Timeline for Does Jesus' lack of knowledge regarding the time of the second coming challenge the omniscience of God?
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
6 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Dec 8 at 16:20 | comment | added | Nephesh Roi | Thanks for the conversation. | |
Dec 8 at 12:05 | comment | added | Alex Balilo | Jesus was still a servant of God after his ascension. He still was not equal to his God after his ascension. God is not a servant. | |
Dec 7 at 17:50 | comment | added | Nephesh Roi | You said a servant cannot be equal to his master. But Jesus is greater than you and He said a servant is not greater than his master but definitely he can become equal to his master (Mat 10:25). Grasp this if you can: among humanity, a servant is a human and his master is also a human (same nature), though they may differ in authority. So a monogenes Son of God is God in nature just as His Father is God in nature. But Father is greater in authority. | |
Dec 7 at 17:49 | comment | added | Nephesh Roi | These are all your personal opinions. Jesus considered Himself different from prophets, apostles and other such servants including Moses (Mat 21:36, Heb 3:5-6). He is the Son of God. If a son can be a servant of his father, then Jesus is a servant (pais not doulos) of God. He is the monogenes Son of God (John 3:18). If you want to downgrade Him into a slave (dolous) after the ascension, you have every freedom to do so. But that is not Scriptural. | |
Dec 7 at 9:40 | comment | added | Alex Balilo | Jesus remained a servant after his ascension to heaven. A servant is not greater than or equal to this master. There's nothing recorded in the bible that say that "this Jesus said as a human and this he said as the God". | |
Dec 4 at 17:11 | history | answered | Nephesh Roi | CC BY-SA 4.0 |