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I would not agree with this at all. This is an ancient belief that was ultimately deemed heresy. In case i am misunderstanding what you are saying here, the heresy I see is Modalism. You are saying that there is one numerical Being, who is God, and that God manifests himself in three different modes but it is the same Being in the three different modes. So, you have one Being called God, and he manifests himself in three different ways.Oh, whew! You had me worried for a moment, but please reprove me if I ever seem sarcastic.
Regarding Jesus' natures, I agree that He is God in the human dimension/incarnate, and I agree that Jesus did not have two natures as if he were two people. I explain the doctrine of the Trinity as follows:
The OT Shema (DT 6:4) teaches that God is one, and the NT also affirms that there is one God (EPH 4:6, 1TM 2:5). However, the NT teaches that God relates to believers in three ways simultaneously: as the Father, as the Son and as the Holy Spirit (1 x 1 x 1=1).
I say there are three Beings, each One is coequal in all respects. For example, The Father loves you with a love that would be described as perfect and infinite in degree. The Son also loves you in a perfect and infinite way. So, for example there is no measurable difference in the love these two Beings possess. They are identical, but they are each part of the Godhead/Trinity.
GJohn 17 Christ prays to the Father that the people who are saved will be 'one.' Because each Member has identical attributes with the Other two. (See below where I explain Dt 6.4)
When Jesus says that I and my Father are one, note that the word 'one' is not in the same gender as "I" and
"the Father." Remember because all three Members of the Godhead are equal in their Being.
Muslims see Allah as one numerical God, which means in eternity past Allah was not a relational being. The Godhead of Christianity had fellowship in eternity past.
The shema you cited uses the word 'one' is the same word as Adam and Eve as 'one' flesh. Make sure you distinguish between one (numerically) in essence and one (three in one accord) in Unity.
Sorry, I am rambling.
One subtle issue I see with Christians is they say, "God is one, but three in being."The Father/Parenthood of God is indicated in Jesus’ model prayer (MT 6:9), throughout the Gospel of John (3:35, 5:17-18, etc.), and in the epistles of Paul (RM 4:11, 8:15, PHP 2:11). God the Father and Christ’s Sonship are discussed in Hebrews 1:1-4. The Son of God also is mentioned by John (JN 1:14, 3:16, etc.) and by Paul (RM 1:4, GL 2:20, 1THS 1:10). The Holy Spirit is mentioned in three successive chapters in John (JN 14:26, 15:26, 16:13), frequently in the book of Acts (ACTS 1:5, 2:4, 9:17, 13:2, 19:2), and in many of Paul’s letters (RM 8:4-26, 1CR 6:19, EPH 4:30) as well as in some of the other epistles (2PT 1:21, JUDE 20).
It might be helpful to discern which aspect of the triune God is the subject of various biblical statements. These divine aspects or “persons” may be distinguished by role: God the Father as creator or initiator (GN 1:1), God the Son as Messiah or mediator (1TM 2:5), and God the Spirit as indweller (RM 5:5). For example, 1 John 4:7 says love comes from (is initiated by) God (the Father), Galatians 5:22 says that love is a fruit of the (indwelling) Spirit, and Ephesians 3:18 speaks of the (mediating) love of Christ (RM 5:8, EPH 2:18).
I would consider this as a better option, or some form of it:
Godhead is one in essence, AND three in being. WHen you include the "but" you muddy the waters.
God the Father is not the Creator, that role belongs to the Son.
Because Jesus had a divine soul, I would say he did not have a sexual orientation (this word is loaded with implications.)We can denote these distinctions by the use of three prepositions: God the Father is over all creation (EPH 4:6), God the Son is Immanuel or with humanity (MT 1:23), and the Holy Spirit is within all believers (EPH 1:13). A single passage that comes closest to indicating this distinction is Ephesians 3:14-19, in which Paul prays to the Father that through His Spirit of love Christ would dwell in believers’ hearts (also see 1CR 8:6).
When the Bible uses masculine words for God, it should be understood that only God the Son is human and had a sexual orientation while on earth. GN 1:26-27 states that both male and female were created in God’s image, referring not to androgyny but to personality, and Jesus said (in MT 22:30 & 19:11-12) that there is no marriage and thus no need for sexuality in heaven.
Jesus volunteeringly (is that a word?) gave up the use of some of his divine attributes, and by so doing, he remained 100% God, he just functioned as a human most of the time. Remember he saw Nathaniel by the use of his divine attributes but at that moment, he was not functioning as God the Son.Regarding intelligence, Jesus indicated in a few places that he was not omniscient was incarnate, but I am not comfortable viewing Jesus as having a soul, because that does seem too separate.
see above commentsWhat do you think of my explanation of the Trinity?