I think you misunderstand what I was proving. I was proving that God is referred to as one person, the Father. I do believe I have presented explicit statements from Scripture to that effect.Kurieuo wrote:If they are, I think you have done a poor job or illustrating how they are "explicit". Is it fairly clear? Yes. But this is different from "explicit" which requires a direct association comment like "The Father is God." You can't provide this can you?
By the way, what is the difference between 'That they may know you [the Father] the only true God', and 'The Father is the only true God'?
What is the difference between 'There is one God, the Father', and 'The Father is the one God'? There is no difference.
What is the difference between 'Our God and Father', and 'Our Father and God'? There is no difference.
If you had explicit statements to that effect, you would have shown them to me by now. As it is, you haven't even presented me with statements as explicit as those which I have shown you.My idea of "explicit" is much stricter than yours. But this does not really matter. I'm quite willing to accept your own idea of "explicit"—I have no qualms about doing this. It just means when I previously said Scripture doesn't implicitly affirm Christ as God, or the Holy Spirit as God, or God as a Trinity, that I now affirm them all as "explicit" (according to same understanding by which you say the Father is explicitly God).
Because an explicit statement of the concept of the trinity requires and explicit statement that God is three persons in one being. You have already acknowledged that there is no such explicit statement in Scripture.How does it not constitute an explicit teaching of the Trinity?
The concept 'God is three persons in one being' is derived, as you have acknowledged, from a process of reasoning which seeks to harmonise a certain understanding of individual texts (none of which state the concept explicitly). It does not derive from any explicit statement of the concept in Scripture.
Any conclusion which is the result of a process of reasoning from the interpretation of several texts, none of which declare the conclusion explicitly, is not a conclusion which is stated explicitly.
Actually you think it is quite explicit that all three (the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit), are each believed to be God. You attempt to resolve the logical contradiction which this causes, by invoking the concept of the trinity - God as three persons in one being - a concept which is not declared explicitly anywhere in Scripture.I think it quite explicit that all three (The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit) are believed to be one God.
Thank you, that's basically a rephrase of what I've said in my last paragraph.The correct teaching of the Trinity is one God in three eternal coexistent persons: The Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. And all the significant hallmarks of the Trinity are "explicitly" taught in Scripture.
If you could actually articulate the reasons why you are left unmoved by my previous comments, that would help me discuss the issue with you.Let's say, I'm left unmoved by your previous comments as I feel you are simply reading what you want to read, and ignoring the obvious of what is said in John 1.
If you reject my arguments but don't explain why, that doesn't leave me much to go on. It's not actually a conversation, is it?