In a message dated 12/25/2004 8:38:45 PM Pacific Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

As I see it,  the Spirit working in my sense of understanding as surely as in yours,  we have, we have a prophesy that describes the coming God Almighty into our world.    In our world, this incarnation will mirror the essence of God AS
HE HAS ALWAYS BEEN.  Disagree?  I am sure you do. 


jt: Why would you think such a thing John when Jesus demonstrated the "fullness of the Spirit" during His earthly
ministry - Is this what you are saying?  Is the "essence of God" the same as the "fullness of the Spirit of God?"


My words above are very important.   The incarnation will mirror the essence of God as He has always existed  ..............   you question this statement.  In the incarnation, the Christ brings all that is God into our world. God is a communal essence,   the father, son and holy spirit and perhaps even more.   All that is God accompanies or is a part of the incarnate Christ.   He brings this Spiritual Circumstance (the Godhead) with Him.   Nothing has changed except that He appears incarnate.   In the Spiritual realm, the lines of existence are not ones of demarcation; rather, they are fetters that tie each to the other in an intimacy that is beyond our comprehension. On earth, lines separate   -   for my thinking and in this case, the heavenly realm works very differently.  As you well know, the Jesus-Only sect uses Is 9:6 as a key passage, nullifying the character of God in Community  and insisting that Jesus is both the Father and the Son (Prince of Peace).  I believe that what is true of the Son before the incarnation   (Is 9:6), was true of all Manifestations  ...   a very real difficulty for the average saint.    If Jesus is the Son, he is not the Father.    If Jesus is the Son, he is not the Spirit  (yet, Paul confuses the two in II Cor. 3:18   and Isa 9:6 furthers this "confusion".)      That is how our earthly mind thinks. As a Gentile Saint,   I see the mix and do not allow it to be a problem.  When God says, "let us make man ............,"    we have the Father, the Almighty God, the Prince of Peace and the Counselor being involved in the creation wonder.   Christ , in the  incarnation, empties himself of this Spiritual Communion and becomes quite distinct.

Essence and fullness of the Spirit  ............   hmmmmm.   The later is a part of the former, I would say.  





 
You seem to think it important that the Son of God be a creation of The God as some moment in time.    If your theory is correct, what do we have?   

jt: I think it is important to say what scripture says


Ah,   so you admit to a higher authority.   Great.   We agree. 



about the Son of God and this is that his physical body was created at a point

in time.  (Hebrews 10:5)


Is that what we talking about?   The incarnation took place with the birth of Christ.   I thought we disagreed on whether Christ, as Son, existed prior to this incarnation.  



 
In Is 9:6, we believe that the Christ is presented in these terms  --  as a Father, as a Counselor [indeed, an horoable profession, even if I do say so myself], a Prince of Peace and a Mighty God.    Sooooooooooooo,   all that happen one day, long ago, in manger near Bethlehem?    The Father had a beginning on that day?   The Mighty God?


jt: The incarnation of one member of the Godhead took place in that manger in Bethlehem
God Almighty has not always been The Counselor or the Prince of Peace?    Only if you believe these statements are TITLES EARNED BY GOD via obedience to prophetical vision.   

jt: The Counselor and Prince of Peace are two prophetic/redemptive names of Christ - there are more.


These are much more than names, Judy.   "Dad" is a name I respond to because that is who I am!!!   Christ the Father  (Is 9:6) ????    When was that  a redemptive name of Christ? It is only here. What must we conclude?    The intimacy of the Godhead results in a shared experience, a shared nature and share existence without loosing the idea of plurality.  



There are no titles for God   --------------    only realities.    The coming of the Christ does not change anything about God.   You are persistent in arguing that "God changes not."   Well, this erronious teaching of yours clearly presents an impossible change for God    ---    unless, of course, you no longer believe that Christ is the Great God Almighty. 


jt: God does not change and it is not part of my belief that he does. This must be what you think I believe.


Did I not acknowledge this in this above?   If Christ is the Son of God,  if he is divine, if this claim makes him "equal to God,"  why is there disagreement as to the eternity of the Sonship of Christ?  Reread the following:  The apostle John presents what has ALWAYS been true  --   Christ as the Word.  The plurality of God IS eternal and is given illustration in John 17.  




Elohim  --  a plural word spoken to lift up the Largeness of God,  is, nonetheless  (If one believes in the providential work of God in the writing and preservation of scripture), a word that indicates the plurality of God.   This may not have been the intention of the ancient writer,   but the door is opened to the notion of the plurality of God with the use of this word.   Look at the phrase "Abraham and his seed ....;"    if Paul does not tell us that Christ is this seed  (Gal 3:16),  we would not have that knowledge about the Abrahamic promise. 

jt: The plurality of God is eternal and still speaks from heaven. It is God the Father, God The Word, and God the Holy Spirit.

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