Tenchi
Member
1 God is, by definition, without beginning or end.
2. Jesus had a beginning.
3. Jesus carries the name of God in him.
4. Jesus is God.
5. Jesus has a God.
6. Jesus is not He alone who is God.
7. The God and Father of Jesus is alone the true God.
Well, premises 2 and 3 need biblical justification and a sound argument in support of them. What does "carry the name of God in him" mean, exactly? And how does doing so make Jesus, God?
Do you know what the "Law of the Indiscernability of Identicals" is? This basic law of logic stipulates that if there is any difference between Jesus and God in their essential nature (e.g. divine aseity), then they aren't both God. If, then, God the Father is truly a se in His fundamental nature, as the Bible says, but Jesus is not, then it cannot be said that they are both God. At most, Jesus could be said to be God-like, or nearly-God, but if he is not truly a se, which would require that he exist as a necessity of his own nature, then he cannot be said to be truly, fully God.
The Bible says otherwise, however. (Isaiah 9:6; John 1:1-4; John 10:30-33; John 14:8-9; Colossians 2:9; Titus 2:13; 2 Peter 1:1, etc.)
The essential nature of God also requires that there be no one above, no one greater than, God. By definition, God is the Greatest Possible Being. If, then, God has a God above Him, He is not God. The One above Him is God. So, too, with Jesus. If he has a God who is above him, particularly by virtue of the superior nature of this God, then Jesus cannot be said to be God. Jesus can, of course, willingly assume a lower place in relation to God the Father, but in his essential nature still be equal to, or identical with, God the Father, which is, I think, what the Bible indicates is the case.
This very state of affairs is widespread among human beings who all share an essential human nature but who adopt positions of relation to one another in which one human is subject in some way to another (employer to employee, police officer to citizen, king to subjects, servants to Master, teacher to student, etc.).