obviously biblical yet some of these statements are very contradicting to the bible.
the Most High is three yet the bible says He is one.
Jesus is the Most High and man. this would mean the Most High is a man, which He says He is not (two or three times) and it would also mean every man is the Most High, i dont think i am the creator of the heavens and the earth.
non trins are cultust if they do not bow down and acknowledge these three persons, just curious where this command is in scripture?
this is an odd one, brought into union with Jesus yet the trinity family says the Father, Son and Spirit make up that family so unless you feel you are one more person in the trinity you are left on the outside looking in.
the Most High is three yet the bible says He is one.
Jesus is the Most High and man. this would mean the Most High is a man, which He says He is not (two or three times) and it would also mean every man is the Most High, i dont think i am the creator of the heavens and the earth.
non trins are cultust if they do not bow down and acknowledge these three persons, just curious where this command is in scripture?
this is an odd one, brought into union with Jesus yet the trinity family says the Father, Son and Spirit make up that family so unless you feel you are one more person in the trinity you are left on the outside looking in.
God is one in terms of Being or Essence, yet three in terms of Person.
There is no contradiction.
The Father is YHVH, the Son is YHVH, and the Holy Spirit is YHVH.
Jesus possesses two natures, being both God and man.
I didn't say that those who don't understand the Trinity are cultists, but those who openly defy the doctrine of the Trinity are not believers. They don't worship the same God. Very typically, though, it is cultists that push an anti-Trinitarian doctrine, because they do not stop at redefining God; they continue to claim that other aspects of Christianity are in error.
Often their rebellion includes a denunciation of the Council of Nicea, the Roman Catholic Church, and Constantine. This is all part of the anti-Trinitarian, cultic spiel. Just about every cultist parrots the same party line.
I don't apply the word "family" to the Trinity. While it is true that the Father and Son have a filial relationship, I do not use this language as it has cultic overtones. Additionally, the Holy Spirit doesn't fit into this "family" claim. The phrase smacks of Mormonism or Herbert Armstrong's Worldwide Church of God nonsense.
My preference is to accentuate that God is, by his very nature, relational (Father, Son, Holy Spirit love one another) and that explains why he is love by NATURE. Humans are to mirror God in terms of his relational nature within their families and within society in general. A "lone ranger" Christian cannot properly mirror God, as more than one person is required to mirror this relational aspect of God.
For those who are interested, I recommend two different books with similar titles, Delighting in the Trinity by Tim Chester, and Delighting in the Trinity by Michael Reeves. These books would go a long ways toward addressing cultic, anti-Trinitarian teachings.
Understanding our Triune God indeed makes sense of the importance of this doctrine.
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