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If god is all knowing and all powerful why did he create us he already knows whos going to heaven and hell, plus he knew the angel who became the devil would turn on him y bother creating him, beacuse god created all... how can jesus be gods son and god?

2007-12-03 16:06:46 · 10 answers · asked by Aaron B 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

10 answers

WHO IS
Jesus Christ?

ACCORDING to reliable history, a man named Jesus was born over 2,000 years ago in Bethlehem, a small town in the land of Judea. Herod the Great was king in Jerusalem then, and Caesar Augustus was emperor in Rome. (Matthew 2:1; Luke 2:1-7) Roman historians of the first two centuries generally avoided mentioning Jesus, since Roman rulers at that time were trying to suppress Christianity.

On the other hand, The Historians’ History of the World observes: “The historical result of [Jesus’] activities was more momentous, even from a strictly secular standpoint, than the deeds of any other character of history. A new era, recognised by the chief civilisations of the world, dates from [Jesus’] birth.”

Time magazine reported that more books have been written about Jesus than any other person in history. Many of these books focus on the question of Jesus’ identity, that is, who he really is. There has perhaps been more controversy about this matter than about any other subject in human history.

Early Questions About Identity
When Mary was told that she would have a child and that she was to name him Jesus, she asked: “How is this to be, since I am having no intercourse with a man?” God’s angel Gabriel replied: “Power of the Most High will overshadow you. For that reason also what is born will be called holy, God’s Son.”—Luke 1:30-35.

Later, Jesus performed miracles that caused his apostles to marvel. When a mighty windstorm threatened to sink their boat on the Sea of Galilee, Jesus calmed the waters with the rebuke “Hush! Be quiet!” In astonishment, his apostles exclaimed: “Who really is this?”—Mark 4:35-41; Matthew 8:23-27.

Questions about Jesus’ real identity became common among people of his day, so Jesus asked his apostles who people were saying he was. “Some say John the Baptist,” they replied, “others Elijah, still others Jeremiah or one of the prophets”—all of whom were then dead. Afterward Jesus asked: “‘You, though, who do you say I am?’ In answer Simon Peter said: ‘You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.’” Even the demons—wicked angels—said of Jesus: “You are the Son of God.”—Matthew 16:13-16; Luke 4:41.

Who Jesus Said He Was
Although Jesus rarely spoke of himself as God’s Son, he did acknowledge that he was. (Mark 14:61, 62; John 3:18; 5:25, 26; 11:4) Almost invariably, however, he said that he was “the Son of man.” By identifying himself this way, he highlighted his human birth—the fact that he was truly a man. Thus he also revealed himself to be that “son of man” whom Daniel had seen in vision appearing before Almighty God—“the Ancient of Days.”—Matthew 20:28; Daniel 7:13.

Rather than proclaim himself to be God’s Son, Jesus allowed others to reach that conclusion. And even people besides his apostles did so, including John the Baptist and Jesus’ friend Martha. (John 1:29-34; 11:27) These believed that Jesus was the promised Messiah. They learned that he had lived in heaven as a mighty spirit person and that his life had been miraculously transferred by God to the womb of the virgin Mary.—Isaiah 7:14; Matthew 1:20-23.

Similar to the First Man, Adam
In many respects, Jesus was similar to the first man, Adam. For example, both were perfect men who did not have a human father. (Genesis 2:7, 15) So the Bible calls Jesus “the last Adam”—a perfect man who could serve as “a corresponding ransom.” Jesus’ life corresponded to that of “the first man Adam,” whom God created as a perfect human.—1 Corinthians 15:45; 1 Timothy 2:5, 6.

No One Better Known
The account of Jesus’ life was recorded by four of his contemporaries—Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John—two of whom were intimate associates. Their books, named after them, are commonly called the Gospels, parts of which can be read in over two thousand languages. These small books are usually incorporated with others that make up the Bible. The circulation of the Gospels—either as individual books or as part of the Bible—is greater by far than that of any other writings in history. No wonder that Jesus is better known than any man who has ever lived!

The first Adam is called in the Bible “son of God.” (Luke 3:38) However, that Adam lost his precious relationship as God’s son by willfully disobeying God. On the other hand, Jesus was always faithful to his heavenly Father, and he remained God’s approved Son. (Matthew 3:17; 17:5) The Bible says that all who exercise faith in Jesus, accepting him as their Savior, can receive everlasting life.—John 3:16, 36; Acts 5:31; Romans 5:12, 17-19.

Yet, some argue that Jesus is not simply the Son of God but that he is actually God himself. They say that he and his Father are both Almighty God. Are they correct? Is Jesus somehow part of God? Is that what Jesus, or any of the Bible writers, said? Really, who is the only true God? Who did Jesus say He is? Let us see.

“Who really is this?”
the apostles asked
WHO IS
“the Only True God”?

JESUS often prayed to God, whom he called Father, and he also taught others to do so. (Matthew 6:9-11; Luke 11:1, 2) In prayer with his apostles—only hours before his death—Jesus petitioned: “Father, the hour has come; glorify your son, that your son may glorify you. This means everlasting life, their taking in knowledge of you, the only true God, and of the one whom you sent forth, Jesus Christ.”—John 17:1, 3.

Notice that Jesus prays to One whom he calls “the only true God.” He points to God’s superior position when he continues: “So now you, Father, glorify me alongside yourself with the glory that I had alongside you before the world was.” (John 17:5) Since Jesus prayed to God requesting to be alongside God, how could Jesus at the same time be “the only true God”? Let us examine this matter.

Jesus’ Position in Heaven
A few hours after this prayer, Jesus was executed. But he was not dead for long—only from Friday afternoon till Sunday morning. (Matthew 27:57–28:6) “This Jesus God resurrected,” the apostle Peter reports, “of which fact we are all witnesses.” (Acts 2:31, 32) Could Jesus have resurrected himself? No, according to the Bible, the dead “are conscious of nothing at all.” (Ecclesiastes 9:5) “The only true God,” Jesus’ heavenly Father, resurrected his Son.—Acts 2:32; 10:40.

A short time afterward, Jesus’ disciple Stephen was killed by religious persecutors. As they were about to stone him, Stephen was granted a vision. He stated: “Look! I behold the heavens opened up and the Son of man standing at God’s right hand.” (Acts 7:56) Jesus, “the Son of man,” was thus seen by Stephen in a role supportive to God in heaven—“at God’s right hand”—even as he had been ‘alongside God’ before he came to earth.—John 17:5.

Later, after Stephen’s execution, Jesus made a miraculous appearance to Saul, better known by his Roman name, Paul. (Acts 9:3-6) When Paul was in Athens, Greece, he spoke of “the God that made the world and all the things in it.” He said that this God, the “only true God,” will “judge the inhabited earth in righteousness by a man whom he has appointed, and he has furnished a guarantee to all men in that he has resurrected him from the dead.” (Acts 17:24, 31) Here the apostle Paul described Jesus as “a man”—yes, lesser than God—whom God had restored to life in heaven.

The apostle John too described Jesus as subordinate to God. John said that he had written his Gospel so that readers might come to believe that “Jesus is the Christ the Son of God”—not that he was God. (John 20:31) John also received a heavenly vision in which he saw “the Lamb,” who in his Gospel is identified as Jesus. (John 1:29) The Lamb is standing with 144,000 others, who John says “have been bought [or resurrected] from the earth.” John explains that the 144,000 have the Lamb’s “name and the name of his Father written on their foreheads.”—Revelation 14:1, 3.

Could “the Lamb” be the same as “his Father”? Clearly not. In the Bible they are distinct. They even have different names.

Name of the Lamb and of the Father
As we have just seen, the name given to God’s Son, the Lamb, is Jesus. (Luke 1:30-32) What about his Father’s name? It appears in the Bible thousands of times. For example, Psalm 83:18 says: “You, whose name is Jehovah, you alone are the Most High over all the earth.” Sadly, God’s name, Jehovah, has been replaced in many Bible translations by the terms “LORD” and “GOD,” often spelled in all capital letters. The capitals are supposed to distinguish Jehovah from others called gods or lords.* Yet, in many Bible translations, the Divine Name has been restored to its rightful place.

The English-language American Standard Version (1901) is a notable example of a Bible translation that has restored God’s name, Jehovah, to its rightful place. Its preface observes: “The American Revisers, after a careful consideration, were brought to the unanimous conviction that a Jewish superstition, which regarded the Divine Name as too sacred to be uttered, ought no longer to dominate in the English or any other version of the Old Testament, as it fortunately does not in the numerous versions made by modern missionaries.”


EGYPT
Triad of Horus, Osiris, and Isis, second millennium B.C.E.


PALMYRA, SYRIA
Triad of moon god, Lord of Heavens, and sun god, c. first century C.E.


INDIA
Triune Hindu godhead, c. seventh century C.E.


NORWAY
Trinity (Father, Son, and Holy Spirit), c. 13th century C.E.
The Trinity—Whose Teaching?
What, then, about the teaching that Jehovah and Jesus are, in effect, the same God, as the Trinity doctrine proclaims? In its issue of April-June 1999, The Living Pulpit magazine defined the Trinity this way: “There is one God and Father, one Lord Jesus Christ, and one Holy Spirit, three ‘persons’ . . . who are the same or one in essence . . . ; three persons equally God, possessing the same natural properties, yet really distinct, known by their personal characteristics.”#

Where did this complex Trinity teaching originate? The Christian Century, in its May 20-27, 1998, issue, quotes a pastor who acknowledges that the Trinity is “a teaching of the church rather than a teaching of Jesus.” Even though the Trinity is not a teaching of Jesus, is it consistent with what he taught?

The Father—Superior to the Son
Jesus taught his disciples to pray: “Our Father which art in heaven, hallowed be thy name.” Our heavenly Father, whose name is Jehovah, is described in the Bible as being superior to his Son. For example, Jehovah is “from everlasting to everlasting.” But the Bible says that Jesus is “the firstborn of every creature.” That Jehovah is greater than Jesus, Jesus himself taught when he said: “My Father is greater than I.” (Matthew 6:9; Psalm 90:1, 2; Colossians 1:15; John 14:28, King James Version) Yet, the Trinity doctrine holds that the Father and the Son are “equally God.”

The Father’s superiority over the Son, as well as the fact that the Father is a separate person, is highlighted also in the prayers of Jesus, such as the one before his execution: “Father, if you wish, remove this cup [that is, an ignominious death] from me. Nevertheless, let, not my will, but yours take place.” (Luke 22:42) If God and Jesus are “one in essence,” as the Trinity doctrine says, how could Jesus’ will, or wish, seem different from that of his Father?—Hebrews 5:7, 8; 9:24.

Furthermore, if Jehovah and Jesus were the same, how could one of them be aware of things of which the other was not? Jesus, for instance, said regarding the time of the world’s judgment: “Concerning that day or the hour nobody knows, neither the angels in heaven nor the Son, but the Father.”—Mark 13:32.

The Trinity and the Church
The Trinity is not a teaching of Jesus or of the early Christians. As noted previously, it is “a teaching of the church.” In its 1999 issue on the Trinity, The Living Pulpit observed: “Sometimes, it seems that everyone assumes that the doctrine of the trinity is standard Christian theological fare,” but it added that it is not “a biblical idea.”

The New Catholic Encyclopedia (1967) discusses the Trinity at length and admits: “The Trinitarian dogma is in the last analysis a late 4th-century invention. . . . The formulation ‘one God in three Persons’ was not solidly established, certainly not fully assimilated into Christian life and its profession of faith, prior to the end of the 4th century.”

Martin Werner, as professor at the University of Bern, Switzerland, observed: “Wherever in the New Testament the relationship of Jesus to God, the Father, is brought into consideration, whether with reference to his appearance as a man or to his Messianic status, it is conceived of and represented categorically as subordination.” Clearly, what Jesus and the early Christians believed is far different from the Trinity teaching of churches today. From where, then, did this teaching come?

The Trinity’s Early Origins
The Bible tells of many gods and goddesses that people worshiped, including Ashtoreth, Milcom, Chemosh, and Molech. (1 Kings 11:1, 2, 5, 7) Even many people in the ancient nation of Israel once believed that Baal was the true God. So Jehovah’s prophet Elijah presented the challenge: “If Jehovah is the true God, go following him; but if Baal is, go following him.”—1 Kings 18:21.

The worship of pagan gods grouped in threes, or triads, was also common before Jesus was born. “From Egypt came the ideas of a divine trinity,” observed historian Will Durant. In the Encyclopædia of Religion and Ethics, James Hastings wrote: “In Indian religion, e.g., we meet with the trinitarian group of Brahma, Siva, and Visnu; and in Egyptian religion with the trinitarian group of Osiris, Isis, and Horus.”

So there are many gods. Did early Christians acknowledge this? And did they view Jesus as Almighty God?


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

* See, for example, Psalm 110:1 in the King James Version. Both Jesus and Peter quoted this verse.—Matthew 22:42-45; Acts 2:34-36.

# The Athanasian Creed, formulated a few hundred years after the death of Jesus, defined the Trinity this way: “The Father is God: the Son is God: and the Holy Ghost is God. And yet they are not three Gods: but one God.”

2007-12-03 16:20:11 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

Jesus wasn't Gods son as in he was born/created; its more of a title that demonstrates the relatinoship--Like when the guy was asked to sacrifice his son. only god did have jesus killed for real. The trinity thing is really hard...

or the first part, its mainly a thing about free will. If you have a plate of cookies sitting out in hands reach and you tell a little kid not to eat them but you really know they will, do you say "we never should have had him, lets kill 'im? "

Its because he LOVES us, and love makes the best of us crazy and do stupid stuff, right?

Also, its not like he said, alright; this person will be Jane Summers and she willl be an agnostic and die and go to hell. He just made Jane Summers and will give her opportunities to know him and become saved.
Pity about the omniscience, though.


...And I've been rambling and I don't think I said anything at all actually, so I'm going to just shut up now.

2007-12-03 16:18:30 · answer #2 · answered by Drowning chemist 3 · 1 2

God is all knowing and had a plan of salvation for his creation that he knew would sin.
God did not plan of becoming unrighteous and overlooking sin but his plan is to bring his creation to his righteousness.

God created man in his image which is triune.

Gen 1:26 And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.

Gen 2:7 And the LORD God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul.

Genesis 1 explains God said let US create man in OUR image.

Genesis 2 shows how man is created from the dust (flesh)
God breathed life into him (spirit)
and man became a living soul (soul)

God created man above the animals more than flesh which returns to dust but with an eternal spirit.

God's plan was to be a savior to his people.
God is Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
The Son was born a man and did overcome temptation as a man and remained perfect.
Overcoming temptations in and death whic is the penalty of sin for those who accept the atonement.
Through this atonement man is by faith made new and in agreement with God's righteousness.

2007-12-03 16:18:37 · answer #3 · answered by djmantx 7 · 1 2

God the Father, God the Son, God the Holy Spirit, 3 in one.

Think of this: Liquid, vapor, ice, 3 forms all water.

Revelation 4:11
"You are worthy, O Lord our God.
to receive glory and honor and power.
For you created everything,
and it is for your pleasure that they exist and were created."

2007-12-03 16:20:27 · answer #4 · answered by Sweet Suzy 777! 7 · 2 1

Is gues that just goes to show you, IT"S NOT ABOUT US!

Through creation and redemption, God has in His wisdom created the scenario that will give HIM maximum glory for eternity.

The biggest problem YOU face right now, is your personal accountability for your sin before an infintely holy and wrath-filled God.

2007-12-03 16:22:22 · answer #5 · answered by revulayshun 6 · 0 1

The atom defines the main user-friendly unit of each chemical ingredient interior the universe. The word atom comes from the Greek word for "indivisible," yet on an identical time because it represents the purest essence of one ingredient, the atom has 3 aspects, with the certainly charged proton and impartial neutron at its middle, and the negatively charged electron exterior the middle that balances its electric powered can charge and interacts with different aspects. Trisecting a line because of the fact the inspiration for layout in creationLife The actual layout of the human physique, and that of many different existence varieties, is in step with a relationship regularly occurring because of the fact the Divine share, or Golden area. This share is in step with trisecting a line such that the ratio of the small piece to the super piece is an identical because of the fact the ratio of the super piece to the entire line. it is likewise stumbled on by using fixing an equation with 3 words, x3 - x2 - x1 = 0. Nature of guy the character of guy is expressed as recommendations, physique and spirit, analogous to, and in comparable to, the triune nature of God. that's exciting to word that Genesis relates guy being made by using "us" in "our" image whilst relating God, indicating the plurality in His nature. existence in the international existence in the international inhabits 3 domain names, the sea, the land and the air. Holy Trinity Following the three-in-one nature that's stumbled on for the period of creation, we detect the three-in-one nature of the only God manifested interior the Holy Trinity, with each Being revealing a distinctive factor of our God and writer to us: the father, the area of God that's transcendent, countless and previous our understanding, The Son, Jesus Christ, the area of God that's immanent and appeared to us interior the way that we ought to proper comprehend Him, in human sort. He replaced into the two "Son of God," an expression of God as contained in human sort, and on an identical time "Son of guy," the perfect expression of who we are able to be in our maximum divine sort. The Holy Spirit, the area of God that lives interior the middle and soul of each human beings, performing as our Counselor for people who have self assurance and hear His voice interior us.

2016-10-19 02:20:45 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

God's choice and done with His understanding. Read book of John Chapter 1 verse 1 then see verse 14.

2007-12-03 16:14:48 · answer #7 · answered by Steiner 6 · 0 3

God is Three in One. (Triune)

God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost.

2007-12-03 16:10:35 · answer #8 · answered by Seeno†es™ 6 · 1 3

Jesus wasn't God's son. Jesus wasn't God. He was a man named Yeshua bar Yosef, who was later turned into myth.

2007-12-03 16:08:53 · answer #9 · answered by Justsyd 7 · 0 5

Feel free to try buddhism.

2007-12-03 16:16:57 · answer #10 · answered by geni 6 · 0 3

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