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Here is the link to this week's Sabbath School Lesson Study and Discussion Material: Click Here
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Re: Lesson #8 - Born of a Woman—Atonement and the INCARNATION
[Re: asygo]
#105065
11/24/08 01:25 AM
11/24/08 01:25 AM
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The word "Homoioma" means "like," not "different from." Neither does it mean "identical" is my conclusion based on Paul's use of homoioma. Your several posts are a little jumbled up, asygo and Tom, with right bits, wrong bits, and some poetic licence! Jesus' humanity was sinful, defiled and degenerate, but his mind was "righteous", indwelled by his Father's Spirit from birth - an indwelling from such an age remaining a mystery equal to the incarnation and not for us to fathom. What, asygo, of that 7 SDABC 926 quote by Tom, originally in manuscript 141, 1901, and cited in "Touched With Our Feelings"? Is it not perfectly unambiguous on the immoral state Jesus' humanity? Then there's this The great work of redemption could be carried out only by the Redeemer taking the place of fallen Adam. (R&H, Feb 24, 1874) Jean Zurcher's book (mentioned above) may well have ended the debate proper on this, so I don't need to say much more here, but you appear to think it's not over, or just needs better wording? As for "not currupted", this is a matter of choice, as that letter without context, to Baker, points out that corruption "did not rest on him". Perhaps Tom was showing how "defiled" and "degraded" are clearly understood as descriptions of a state of morality, whereas "corruption" is known as a matter of choice: the wrong context changes meaning.
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Re: Lesson #8 - Born of a Woman—Atonement and the INCARNATION
[Re: Colin]
#105067
11/24/08 01:44 AM
11/24/08 01:44 AM
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Is it not perfectly unambiguous on the immoral state Jesus' humanity? We now have a 3rd entrant. Tom: Jesus' humanity was amoral. Arnold: Jesus' humanity was moral. Colin: Jesus' humanity was immoral. I'd sooner go with Tom's assertion of amorality than with the idea that Jesus was immoral in any way, aside from our immorality that was imputed to Him as the Lamb.
By God's grace, Arnold
1 John 5:11-13 And this is the testimony, that God gave us eternal life, and this life is in his Son. Whoever has the Son has life; whoever does not have the Son of God does not have life. I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God, that you may know that you have eternal life.
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Re: Lesson #8 - Born of a Woman—Atonement and the INCARNATION
[Re: asygo]
#105068
11/24/08 02:54 AM
11/24/08 02:54 AM
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Is it not perfectly unambiguous on the immoral state Jesus' humanity? We now have a 3rd entrant. Tom: Jesus' humanity was amoral. Arnold: Jesus' humanity was moral. Colin: Jesus' humanity was immoral. I'd sooner go with Tom's assertion of amorality than with the idea that Jesus was immoral in any way, aside from our immorality that was imputed to Him as the Lamb. Immoral has the same meaning as sinful, not so: I prefer sinful nature - we exist in a state of sinfulness, but was resorting to immoral to emphasise the point while you two were using the root word - won't use it again due to how it confuses you who appear to hold to the new theology. What of that quote???...
Last edited by Colin; 11/24/08 02:57 AM.
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Re: Lesson #8 - Born of a Woman—Atonement and the INCARNATION
[Re: Colin]
#105069
11/24/08 03:25 AM
11/24/08 03:25 AM
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Here's another quote: Humanity died: divinity did not die. {YI, August 4, 1898 par. 1} With this quote, where is the worthy sacrifice? This clearly suggests that God's Son didn't die, only the Son of man...? Is that a worthy sacrifice unless the Son of God lay down his divine life? I was mistaken: She does not remove the worthy sacrifice, for she merely confirms that indeed divinity is immortal...while she also believed that the Son of God himself died. Here is a most basic statement regarding the pre-incarnate Christ, the Son of God, and what he did - he died... “Jesus Christ laid off His royal robe, His kingly crown, and clothed His divinity with humanity, in order to become a substitute and surety for humanity, that dying in humanity He might by His death destroy him who had the power of death.” (Ellen G. White, Letter 97, page 5, To "My Brethren in North Fitzroy," November 18th 1898) This simple statement she clarified in the same letter “He could not have done this as God, but by coming as man, Christ could die. By death He overcame death. The death of Christ bore to the death him who had the power of death, and opened the gates of the tomb for all who receive Him as their personal Saviour.” (Ibid) She is distinguishing divine nature from the divine Son, and describing - nearly explaining! - how God's own divine Son managed to offer himself as the atoning sacrifice for sinners. I hadn't got this clear in my own head last week, but there it is! Here is another quote, clear as day “Jesus had united with the Father in making the world. Amid the agonizing sufferings of the Son of God, blind and deluded men alone remain unfeeling. The chief priests and elders revile God's dear Son while in his expiring agonies. Yet inanimate nature groans in sympathy with her bleeding, dying Author.” (Ellen G. White, Signs of the Times. 21st August 1879 ‘The Sufferings of Christ’) The divine nature, the Godhead, is immortal, but "God, sending his Son in the likeness of sinful flesh" facilitated the death of his Son, since God alone could save and only the Son of the Most High did save us by dying for us. Oh, I really ought to include this one, for it says it so well. “Men need to understand that the Deity suffered under the agonies of Calvary. The Majesty of heaven was made to suffer at the hands of wicked men, -- religious zealots, who claimed to be the most enlightened people on the face of the earth. Men claiming to be the children of Abraham worked out the wrath of Satan upon the innocent Son of the infinite God.” (Ellen G. White, Review and Herald, 4th April 1899, ‘After the camp meeting’)
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Re: Lesson #8 - Born of a Woman—Atonement and the INCARNATION
[Re: Colin]
#105073
11/24/08 04:00 AM
11/24/08 04:00 AM
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you who appear to hold to the new theology. We prefer to be called "those who have learned a thing or two over the past century and a half" as opposed to those who have remained stagnant in "old error," or more often, "erroneous ideas of what the old theology really was." It is better to stick to theology, as mud-slinging is an old skill I'd rather not dredge up.
By God's grace, Arnold
1 John 5:11-13 And this is the testimony, that God gave us eternal life, and this life is in his Son. Whoever has the Son has life; whoever does not have the Son of God does not have life. I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God, that you may know that you have eternal life.
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Re: Lesson #8 - Born of a Woman—Atonement and the INCARNATION
[Re: asygo]
#105078
11/24/08 04:36 AM
11/24/08 04:36 AM
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NO ANSWER??? Here's a reminder In Christ were united the divine and the human--the Creator and the creature. The nature of God, whose law had been transgressed, and the nature of Adam, the transgressor, meet in Jesus--the Son of God, and the Son of man.(7 SDABC 926) As for your opinion of yourself, you're welcome to it, but you remain a new school of thought...theological thought. We have nothing to fear for the future except we forget the way the Lord has led us, AND HIS TEACHING, in our past Written in the 20th century, not her precise wording, but you reckon Francis Nicol, Kenneth Wood and Herbert Douglass got it wrong, or just the no-called Independent Ministries?
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Re: Lesson #8 - Born of a Woman—Atonement and the INCARNATION
[Re: asygo]
#105080
11/24/08 05:03 AM
11/24/08 05:03 AM
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There is nothing in there like "Jesus died while the Father and Spirit did not die." What we find there is the affirmation that Jesus is immortal (we can discuss what that word means) and that He has the right to "quicken whom He will." It is an article on the life that Jesus has.
"[Jesus] am the resurrection, and the life." [Jesus] who had said, "[Jesus] lay down [Jesus] life, that [Jesus] might take it again," came forth from the grave to life that was in [Jesus]. [Jesus] died: [Father and Spirit] did not die. In [Jesus'] divinity, [Jesus] possessed the power to break the bonds of death. [Jesus] declares that [Jesus] has life in [Jesus] to quicken whom [Jesus] will. {YI, August 4, 1898 par. 1} Yes, Jesus our great God and Saviour, powerful to save, give eternal life, lay it down and take it again - it is infinite, after all! In Jesus life work as Messiah he lived, gave and died for us: That involves him dying for sin and sinners, while his Father and Spirit directly guided and strengthened him in his human suffering of obedience: that he died directly relates to their existence, for salvation is by "the death of [God's] Son" (Rom 5:10), and his death doesn't actually affect the life of the Godhead possessed by the Father and the Spirit, who were yet very involved in Christ's death. While what you say is true, that article is not talking about that. To make it say what you wish it said is putting words into EGW's mouth. I can now refer you to my latest post, for her statements that the Son of God himself died while divine nature did not. That's why my point above here has a footing, though not expressed directly here. This survival of God at the death of his Son isn't permitted by the indivisible essence of the trinity doctrine - under which teaching the trinity would die with Christ should God actually die in Christ's humanity. You seem to be arguing against someone who is not here. You and DebbieB seem to have something against these Trinitarians and their alleged doctrines. These trinitarian allegations? - with pleasure...: please read it all on the trinity thread where I'm posting introductory details. But the current point of contention is whether or not Jesus' divinity died. Some of us believe EGW taught that it did not. Yes, Jesus' deity didn't die, by the pre-existent Son of God did - he himself died as a man, which is the point that DebbieB made earlier: two natures in one Man, so that two personages, Son of God and Son of man, lived and died together as one Man.
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Re: Lesson #8 - Born of a Woman—Atonement and the INCARNATION
[Re: Rosangela]
#105086
11/24/08 03:51 PM
11/24/08 03:51 PM
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Yes, Jesus' deity didn't die, by the pre-existent Son of God did What does this mean to you? What I believe is that Christ's divinity remained in the tomb, unconscious - but not dead. In much the same way as when Christ was sleeping. Christ's divinity didn't die - that's all I seek to express, and it may well be as you described it. Christ, the Son of God, died, since only God could save us from death, and that's what he did and how he did it. He who came from heaven, God with us, died for us by having taken on humanity. One must simply differentiate between Christ as God and his deity, for that is how EGW sorts it out in talking of his sacrifice as God.
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