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2006-07-03 12:33:45 · 32 answers · asked by jarrod_234 2 in Society & Culture Other - Society & Culture

32 answers

no

2006-07-03 12:36:11 · answer #1 · answered by †♫♫♫♥☼♥♫♫♫† 4 · 1 0

Yes he is, according to most Christian religions.

Think of a three leaf clover, it's one thing but it has three parts, the son the father and the holy spirit. God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit.

Actually, no where is the Trinity mentioned in the Bible. So to solve any confusion and to stick to a general message, Roman Emperor Constantine called leaders of the church to meet at the Council of Nicaea in the year 325. They created the Nicene Creed, which declared that the Son and the Father are the same, or are of similar substance. They later clarified the Holy Spirit's role at the second meeting in 381. Not only did they use those meetings to solve the Jesus-God-Holy Spirit ordeal, but to tie many loose ends of the religion together to ensure a successful interpretation and spread of Christianity.

The Christian religions that reject the Nicene Creed (and therefore don't think Jesus and God are the same thing) include the Church of Latter Day Saints (Mormons) Jehovah's Witness and some others. They strictly stick to what the bible says.

2006-07-03 12:59:32 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes Jesus is the Son of God but Jesus is was part of the Trinity therefore Equal with God so then Jesus is God, Jesus means God with us. God reveals Himself to us three ways God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. Three persons one God, Christians call it the Trinity.

2006-07-03 12:41:56 · answer #3 · answered by zqx357 5 · 0 0

Jesus is a part of God. God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit. Three in one, all God.

2006-07-03 12:42:58 · answer #4 · answered by ? 7 · 0 0

Two of the Gospels, those of Saint Matthew and Saint Luke, provide information about Jesus' birth and childhood. They also provide genealogies tracing Jesus' descent through the Hebrew patriarch Abraham and the 10th-century bc king David (Matthew 1:1-17; Luke 3:23-38). Presumably, the genealogies are offered as proof of Jesus' messiahship. According to Matthew (1:18-25) and Luke (1:1-2:20), Jesus was miraculously conceived by his mother. He was born in Bethlehem, where Joseph and Mary had gone to comply with the Roman edict of enrollment for the census. Matthew alone (2:13-23) describes the flight into Egypt, when Joseph and Mary took the child out of reach of the Judean king Herod the Great. Only Luke relates the compliance of Joseph and Mary with the Jewish law, which required circumcision and presentation of the firstborn son at the Temple in Jerusalem (2:21-24). Luke also describes their later journey (2:41-51) with the young Jesus to the Temple for the Passover feast. The Gospels mention nothing concerning Jesus from the time he was 12 years old until the time he began his public ministry, about 18 years later. See Matthew, Gospel According to; Luke, Gospel



God, the center and focus of religious faith, a holy being or ultimate reality to whom worship and prayer are addressed. Especially in monotheistic religions (see Monotheism), God is considered the creator or source of everything that exists and is spoken of in terms of perfect attributes—for instance, infinitude, immutability, eternity, goodness, knowledge (omniscience), and power (omnipotence). Most religions traditionally ascribe to God certain human characteristics that can be understood either literally or metaphorically, such as will, love, anger, and forgiveness.

2006-07-03 12:40:08 · answer #5 · answered by and_designer 1 · 0 0

Jesus is a member of the Godhead. Jesus is Jehovah, who is the God of the Old Testament. He is God's spirit son (as all humankind is), and is the only begotten Son of God in the Flesh. God the Father is the God that designed the earth and is the Father of all our spirits. God has a body, though it is not mortal like ours, but is a physical being. Jesus Christ is the one who executed the Father's plan, died for our sins, and is the mediator who allows justice to be perfectly executed even though none but he are perfect. Before Jesus was born to Mary, he was a spirit, while he was on the earth he was a mortal, after He died and was resurrected, He again has a body, but it is immortal. The Holy Ghost (or spirit) is the third member of the Godhead. He is spirit only, and is that "good" feeling in your heart when you know something is very right.

The members of the Godhead are one in purpose but three separate entities. (Kind of like your family is one family, but several different members). We can see several examples in scripture that the Godhead is 3 separate beings, most prominently in the New Testament where Jesus Christ is baptized. Christ was a mortal and on earth, the Father spoke from the heavens, and the Holy Ghost was the dove.

2006-07-03 12:39:47 · answer #6 · answered by Amber E 5 · 0 0

According to the Bible, Yes.

John 1:1

If He's not then He wouldn't have been able to forgive sins, raise Himself from the dead, and definitely wouldn't have been called the Almighty.

Also, since, as a man, He was a Rabbi, had Thomas declared Jesus to be his Lord and God then Jesus would have corrected him for blaspheming. Instead, He (Jesus) complimented Thomas on recognizing this fact (that He was both Lord and God).

Of course, He was also the Father's Son but this doesn't mean that He wasn't God also (the Son, not the Father). The distinction needs to be made between Modalism (cultic) and Trinitarianism (orthodox).

The common objection to this is that 'it just doesn't make sense.' The Bible specifically tells us that God's ways are not our ways and that His thoughts are above our thoughts. It shouldn't be surprising that we can't fully comprehend many aspects of the nature of God -- He is, after all, God.

When someone proposes to me that the Trinity isn't correct on the basis that we can't fully understand it or because it goes against the norm for finite creatures, I point out that 'Infinity,' 'Omnipresence,' 'Omniscience' etc. are all realities that go beyond our finite comprehension. This doesn't make them any less real.

2006-07-03 12:43:50 · answer #7 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

As far as I am concerned there is only one God...He is the Father and the Lord of the Universe. There are no sons, holy ghosts, virgin mothers, demons, devil, and so on. Religion was created by man and if you check the various books on the subject you will find that each religion claims that it is the only correct one and if you do not believe in it to the letter you will never go to heaven.
Jesus is not God! He was a nice Jewish fellow who tried to do good for his people. They then invented a religion after he died on the cross. He doesn't even know what being a Christian really is.

2006-07-03 12:40:44 · answer #8 · answered by wunderkind 4 · 0 0

no. Jesus, God and the Holy Ghost are three different beings, but one in purpose, representing the Godhead...not being one person though.

Jesus is God's Only Begotten Son, who walked the earth. the Holy Ghost is the Comforter Jesus and God sent.

you should read Matthew, Mark, Luke and John in the new Testament =)

2006-07-03 12:36:36 · answer #9 · answered by sarea 2 · 0 0

Jesus, God, and the Holy Spirit are three parts of the same supernatural being just like we have a body, soul, and spirit. Hence, people are created in the same likeness as God.

2006-07-03 12:38:31 · answer #10 · answered by Revelator 2 · 0 0

No. Jesus is the only son of Jehovah. Jesus is the first creation of God.

i've seen you received so many answers on your question. If you are really serious in finding the real answer.

Pray to Jehovah, and ask for his Holy spirit to guide you to the truth.

For more information. log on to www.watchtower.org

2006-07-03 12:46:40 · answer #11 · answered by dingdong 2 · 0 0

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