 28I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish; no one can snatch them out of my hand. 29My Father, who has given them to me, is greater than all[d]; no one can snatch them out of my Father's hand. 30I and the Father are one."

31Again the Jews picked up stones to stone him, 32but Jesus said to them, "I have shown you many great miracles from the Father. For which of these do you stone me?"

33"We are not stoning you for any of these," replied the Jews, "but for blasphemy, because you, a mere man, claim to be God."

34Jesus answered them, "Is it not written in your Law, 'I have said you are gods'[e]? 35If he called them 'gods,' to whom the word of God came—and the Scripture cannot be broken— 36what about the one whom the Father set apart as his very own and sent into the world? Why then do you accuse me of blasphemy because I said, 'I am God's Son'? 37Do not believe me unless I do what my Father does. 38But if I do it, even though you do not believe me, believe the miracles, that you may know and understand that the Father is in me, and I in the Father." 39Again they tried to seize him, but he escaped their grasp.

40Then Jesus went back across the Jordan to the place where John had been baptizing in the early days. Here he stayed 41and many people came to him. They said, "Though John never performed a miraculous sign, all that John said about this man was true." 42And in that place many believed in Jesus.
Here's a list of what this passage claims about Jesus...

*He calls God his 'Father'
*He gives his sheep eternal life
*His sheep shall never perish
*No one can snatch his sheep out of his hand
*His Father has given his sheep to Jesus
*Jesus and the Father are one
*He does miracles in his Father's name
*The Jews wanted to kill Jesus for claiming to be God
*The Father set him apart as his very own and sent him into the world
*He is God's Son
*The Father is in him, and he is in the Father
*Many believed in Jesus

My position is that: in light of the surrounding context, John 10:30 is a claim to the divinity of Jesus. Furthermore, in light of the context of the book of John, John 10:30 is a claim to 'special' oneness of Jesus and the Father - oneness in essence with the Father.
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Old 09-26-2006, 06:42 PM   #32
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Originally Posted by dzim77 View Post
Yes, in the eyes of the Jews, to whom he was making the statement. And in the eyes of the author of the book. Doesn't this constitute a claim to divinity? Doesn't reading the text in context mean to understand what the author was intending to state within the cultural context?

I see that you are asserting that the Jews misunderstood Jesus, that he wasn't really making a claim to divinity. I disagree... as I said in my previous post that the immediately following context supports this (as well as the context of the whole book of John).

My question is, if Jesus wasn't claiming divinity then what, exactly, was Jesus saying?
Jesus talked of being in accord. Do I need to find other words for the idea?

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Originally Posted by dzim77
First of all, this is not the case I was making in the previous two posts. The case I was making is that Jesus' statement in John 10:30 is a claim to divinity which supports the doctrine of trinity.
Either he is saying that he was of one accord with god as the followers would be, or he wasn't.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
But, to answer your question.... Jesus' oneness with the Father is a oneness of essence. They are both God in essence and divine substance.
THis is not answerikng my question. You are just bullshitting. This has nothing at all to do with the linguistic problem posed to you. You are just introducing a joker into the pack, so you can say whatever you want.

[QUOTE=dzim77This, of course, cannot be seen by reading only John 10 and 17... it is necessary to take into consideration the context of the whole gospel of John to reach this understanding.[/quote]
Of course, you have to forget the significance of what is being actually said.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
If you feel that I am misquoting, let me know and I will stop, but earlier in this thread you said....
No, you are not relating to the text.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
The Jews wanted to kill Jesus because he was putting himself on the same level as God by claiming to be one with the Father - as you keenly oberved earlier. (even calling God his 'Father' is a no-no). Of course they didn't understand Jesus to be talking about the idea of "Trinity", but they knew he was claiming to be equal with God.
Of course you don't understand Jesus to be talking about the idea of "Trinity". You are still doinng post hoc manipulation of the text. You will not let go of your bias and read the text for what it says.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
The idea of being the unique Son of God is ... well, unique
All sorts of ideas are unique. The idea of the mediator which appears in Hebrews is unique, but it certainly contradicts the notion of the trinity. It is a unique relationship with god though.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
It's a new idea by Jesus in the way he claimed it. The book of John expounds on this concept with beauty.
The book of John takes the concept of the logos which is just a sex change from sophia (Hebrew XKMH) and ties that into the fray. You are confusing the poetic communication of John based on Wisdom with your post hoc necessities.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
This is what the Trinity serves to explain... that Jesus is the unique Son of God means that he is in essence God... he is one in essence and being with the Father yet he is a distinct person from the Father.
We know what trinity serves to explain, what Arianism serves to explain, what all the other attempts at covering all the discordant threads in the attempts to understand the texts.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
In light of the book of John, how would you explain Jesus claim to be the unique Son of God apart from the trinitarian explanation?
Why do assume that it was a unique whole in the original intention of the one writer? When works are reworked in different generations that get the conflicting ideas of those different generations. Do you think the same people who wrote the genealogies of Jesus also nullified their significance by immediately saying that Jesus wasn't of the line of Joseph?

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Originally Posted by dzim77
You are now accusing me of decontextualising...
Yup. You go off and talk about other things after injecting the idea that Jesus must have been referring to himself as god. The religion has had nearly two millennia of apologetics evolution to justify its current dogma. This has certainly mystified the issue for believers, who now have to disentangle themselves from that mystification to have a hope of reading the text for what it says. When someone else has joined the dots you see their drawing not the dots for themselves.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
First off let me say that I really like what you are doing in this thread. You are using the context of the book of John to interpret and clarify the meaning of certain verses in the book. You are using John 17 to clarify and interpret what Jesus meant in John 10 when he said "I and my Father are one." That's cool. But why should we have to limit the context to John 17? Why should we not include the whole book of John as context?
You start with the language and that is reflected in the comparison between the two statements using the same language. This should lead you to understand that the text says nothing about the sort of oneness you are talking about, as it is the same that the followers will have. This in itself does not allow you to comment on any divinity. Your realising that should tell you that you are doing something wrong.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Why should we not examine John's view Jesus' divinity/non-divinity, John's view of the relationship between Jesus and the Father, John's view of the Holy Spirit and bring that contextual understanding to bear on our interpretation of John 10:30?
You need to be able to relate this view regarding divinity to the texts, both Jn 10:30 and 17:22.

You may believe the notion of the trinity but you need to show that it is relevant to the core of the text, rather than to assume it.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Otherwise, you are using context (John 17), but you are strictly limiting what context we can use - seeimingly in order to justify a certain interpretation. I propose that if you limit your context to John 17, then John 10:30 does not appear to support the doctrine of Trinity.
You can propose whatever you like, but you must touch first base before going onto second.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Now in order to contextualise, let's look at the rest of the passage in John 10:

Here's a list of what this passage claims about Jesus...

*He calls God his 'Father'
He is a Jew, isn't he?

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Originally Posted by dzim77
*He gives his sheep eternal life
This is a distortion of the text. Whoever believes in him with have eternal life etc. He is not made the agent in the act.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
*His sheep shall never perish
This is no help.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
*No one can snatch his sheep out of his hand
No help.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
*His Father has given his sheep to Jesus
Yup, that's right, "his father".

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Originally Posted by dzim77
*Jesus and the Father are one
Just as his followers are one.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
*He does miracles in his Father's name
Well, this representative of god must do something. Elijah did'em. Elisha did'em. Any representative of god worth his salt did'em. Even Peter. Now none of them were in the trinity.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
*The Jews wanted to kill Jesus for claiming to be God
That is false. They wanted to kill him for blasphemy. He didn't claim he was god, nor even a god in the strict sense of the term. He claimed to be of one accord with god.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
*The Father set him apart as his very own and sent him into the world
That's because he is being transformed into Wisdom by John. That tells you nothing about your claim of trinity.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
*He is God's Son
All Jews called god their father, so they were his sons.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
*The Father is in him, and he is in the Father
Jn 14:20

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Originally Posted by dzim77
*Many believed in Jesus
Heh, that's impressive evidence. Many believed, we are told, in Simon Magus.

Sorry, but you don't seem to have anything at all up your sleave.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
My position is that: in light of the surrounding context, John 10:30 is a claim to the divinity of Jesus. Furthermore, in light of the context of the book of John, John 10:30 is a claim to 'special' oneness of Jesus and the Father - oneness in essence with the Father.
When you show that you can read the text for what it says, then you might start understanding hat it says.


spin
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Old 09-27-2006, 09:54 AM   #33
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Originally Posted by dzim77
Why should we not examine John's view Jesus' divinity/non-divinity, John's view of the relationship between Jesus and the Father, John's view of the Holy Spirit and bring that contextual understanding to bear on our interpretation of John 10:30?

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originally posted by spin: You need to be able to relate this view regarding divinity to the texts, both Jn 10:30 and 17:22.

You may believe the notion of the trinity but you need to show that it is relevant to the core of the text, rather than to assume it.
...
You can propose whatever you like, but you must touch first base before going onto second.
Spin,

All I'm suggesting is that we take into consideration who Jesus is and the nature of Jesus' relationship with the Father,as presented to us in the book of John, when determining the meaning of a particular verse in the book of John. This is not 'throwing a joker into the deck' or 'changing the subject' or 'post hoc manipulation'. It is understanding John's view of Jesus and his relationship with the Father and bringing that understanding to bear when interpreting a particular verse.

John 10:30 invovles Jesus. It involves the Father. It involves Jesus' relationship with the Father... so Yes, the understanding of these elements as is consistent throughout the book of John is very relevant here. (first base as you would say). The same applies to John 17.

I'll scratch that part about John's view of the Holy Spirit.

John 10:30 has more than one possible meaning, so does John 17:21-23. So, we should examine the context in order to determine which meaning is most likely correct. I'm not ruling out your interpretation, I'm suggesting that, given the context of John, there is more to the verse what you are saying. I believe that this verse adds weight to the doctrine of Trinity.



here are a few of the possibilities that are relevant here:

1. John 10 and 17 are referring to a oneness of 'accord' in each and every use of the term 'one'. (the kind of accord that can exist between two human beings).

2. John 10 and 17 are referring to a oneness of accord in one or more, but not all uses of the word 'one'... for example... Jesus is praying that the oneness of his followers would be so great that it would reflect or represent to the world, the oneness in essence of Jesus and His Father.... also, that Jesus is praying that his followers would experience a oneness in Union with himself and the Father (just as a man becomes one with his wife in marriage).

3. Jesus is saying he is one in accord with the Father AND that he is one in essence... the two are not mutually exclusive.

Since, then, there is more than one possible meaning, and each possibility is viable, we must look further into the context of John to determine the most likely meaning of the passage. (this is all I'm suggesting)


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Originally Posted by dzim77
First of all, this is not the case I was making in the previous two posts. The case I was making is that Jesus' statement in John 10:30 is a claim to divinity which supports the doctrine of trinity.


Either he is saying that he was of one accord with god as the followers would be, or he wasn't.
Not true. There could be a deeper, more comprehensive, or perahaps totally different connotation of the word 'one' in each case. He could be saying he was one in accord AND essence with the Father. (which would be consistent with John's view of the relationship as portrayed throughout the book).



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Originally Posted by dzim77
The Jews wanted to kill Jesus because he was putting himself on the same level as God by claiming to be one with the Father - as you keenly oberved earlier. (even calling God his 'Father' is a no-no). Of course they didn't understand Jesus to be talking about the idea of "Trinity", but they knew he was claiming to be equal with God.

Of course you don't understand Jesus to be talking about the idea of "Trinity". You are still doinng post hoc manipulation of the text. You will not let go of your bias and read the text for what it says.
I said that *the Jews* didn't understand Jesus to be talking about 'trinity', but they knew he was claiming equality with God. Jesus could very well have been intending to refer to a trinitarian relationship.



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Originally Posted by dzim77
It's a new idea by Jesus in the way he claimed it. The book of John expounds on this concept with beauty.


The book of John takes the concept of the logos which is just a sex change from sophia (Hebrew XKMH) and ties that into the fray. You are confusing the poetic communication of John based on Wisdom with your post hoc necessities.
Now you're referring to poetic communication?? Either way, John identifies Jesus Christ as the Word (logos) - who was with God, was God, came from heaven to become flesh and dwell among us.


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Originally Posted by dzim77
In light of the book of John, how would you explain Jesus claim to be the unique Son of God apart from the trinitarian explanation?


Why do assume that it was a unique whole in the original intention of the one writer? When works are reworked in different generations that get the conflicting ideas of those different generations. Do you think the same people who wrote the genealogies of Jesus also nullified their significance by immediately saying that Jesus wasn't of the line of Joseph?
I prefer to stick to the topic at hand here... these are big sidetracks.

If you are going to compare John 17 to John 10, in order to examine John's use of the concept of oneness (which your thread is based on). Then you are opening up the book of John as context. If you are going to throw out sections of John that would cause us to come to a different conclusion about John 10:30, then this thread is pointless.


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Originally Posted by dzim77
You are now accusing me of decontextualising...


Yup. You go off and talk about other things after injecting the idea that Jesus must have been referring to himself as god. The religion has had nearly two millennia of apologetics evolution to justify its current dogma. This has certainly mystified the issue for believers, who now have to disentangle themselves from that mystification to have a hope of reading the text for what it says. When someone else has joined the dots you see their drawing not the dots for themselves.
Instead of accusing me of bias and assuming you have no bias or agenda of your own, let's talk about what the text says. Please

I'm only suggesting we consider the context of the book of John instead of limiting our context to a few verses.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
First off let me say that I really like what you are doing in this thread. You are using the context of the book of John to interpret and clarify the meaning of certain verses in the book. You are using John 17 to clarify and interpret what Jesus meant in John 10 when he said "I and my Father are one." That's cool. But why should we have to limit the context to John 17? Why should we not include the whole book of John as context?

You start with the language and that is reflected in the comparison between the two statements using the same language. This should lead you to understand that the text says nothing about the sort of oneness you are talking about, as it is the same that the followers will have. This in itself does not allow you to comment on any divinity. Your realising that should tell you that you are doing something wrong.
I think I covered this by explaining that there are more than one possible meaning to both texts (John 10 and John 17)



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Originally Posted by dzim77
Now in order to contextualise, let's look at the rest of the passage in John 10:

Here's a list of what this passage claims about Jesus...

*He calls God his 'Father'

spin He is a Jew, isn't he?
Jews did not refer to God as thier Father the way Jesus did. In fact, in John 5 they wanted to stone Jesus for this. (I'm sure you already know this)


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Originally Posted by dzim77
*He gives his sheep eternal life


spin: This is a distortion of the text. Whoever believes in him with have eternal life etc. He is not made the agent in the act.
Looks pretty plain to me. You claim it's a distortion, what was that you said about a joker in the deck?

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Originally Posted by dzim77
*His sheep shall never perish

This is no help.


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Originally Posted by dzim77
*No one can snatch his sheep out of his hand


No help.


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Originally Posted by dzim77
*His Father has given his sheep to Jesus


Yup, that's right, "his father".
Ok, maybe not much help...these were just included for the sake of being more comprehensive.


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Originally Posted by dzim77
*Jesus and the Father are one


spin: Just as his followers are one.
So you say... but let's look at all these statements together (in context) and see if that sheds light on this particular statement... instead of isolating the statements and picking them apart one by one as you have done here.


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Originally Posted by dzim77
*He does miracles in his Father's name

Well, this representative of god must do something. Elijah did'em. Elisha did'em. Any representative of god worth his salt did'em. Even Peter. Now none of them were in the trinity.
Agreed. But again, let's look at this statement along with the context of everything Jesus is saying about himself.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
*The Jews wanted to kill Jesus for claiming to be God


Spin: That is false. They wanted to kill him for blasphemy. He didn't claim he was god, nor even a god in the strict sense of the term. He claimed to be of one accord with god.
No, the text plainly says they wanted to kill him for claiming to be God. (talk about distorting the text!)

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John 10:33 "We are not stoning you for any of these," replied the Jews, "but for blasphemy, because you, a mere man, claim to be God."
Also, following your method of comparing John 17 to John 10, let's look at some other texts in which the Jews tried to kill Jesus... in each case, Jesus claims divinity - in John 5, he claims equality with God, in John 8, he claims to pre-exist Abraham and refers to himself as "I AM". This would shed light on why the Jews wanted to kill Jesus in John 10 (other than the fact that it plainly says he was claiming to be God).

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17Jesus said to them, "My Father is always at his work to this very day, and I, too, am working." 18For this reason the Jews tried all the harder to kill him; not only was he breaking the Sabbath, but he was even calling God his own Father, making himself equal with God. John 5:17-18

52At this the Jews exclaimed, "Now we know that you are demon-possessed! Abraham died and so did the prophets, yet you say that if anyone keeps your word, he will never taste death. 53Are you greater than our father Abraham? He died, and so did the prophets. Who do you think you are?"

54Jesus replied, "If I glorify myself, my glory means nothing. My Father, whom you claim as your God, is the one who glorifies me. 55Though you do not know him, I know him. If I said I did not, I would be a liar like you, but I do know him and keep his word. 56Your father Abraham rejoiced at the thought of seeing my day; he saw it and was glad."

57"You are not yet fifty years old," the Jews said to him, "and you have seen Abraham!"

58"I tell you the truth," Jesus answered, "before Abraham was born, I am!" 59At this, they picked up stones to stone him, but Jesus hid himself, slipping away from the temple grounds.
John 8:52-59
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Originally Posted by dzim77
*The Father set him apart as his very own and sent him into the world


That's because he is being transformed into Wisdom by John. That tells you nothing about your claim of trinity.
Following your method, let's see what else John has to say about Jesus being sent into the world by the Father in order to shed light on this verse...

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John 1
1In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. 2He was with God in the beginning. 3Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made.

9The true light that gives light to every man was coming into the world.[b]
10He was in the world, and though the world was made through him, the world did not recognize him. 11He came to that which was his own, but his own did not receive him.

14The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us. We have seen his glory, the glory of the One and Only,[d] who came from the Father, full of grace and truth. 15John testifies concerning him. He cries out, saying, "This was he of whom I said, 'He who comes after me has surpassed me because he was before me.' " 16From the fullness of his grace we have all received one blessing after another. 17For the law was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ. 18No one has ever seen God, but God the One and Only,who is at the Father's side, has made him known.
The Word was with God, was God, became flesh, made his dwelling amoung us, is the One and Only, came from the Father, is Jesus Christ, is God the One and Only who is at the Father's side.

So, here John establishes his view of Jesus - that he is God and that he was sent from the Father to give light to the world.

Now, doesn't this aid us in our understanding of John 10?

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John 3 16"For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.
Again, the idea of God's one and only Son whom he sent into the world.

one more:
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John 6 38For I have come down from heaven not to do my will but to do the will of him who sent me. 39And this is the will of him who sent me, that I shall lose none of all that he has given me, but raise them up at the last day. 40For my Father's will is that everyone who looks to the Son and believes in him shall have eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day."
Here Jesus specifies that he has come down from heaven to do the will of the Father. Doesn't sound like he's just another Jew refering to God as his "father".

John presents us with a Jesus who was with God in the beginning, who is God, who has come from heaven in the flesh. Again, doesn't this shed light on the meaning of John 10?



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Originally Posted by dzim77
*He is God's Son


All Jews called god their father, so they were his sons.
Then why did they want to stone him in John 5?


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Originally Posted by dzim77
*The Father is in him, and he is in the Father


spin: Jn 14:20
Again, I like that you are using John to interpret John. But, again, there is more than one possible meaning here. Jesus' relationship to the Father can be reflected in the relationship between Jesus and his followers without being the same in essence. This is the same issue as the John 10:30 issue.


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Originally Posted by dzim77
*Many believed in Jesus


spin: Heh, that's impressive evidence. Many believed, we are told, in Simon Magus.

Sorry, but you don't seem to have anything at all up your sleave.
True. Again,this is to be taken together with the full context of what John is saying about Jesus.


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Originally Posted by dzim77
My position is that: in light of the surrounding context, John 10:30 is a claim to the divinity of Jesus. Furthermore, in light of the context of the book of John, John 10:30 is a claim to 'special' oneness of Jesus and the Father - oneness in essence with the Father.

When you show that you can read the text for what it says, then you might start understanding hat it says.

spin
Allow me to put your method into practice by analyzing your statements on this thread....

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by spin: It should be obvious that "to be one" in John deals with single accord, that believers will be of a single accord, just as we (Jesus and god) are.
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by spin: Only a god can be in accord with a god. Mere people accept a god's announcements.
When comparing these two quotes, it is obvious from spin's use of the word accord, that in order to be in accord with God, one must be a god. Therefore, Jesus is claiming to be god. Right?

Well, the problem is that in your first use of the word 'accord' you were referring to the kind of accord that one man can have with another man. (nothing divine about that). But in your second use of 'accord' you are referring to the Jewish connotation of 'accord' - that only one equal with God can be in accord with God. So the same word can be used with different connotations depending on the context.

It's frustrating when phrases are taken out of context and isolated from the entire flow of thought, in order to produce a certain interpretation, isn't it?

I stand by the position that John 10:30 is a claim to divinity... in *at least* the way the Jews understood it to be -that he was claiming equality with God. Given the context of John, I believe Jesus is saying more than that... Yes, he is one in accord with the Father... but he is more than that, he is one in essence with the Father... they are both God in essence.

Why can we interpret the oneness of Jesus and the Father to be different than the oneness that Jesus prays for his followers? Because of what the whole rest of the book of John claims about who Jesus is and his relationship with the Father... which is completely different than the nature of Jesus' followers and the kind of relationship they have with the Father.

In either case, this verse, taken in context, supports the trinity.
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Old 09-27-2006, 11:41 AM   #34
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John 10:30 invovles Jesus. It involves the Father. It involves Jesus' relationship with the Father... so Yes, the understanding of these elements as is consistent throughout the book of John is very relevant here. (first base as you would say).
First base is dealing with the language and that involves dealing with other relevant uses of the same terminology ("to be one") to be sure of our understanding.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
John 10:30 has more than one possible meaning, so does John 17:21-23. So, we should examine the context in order to determine which meaning is most likely correct. I'm not ruling out your interpretation, I'm suggesting that, given the context of John, there is more to the verse what you are saying. I believe that this verse adds weight to the doctrine of Trinity.
You still haven't dealt at all with the significance of the world believing and being one, so as to give evidence for your post hoc belief about the trinity.


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Originally Posted by dzim77
1. John 10 and 17 are referring to a oneness of 'accord' in each and every use of the term 'one'. (the kind of accord that can exist between two human beings).

2. John 10 and 17 are referring to a oneness of accord in one or more, but not all uses of the word 'one'... for example... Jesus is praying that the oneness of his followers would be so great that it would reflect or represent to the world, the oneness in essence of Jesus and His Father.... also, that Jesus is praying that his followers would experience a oneness in Union with himself and the Father (just as a man becomes one with his wife in marriage).
Given the relationship between the first and second reference to being one in Jn 17:22, we can scratch the special pleading.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
3. Jesus is saying he is one in accord with the Father AND that he is one in essence... the two are not mutually exclusive.
All you need to do is justify such a dual meaning from the use of language. What we normally do is understand what the text literally says, until proven to indicate something else.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Not true. There could be a deeper, more comprehensive, or perahaps totally different connotation of the word 'one' in each case. He could be saying he was one in accord AND essence with the Father. (which would be consistent with John's view of the relationship as portrayed throughout the book).
Try communicating like this. No-one will understand you. And you have no reason to believe that the text could have such a dual significance, except for your post hoc trinititarian retrojection.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
I said that *the Jews* didn't understand Jesus to be talking about 'trinity', but they knew he was claiming equality with God. Jesus could very well have been intending to refer to a trinitarian relationship.
You don't know. You have no evidence. You are guessing.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Now you're referring to poetic communication??
Yes, the beginning of John is poetry. (That helps to show that it was tacked onto the beginning.)

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Either way, John identifies Jesus Christ as the Word (logos) - who was with God, was God,
Slightly confused from the translation. The grammar of the Greek suggests that it should read not "was god", but "was divine".

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Originally Posted by dzim77
I prefer to stick to the topic at hand here... these are big sidetracks.
If you think it is a sidetrack to question your assumptions, then you have a funny idea about what sidetracks really are. You assumed that the text was written from a single source. I asked you to justify it and I gave you a few reasons why you needed to. Forget the reasons. Justify your assumption that the text was written by one person. I have merely been talking about the significnace of language.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
If you are going to compare John 17 to John 10, in order to examine John's use of the concept of oneness (which your thread is based on). Then you are opening up the book of John as context.
And it certainly is linguistic context.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
If you are going to throw out sections of John that would cause us to come to a different conclusion about John 10:30, then this thread is pointless.
I don't need to throw anything out. You need to justify your assumption of unified point of view.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Instead of accusing me of bias and assuming you have no bias or agenda of your own, let's talk about what the text says. Please
Can you start from scratch and justify your act of retrojecting your current beliefs into the text?

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Originally Posted by dzim77
I'm only suggesting we consider the context of the book of John instead of limiting our context to a few verses.
I started with linguistic evidence. You have shown a total unwillingness to talk about it and to change the topic at any opportunity you can get. You still haven't dealt with the first base yet. You've merely said that maybe the use of being one in the first part of 17:22 may be different from that in the second half, an unsupported conjecture.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
I think I covered this by explaining that there are more than one possible meaning to both texts (John 10 and John 17)
You have just made a few conjectures.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Jews did not refer to God as thier Father the way Jesus did. In fact, in John 5 they wanted to stone Jesus for this. (I'm sure you already know this)
The writer is giving the Jewish analysis of the comments attributed to Jesus in Jn 5. The Jews saw him as making special claims.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Looks pretty plain to me. You claim it's a distortion, what was that you said about a joker in the deck?
Your claim was: He gives his sheep eternal life

You have inserted Jesus as the agent in the comment and therefore manipulated the significance.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
So you say... but let's look at all these statements together (in context) and see if that sheds light on this particular statement... instead of isolating the statements and picking them apart one by one as you have done here.
This is just a circularity. You can't support what you want to conclude using your conclusion about it.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Agreed. But again, let's look at this statement along with the context of everything Jesus is saying about himself.
First, you show your claim is correct in the specific instance, ie that Jesus being one with the father means anything more than the people of the world being one -- the writer using the same language.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
No, the text plainly says they wanted to kill him for claiming to be God. (talk about distorting the text!)
No distortion of the text.

Your initial claim:
*The Jews wanted to kill Jesus for claiming to be God
My response:
That is false. They wanted to kill him for blasphemy. He didn't claim he was god, nor even a god in the strict sense of the term. He claimed to be of one accord with god.
This is still correct. The Jews might have wanted to kill him for his blasphemy, which they interpreted as making himself out as a god, but Jesus does not claim to be in any tangible sense a god. He just quizzically says "Is it not written in your law, 'I said, you are gods'?"


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Originally Posted by dzim77
Also, following your method of comparing John 17 to John 10, let's look at some other texts in which the Jews tried to kill Jesus... in each case, Jesus claims divinity - in John 5, he claims equality with God,
Actually he talks of god being his father. You confuse the Jews' analysis with what Jesus claimed.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
in John 8, he claims to pre-exist Abraham and refers to himself as "I AM".
Perhaps you might like to make a case for the significance of the verse rather than assume it. Was Jesus not provocatively referring to god, citing the LXX translation of god's Hebrew name?

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Originally Posted by dzim77
This would shed light on why the Jews wanted to kill Jesus in John 10 (other than the fact that it plainly says he was claiming to be God).
Assuming what you haven't shown again.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Following your method, let's see what else John has to say about Jesus being sent into the world by the Father in order to shed light on this verse...
You don't seem to understand my method, which was to show the significance of the same Greek terminology.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
The Word was with God, was God,
Breezing along, but I have pulled this "was god" up earlier.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
became flesh, made his dwelling amoung us, is the One and Only, came from the Father, is Jesus Christ, is God the One and Only who is at the Father's side.
This doesn't parse.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
So, here John establishes his view of Jesus - that he is God and that he was sent from the Father to give light to the world.
The word was with god at the beginning. Yup. The word was divine. Yup. That god and the word were the same. Naaa.

(We are dealing with the logos poem and you need to assume coherence of authorship between it and the rest of John to jump to your conclusions.)

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Now, doesn't this aid us in our understanding of John 10?
No.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Again, the idea of God's one and only Son whom he sent into the world.
THat has no reflection on the issue.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Here Jesus specifies that he has come down from heaven to do the will of the Father. Doesn't sound like he's just another Jew refering to God as his "father".
He is clearly distinguishing himself from the father as a separate entity. This is a simple contradiction of the trinitarian error.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
John presents us with a Jesus who was with God in the beginning, who is God, who has come from heaven in the flesh. Again, doesn't this shed light on the meaning of John 10?
All it shows is your willingness to misunderstand the texts you are using. It has little to do with the linguistic analysis of my first post.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Then why did they want to stone him in John 5?
Blasphemy. He is making his sonship different from that of the Jews, ie he is playing hard and fast with Jewish beliefs.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Again, I like that you are using John to interpret John. But, again, there is more than one possible meaning here.
Then you can't use it to justify anything until you can establish what it means, can you?

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Originally Posted by dzim77
True. Again,this is to be taken together with the full context of what John is saying about Jesus.
If we take all your statements together we have a bunch of erroneous ideas, not single ones.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Allow me to put your method into practice by analyzing your statements on this thread....
You don't understand the methodology. Where is your close linguistic analysis?




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Originally Posted by dzim77
When comparing these two quotes, it is obvious from spin's use of the word accord, that in order to be in accord with God, one must be a god. Therefore, Jesus is claiming to be god. Right?
Because you won't understand the logic of the Jews presented in the text as separate from what Jesus said, I can understand your confusion.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Well, the problem is that in your first use of the word 'accord' you were referring to the kind of accord that one man can have with another man. (nothing divine about that). But in your second use of 'accord' you are referring to the Jewish connotation of 'accord' - that only one equal with God can be in accord with God. So the same word can be used with different connotations depending on the context.
If you don't get the notion of how the Jews are portrayed in there thinking, this doesn't get us very far.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
It's frustrating when phrases are taken out of context and isolated from the entire flow of thought, in order to produce a certain interpretation, isn't it?
YOu need to learn methodology, instead of just copying what you don't seem to understand.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
I stand by the position that John 10:30 is a claim to divinity... in *at least* the way the Jews understood it to be -that he was claiming equality with God.
Why do you confuse the Jews' reading of the implications with what Jesus actually said? It is normal for the writer to represent people misunderstanding Jesus.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Given the context of John, I believe Jesus is saying more than that... Yes, he is one in accord with the Father... but he is more than that, he is one in essence with the Father... they are both God in essence.
YOu need to get over your beliefs and get on with evidence.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Why can we interpret the oneness of Jesus and the Father to be different than the oneness that Jesus prays for his followers? Because of what the whole rest of the book of John claims about who Jesus is and his relationship with the Father... which is completely different than the nature of Jesus' followers and the kind of relationship they have with the Father.
So, you have no case. YOu just rehash the old dogma as though you have shown it.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
In either case, this verse, taken in context, supports the trinity.
Yes, I knew you believed that. I knew you would believe it no matter what. The difference between believing and demonstrating is quite wide.


spin
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Old 09-27-2006, 12:39 PM   #35
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If you think it is a sidetrack to question your assumptions, then you have a funny idea about what sidetracks really are. You assumed that the text was written from a single source. I asked you to justify it and I gave you a few reasons why you needed to. Forget the reasons. Justify your assumption that the text was written by one person. I have merely been talking about the significnace of language.

I don't need to throw anything out. You need to justify your assumption of unified point of view.

spin
Now you're asking me to justify a unified view of John before I proceed?


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It should be clear that the meaning of Jn 10:30 needs to consider these other verses and we cannot assume with later fathers that this verse indicates a trinitarian view, for if it did how could we meaningfully read "they may be one, just as we are one"?

It should be obvious that "to be one" in John deals with single accord, that believers will be of a single accord, just as we (Jesus and god) are.


spin
so... Why didn't you justify a unified view of John, or anything of the sort, before comparing these two passages?


Anyways, I thought this thread was interesting and something maybe going in a 'new direction' by looking at the book of John and it's concepts and train of thought -as is- in order to gain a better understanding of particular verses in the book.

Now you are asking me to justify a unified view of John, claiming that John 1 was 'tacked on', seemingly claiming that every verse that supports a divine Jesus was -by definition- distorted. I understand, but I'd prefer not to go down that path.

I've stated my case in the previous post. And I have to say that the discussion was enlightening for me... to consider and contemplate the idea in John that Jesus desires his followers be in one accord with the Father and Son, even to the extent that Jesus is in one accord with the Father... very cool.

On a complete side note, I think that the idea of trinity is accurate and true to the Bible. I think it is a great 'tool' to use to understand the nature of God as presented to us in scripture. But I also think that when we see God as He is (on judgement day and after) that we will realize how this 'tool' of the doctirne of trinity was so insufficient and incomplete and we will gain a much more complete and fuller understanding of God's nature when we stand in his presence and see him as He truly is... but I digress.

So, thanks for the discussion, spin. Know that you are in my prayers.

-DZ
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Old 09-27-2006, 06:52 PM   #36
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Now you're asking me to justify a unified view of John before I proceed?
When dealing with ancient texts that you don't know much about, you cannot make assumptions such as the coherence of a single text. When you will not acknowledge the point through the simple examples I gave (about the use of genealogies which were later nullified), more of your underlying assumptions need to be revealed before going on.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
so... Why didn't you justify a unified view of John, or anything of the sort, before comparing these two passages?
I was looking at linguistic manifestations. Not unified authorship. How language is used, not who wrote each verse to see if the theological content was the same. You continually tried to change the subject -- I think because the subject was not clear to you.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Anyways, I thought this thread was interesting and something maybe going in a 'new direction' by looking at the book of John and it's concepts and train of thought -as is- in order to gain a better understanding of particular verses in the book.
When you look at the meaning of phrases, you look at similar usage. This is standard practice.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
Now you are asking me to justify a unified view of John, claiming that John 1 was 'tacked on', seemingly claiming that every verse that supports a divine Jesus was -by definition- distorted. I understand, but I'd prefer not to go down that path.
The path that I wanted to go down was dealing with language. It's very hard to show the language when you keep changing subject. To try to get you back on track, I tried to show you the difficulties of the path you wanted to go down.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
I've stated my case in the previous post.
Sadly, you have no case which reflected on the language.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
And I have to say that the discussion was enlightening for me... to consider and contemplate the idea in John that Jesus desires his followers be in one accord with the Father and Son, even to the extent that Jesus is in one accord with the Father... very cool.
Well, something came out of it for you.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
On a complete side note, I think that the idea of trinity is accurate and true to the Bible.
This is your problem. You couldn't approach the issue without already having decided.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
I think it is a great 'tool' to use to understand the nature of God as presented to us in scripture.
Literature tells you about what people thought.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
But I also think that when we see God as He is (on judgement day and after) that we will realize how this 'tool' of the doctirne of trinity was so insufficient and incomplete and we will gain a much more complete and fuller understanding of God's nature when we stand in his presence and see him as He truly is... but I digress.
"Digress" is a euphemism.

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Originally Posted by dzim77
So, thanks for the discussion, spin. Know that you are in my prayers.
Haven't you got better things to do with your time? ...I guess not.


spin
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