Trinity and Oneness: Difference between revisions
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|This article is a short comparison of some key factors of Trinitarian, Oneness, and Biblical Christianity: | |This article is a short comparison of some key factors of Trinitarian, Oneness, and Biblical Christianity: | ||
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|Sabellius, who was a member of the church of Rome under Bishop Zephyrinus (199-217 AD) and Bishop Callixtus I (217-222 AD | |Unitarianism (modalism) began with the teachings of Sabellius, who was a member of the church of Rome under Bishop Zephyrinus (199-217 AD) and Bishop Callixtus I (217-222 AD. Callixtus I excommunicated Sabellius as a heretic as a result of this doctrine. | ||
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|Biblical | |Biblical | ||
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|Oneness | |Oneness | ||
|How can Jesus be his own Father? If Jesus is | |How can Jesus be his own Father? If Jesus is the Father, how was he begotten? Does this doctrine deny that Jesus is the Son of God? Consider the scripture ''"Whoever denies the Son does not have the Father"'' (I John 2:23 [[NASB]]). | ||
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|Trinitarian | |Trinitarian | ||
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|Jesus (The | |Jesus (The Creator) | ||
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| | |Elohim, the fullness of the Godhead without form or constraint. Learn more about [[Elohim|Elohim (God).]] | ||
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|Trinitarian | |Trinitarian | ||
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|Jesus | |Jesus (the Redeemer) | ||
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|Jesus Christ | |Jesus Christ, the fullness of the Godhead bodily, born of a virgin and anointed for a purpose. (See also, [[Son of God|Son of God.]]) | ||
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|Jesus (the | |Jesus (the Regenerator) | ||
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|+ <div style="border-bottom:1px #B87333 solid; text-align:center; font-size:140%; padding:1px; margin:1px;">Who | |+ <div style="border-bottom:1px #B87333 solid; text-align:center; font-size:140%; padding:1px; margin:1px;">Who Spoke to Abraham?</div> | ||
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| | |Jesus, the Father. | ||
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[[Jehovah]], the visible or audible expression of the Father. Other expressions of this same God include the "[[Angel|Angel of the Lord]]", "[[Melchizedek]]", and "the [[Word]]" - all of these are prophetic expressions of God, but are not themselves the Son of God as these expressions could not die for our sins. | |||
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| | |God the Father (not Jesus). | ||
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Revision as of 17:47, 21 August 2008
This article is a short comparison of some key factors of Trinitarian, Oneness, and Biblical Christianity:
Note: Anastasius I was the first Bishop of Rome to use the title "Pope" in 400 AD. Prior to Anastasius I, the pastor of the Church at Rome was simply called the "Bishop of Rome".
The Early Church of Rome did not believe the doctrine of the Trinity
As evidence that the Catholic Church has not always been Trinitarian, the doctrine of the Bishop of Rome, Callixtus I, who was canonized as a saint by the Catholic Church, is summarized below. Note that this summary is by Hippolytus, an early trinitarian and dissenter from the Church of Rome:
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