Yes, Jesus/God impregnated his own mother with himself, then he watched himself grow up, prayed to himself, told himself he was proud of himself, hung on the cross as a sacrifice to himself, and asked himself why he had forsaken himself.
Really now, it's easy enough to understand.
:p
2007-12-27 12:34:23
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answer #1
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answered by Christy 2
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No. Jesus is the second figure in the trinity. The trinity is composed of God the Father, God the Son (Jesus.) and God the Holy Spirit. Mary was impregnated by the Holy Spirit--not by Jesus. Jesus was the offspring of Mary. Now, to help you understand the trinity- think of it like you would think of a team. A team has several players but these several players compose one team..the same team. The Father, the Son.and the Holy Spirit are kind of like members of the same team=God. Three beings but one team. Three God heads (or figures) but one God.
2007-12-23 14:08:30
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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God the Father (1st person of trinity who begot the second person of the trinity even before creation) impregnated Mary through love and through His Holy Spirit of love (3rd person of trinity). Jesus is God as the second person of the trinity that became incarnate in the womb of Mary. As persons, God the Father is NOT God the Son. But both, along with the Holy Spirit, equally share the Divinity as ONE God. The Divine person of Jesus DID NOT impregnate his own mother. Jesus is the Son of God as one begotton by God the Father, and are two separate and distinct persons in ONE God.
2007-12-23 14:18:41
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answer #3
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answered by gismoII 7
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Terminator: The Sara Connor Chronicles totally RIPPED OFF that whole Trinity story. Just another remake.
But that's fair play...The Biblical mythology has ripped off some of its best stories from other religions.
2007-12-23 15:09:49
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answer #4
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answered by ... 7
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In "trying to understand the trinity," you would have to learn how to read big words so you could comprehend neoplatonic and Gnostic tracts about the nature of God, which influenced early Christian ideology about a triune deity: a transcendent Godhead ("God"); a redemptive, personal God (Christ/Logos), and world soul through which man is linked and is a reflection of God (the Holy Spirit).
2007-12-23 14:09:55
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answer #5
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answered by philosophyangel 7
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A) there is no "Trinity". That is a heathen concept that has no place in true worship. B) the "holy spirit" is sometimes referred to as the spirit of YHVH and sometimes as the spirit of YAHOSHUA, (the Messiah) and twice (if I remember right) as THEIR spirit. C) it seems reasonable that the "spirit of the son" entered Mary, and filled the beginning baby. (I don't think "impregnate" is exactly the right word-- but did indeed cause the pregnancy.)
2007-12-23 14:04:37
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answer #6
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answered by hasse_john 7
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Another in the long line of things disproving the trinity. This in addition to all scriptures being against the belief.
2007-12-23 14:14:31
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answer #7
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answered by grnlow 7
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The Trinity is a theological way of interpriting the bible - If you are not a theologian do not bother.
Better to understand the more obvious messages - like caring for your neigbour.
2007-12-23 21:00:19
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answer #8
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answered by j_emmans 6
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you will never be able to undersatnd the Trinity its beyond human understanding....think of it this way
i think this is one of St. Augustine's story....
he was walking near the shore trying to understand the trinity and he noticed a little boy trying to fill a hole he dug in the sand with the ocean water so st augustine walked up to him and asked him what he was doing the little noy replied and said well im trying to fit the ocean in this whole well st augustine said thats impossible and the little boy told him same with you its impossoble for you to understand the trinity...
its a mystery, its part of faith
2007-12-23 18:10:08
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answer #9
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answered by * StAy BeAuTiFuL* 2
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Ridicule is the only weapon which can be used against unintelligible propositions. Ideas must be distinct before reason can act upon them; and no man ever had a distinct idea of the trinity. It is the mere Abracadabra of the mountebanks calling themselves the priests of Jesus.
-- Thomas Jefferson
2007-12-23 14:03:20
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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