Arianism vs the Trinity

By the end of the third century, most Christian leaders adhered to the paradoxical belief that the Creator is God, Christ is God, and the Spirit is God, whiles also insisting that there is only one God. However, they continued to be bitterly divided about how to explain the paradox. While some insisted that the one God simply appeared in three different forms (Modalism), an Alexandrian theologian named Arius articulated a different formula, by which the Creator was the sole uncreated eternal God, and Christ (while divine and unique as God’s Son) was nevertheless subordinate to the Creator. John Hamer of Toronto Centre Place will look at Arius’ understanding of the Godhead and the legacy of Arianism.
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#ArianismVsTrinity #ChurchHistory #ChristianDoctrine

Пікірлер: 622

  • @langreeves6419
    @langreeves64199 ай бұрын

    Better watch out, better not pout In the Trinity better have no doubt Santa Claus is coming to town He sees you when you're sleeping He knows when you're awake You'd better be trinitarian, Or he'll slap you in the face!

  • @ObjectiveEthics

    @ObjectiveEthics

    9 ай бұрын

    🎅 🧑‍🎄 BRILLIANT 👏 👌 👍 😂

  • @MathumaTao

    @MathumaTao

    9 ай бұрын

    Don't eat meat, I repeat don't eat meat. Every Friday in the Lenten season, that's once a week

  • @LogosInsula

    @LogosInsula

    9 ай бұрын

    The word "Trinity" is NO WHERE IN THE BIBLE.

  • @LogosInsula

    @LogosInsula

    9 ай бұрын

    God made the Father, The Father made Jesus

  • @danielswan2860

    @danielswan2860

    9 ай бұрын

    😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅

  • @dropkick69able
    @dropkick69able9 ай бұрын

    This channel is underrated. I'm impressed with the knowledge being shared here

  • @garymensurati1631

    @garymensurati1631

    2 ай бұрын

    Agree 💯💯

  • @GeorgeCostanzais10.
    @GeorgeCostanzais10.9 ай бұрын

    John Hamer gives great lectures, the absolute best on KZread!

  • @centre-place

    @centre-place

    9 ай бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @johntafoya3597

    @johntafoya3597

    9 ай бұрын

    The name Jesus came from the Jesuits Latin saviours name in Hebrew is YAHshua which today would be Joshua in English. YAHshua means Yahweh is salvation. Yeshua is Arabic. Now they have the chosen using the Aramaic name Yeshua . And the chosen is 5% scripture from the Bible

  • @adanaltamirano2244

    @adanaltamirano2244

    9 ай бұрын

    Yes John is the best on KZread for sure!!

  • @victorsanchez5336

    @victorsanchez5336

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@centre-placeHello. would like to inquire if Licinius the Co-Emperor of Constantine in the issuing of the Edict of Milan, also converted to Christianity?

  • @marymagnuson5191

    @marymagnuson5191

    9 ай бұрын

    I am addicted to listening to him.

  • @ObjectiveEthics
    @ObjectiveEthics9 ай бұрын

    Mr Hamar you have an incredible gift for teaching. You are always offering substantial scholarship and historically verified accounts during your lectures. In spite of the academic substance you have a gift for presenting the information in a way that is both tangible and entertaining for the listener. Thank you.

  • @mark11967AD
    @mark11967AD5 ай бұрын

    The Santa aside about St Nicholas just shows how down to earth and decent Mr Hamer is essentially wiping away any confusion and answering what might be distracting curiosities. A genuinely considerate person and one of the reasons he is a great teacher/lecturer. And all for free. We need more people like this who are about enlightening and enriching without it always being about money. A form of Charity you could say his lectures. Bravo.

  • @garymensurati1631

    @garymensurati1631

    Ай бұрын

    Yes, Agree 💯💯

  • @jillwild8515
    @jillwild85159 ай бұрын

    Your lectures are always so enlightening Dr Hamer..thankyou ..

  • @Ahasverus92
    @Ahasverus925 ай бұрын

    Oh wow, this has to be one of the most logically and historically comprehensive videos about theology and specially this thorny topic on the whole internet. The mindblows-per-minute are off the charts. Congrats and Thank you for putting this and yourself out there (here) Dr. Hamer!

  • @grandmaroxie2210
    @grandmaroxie22109 ай бұрын

    Thank you for these lectures. They are so interesting. Thank you, John, for all you do.

  • @poi2lkj3mnb
    @poi2lkj3mnb9 ай бұрын

    Thanks for your lectures. Despite how prevoked I am by my disagreements I always find them to be engaging and illuminating.

  • @centre-place

    @centre-place

    9 ай бұрын

    Thank you for your thoughtful engagement. It's always refreshing to hear from individuals who can appreciate a perspective even while holding different views. 🌟

  • @LogosInsula

    @LogosInsula

    9 ай бұрын

    "prevoked' is interesting, never seen it before. Does that come across as a verb or present participle maybe? Adjective?

  • @andrewisjesus
    @andrewisjesus9 ай бұрын

    another slam dunk. hate i missed the live but absolutely amazing channel. been around years now. Don't sleep on the oldest lectures either, the ones with the live audience I always have really appreciated

  • @centre-place

    @centre-place

    9 ай бұрын

    Thank you! We're hoping to have some in-person lectures in the future but the questions from the audience will have to be more organized 😉

  • @Kaz.Klay.

    @Kaz.Klay.

    9 ай бұрын

    Despite the interruptions and sometimes elementary questions... Not a Mormon and disagree with some of his points but generally he's pretty good

  • @hamnchee
    @hamnchee9 ай бұрын

    Arius getting bitch slapped by Santa Claus was not something I expected today.

  • @Robb3348

    @Robb3348

    9 ай бұрын

    LOL. well, you experienced it so widen your purview of consciousness and take it in...b-tch! 😛 (sorry)

  • @carmelo1509
    @carmelo150915 күн бұрын

    Mr. Hamar's lectures are extremely informative and comprehensive.

  • @andrewsuryali8540
    @andrewsuryali85409 ай бұрын

    About the Arian baptistry: Arians don't use halos for their imagery of Jesus and the holy people. That's the most common and distinguishing feature.

  • @EricToro-ef4hr

    @EricToro-ef4hr

    9 ай бұрын

    the halos are agnostic symbolism.

  • @Abrown2048
    @Abrown20489 ай бұрын

    Always the best lectures of KZread. Simply blown away.

  • @andrewsuryali8540
    @andrewsuryali85409 ай бұрын

    Arianism DID sort of become the Roman state religion for a while. Constantine near the end of his life started favoring Arianism because the closest bishop he had was his relative Eusebius of Nicomedia, who was Arian through and through. Constantine didn't reverse his policies but he listened to Eusebius and exiled many of the anti-Arius bishops (including St. Nick in some accounts). Similarly, the "Church historian" Eusebius of Caesarea who was his main chronicler and one of his main panegyrists was a sympathizer of Arius who tried to reconcile the two parties - he was one of the people who proposed homoiousion as a compromise. That's why the Orthodox never made Eusebius a saint despite relying heavily on his "History of the Church" interpretation. Constantine in the end was baptized by Eusebius of Nicomedia and this technically made him an Arian. After his father's passing, Constantius II went all the way and basically reversed Nicaea, exiling many of the anti-Arius bishops who survived and effectively making Arianism the official form of imperial Christianity. Julian's reign was actually the start of the Nicene Christians' return to power, not the Arians', as Julian deliberately equalized the two branches again to make them fight each other.

  • @andrewsuryali8540

    @andrewsuryali8540

    9 ай бұрын

    @@obaaneatyThe establishment of Christianity as a state religion is usually marked to the Theodosian Edict. However, what most people don't realize is that Theodosius ONLY ISSUED AN EDICT. In reality, the Constantinian Dynasty was when the organization and hierarchy of the Church, as well as its establishment at the center of imperial power, occured. In particular, the establishment of dioceses under the bishops happened under Constantine himself, and it was also Constantine who granted the dioceses legal powers so that Christians were allowed to transfer civil lawsuits into religious courts (the beginnings of canon law). This act of legal favoritism was what really turned Christianity into the state religion. The paroikia (parishes) were further established under Constantius II to increase the governing power and reach of the Church. Julian tried to reverse this by removing the legal powers of the religious courts, but he didn't reign long enough to make it stick. All Theodosius actually did was bring back the Constantinian era organization and powers of the Church. Christianity was already a state religion under Constantine and Constantius II in every aspect of its function. However, the Constantinians were still tolerant of other religious expressions. This is another thing people usually misunderstand about Theodosius' edict. Theodosius didn't set up a state Church. That was already available to him. What he actually did was suppress all competitors to that state Church. That's what the Theodosian Edict was really about. The only post-Constantinian emperor who contributed to the organization and expansion of power of the Church in any significant manner was Justinian I with his establishment of the Five Patriarchates. This is the real historical basis for the authority of the Popes of the Catholic and Coptic churches today.

  • @alanpennie8013

    @alanpennie8013

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@obaaneaty It's complicated, as they say. My understanding is that Constantius II (like his father) was not committed to any particular Christology but simply wanted The Church to be harmonious and united. So he looked for inclusive formulae which anyone should be able to accept and this suited the surviving Arians who were a small and stigmatised minority until the barbarian kingdoms took up their ideas for political reasons.

  • @str.77

    @str.77

    9 ай бұрын

    Largely true except of one detail: Constantine always favoured reconciliation and thus was quite lenient to Arian bishops who pretended to accept the Nicene creed. They then influenced him recall other Arians (Arius himself however was prevented by a very ignoble death) and banish those "die-hards" who refused to reconcile them - sounds familiar! On his deathbed, Constantine was baptised by one of those Arian bishops, Eusebius of Nicomedia. But this did not "technically make him an Arian". That sentence, like most sentences involving the word "technically", is absurd. Constantine never wavered in his commitment to the Nicene creed itself. As long as he lived, those Arians and others that were uncomfortable with the creed couldn't dare oppose it. Once he was dead, under Constantius II, the attack on the Creed began, with synod after synod drawing up different alternatives and one group of non-Nicenes fighting - and banishing - the other. It was then - only then - that words like "homoios" (similar), "anhomoios" (dissimilar) and "homoiusios" (similar in substance") were brought up. It was ironically this turmoil that convinced many Easterners that had opposed the Nicene creed that this was the best wording after all. Especially the "homoiusian" camp mostly joined the pro-Nicene side. What also helped were the several banishments: bishops from the East were exiled to the West and vice versa, thereby gaining an inside into how the other part of the Empire saw things. The result was the reworked creed that we know today.

  • @prayunceasingly2029

    @prayunceasingly2029

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@str.77interesting!

  • @karenlankford8558
    @karenlankford85589 ай бұрын

    This was helpful to me in understanding how modern Christians came to accept this really crazy sounding idea of a 3 in 1 god.

  • @TaylorGriffing-rj2on

    @TaylorGriffing-rj2on

    8 ай бұрын

    To me the idea of the 3 in 1 thing is the basic human inability of God's infinite Ness. He is creator of all things . He is everything at all times all the time

  • @marouanenajar3026

    @marouanenajar3026

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@TaylorGriffing-rj2on God said he is one. Never said I am 3 or 4.

  • @ScottyMcYachty
    @ScottyMcYachty9 ай бұрын

    Thanks John. Another awesome and educational video!

  • @DiscipleToki
    @DiscipleToki6 ай бұрын

    Long ago when I was a Christian, I studied intently the early church, the scriptures, councils, and more. My own developed view on the Trinity was that the Living God's Word (Logos) was the spoken Words of the Father as such eternal being the very language used to create reality, Birthed when the Father first spoke. The Spirit was the Father's breath, in this way they are God as God is the essence of Living, and as such all that comes from his actions in the body live and move and have to be, since the Father is eternal so too are the Father's words and breath and in this way the trinity made sense to me. Father essence, Son Word, Spirit Breath. As such it is one God but that which emanates from the Father. Birthed in the sense of words spoken. Since the Father is unchanging and eternal so too are his words and breath.

  • @ezkl9424
    @ezkl94248 ай бұрын

    Trinitarians burned people at the stake for not accepting their belief. Non Trinitarians have never been known to burn anyone for not accepting Oneness or the one God.

  • @vickitallant2121
    @vickitallant21219 ай бұрын

    Wow thank you this explains so much to me I will forever be grateful to you for your knowledge.And sharing this knowledge.God Bless You.

  • @berendharmsen
    @berendharmsen9 ай бұрын

    Found you again! I used to really enjoy his lectures and then one day, I realised they didn't show up inb my feed anymore and no matter how I tried, I couldn't find a name for him, or his church and I completely forgot and found that it can be surprisingly difficult to look for someone if all you can search is 'some minister guy from a rather groovy, possibly Canadian church that does quite scientific lectures about religion.' Somehow, that doesn't bring him up.

  • @guitaoist
    @guitaoist4 ай бұрын

    Jesus: “The father is greater than I.” Jesus: “To sit on my right hand and on my left hand is not mine to give.” Jesus: “Pray to the father [not to me].”

  • @josepheridu3322
    @josepheridu33229 ай бұрын

    I'm surprised Arian Christianity died off after being so popular for so long in so many places, as if it never existed, even in places where they were not prosecuted.

  • @alanpennie8013

    @alanpennie8013

    9 ай бұрын

    You have to remember that as late antiquity went on Arianism was increasingly associated with hicks who knew nothing about philosophy, or in other words uneducated people. Any one who received a higher education would receive a lesser or greater exposure to Platonism and from their pov Trinitarianism would look like common sense.

  • @str.77

    @str.77

    9 ай бұрын

    It was never that popular to begin with., more a thing of bishops and courtiers. In the East - and it was a purely Eastern thing - some had issues with the Nicene creed and especially the condemnations attached to it. Terminology wasn't yet totally clear as well. The ensuing turmoil convinced many Easterners that the Nicene creed was good after all and the result was the updated version that we have today. Arianism then got an imported revival because Germanic peoples had become Christians when Arianism was dominant and now brought it with them when they invaded the Empire. Some, like the Goths, were mainly tolerant, others, like the Vandals, persecuted the Catholic Roman population, but it always was a foreign element. A large reason for the success of the Franks was that they adopted Christianity in the version common among the Roman population in Gaul.

  • @44preds
    @44preds5 ай бұрын

    I really enjoy the indepth analysis of these vids. Well thought out and presented in an open minded way

  • @laurencecox2657
    @laurencecox26579 ай бұрын

    One feature of the Council of Nicaea that doesn't usually get mentioned, but is remarked upon by Geza Vermes in his book "Christian Beginnings: From Nazareth to Nicaea AD30-325" is that almost all the participants were from the eastern part of the Roman Empire; I think it was just six bishops from the western part and even the Bishop of Rome did not attend, but sent one of his priests. The argument between the Arians and Trinitarians was of little interest to almost all Christians in the western part of the Roman Empire.

  • @pianosonata5029

    @pianosonata5029

    5 ай бұрын

    Well, of course, the western part Christians weren't at all Christians. They had made a mixture of paganism with Christianism. The three main gods of every culture found home in the Christian Trinity. This was just a power grab. A certain sect of Christianism was chosen by the politicians, so the rest of the Christians were doomed. Nothing else mattered.

  • @annasalko
    @annasalko6 ай бұрын

    Oh man, I can't stop laughing at Santa punching Arius in the face. This lecture is awesome. 🤣🤣🤣

  • @bgp001
    @bgp0019 ай бұрын

    In regards to the holy spirit, some of the early Christian groups identified the holy spirit as female and could be interpreted as the mother aspect of the monad.

  • @veronica_._._._

    @veronica_._._._

    9 ай бұрын

    Gnostic heresies you mean.

  • @bgp001

    @bgp001

    9 ай бұрын

    @@veronica_._._._ Some would be identified as that, but the "gnostic" groups are not so easily identified as we, in the modern world, believe they could be categorized. Early Christianity was much more varied than most are willing to admit.

  • @veronica_._._._

    @veronica_._._._

    9 ай бұрын

    @@bgp001 Of course their are a 1001 errors and one 🎯 Defining my terms here specifically? l'm using gnostic, in the "emotional catharsis " pagan sense of "god becoming" and the disgust lust continuum. acted out in dionysian mutilation or, masochistic mutilation. The first ends in disgust the second begins in disgust. Christianity was inward focused, the opposite of the pagan "venting" periodic safety valve.. Many early texts were also satires, parodies, some were the equivalent of fanfic even, and the text version of attacks like the crucified mule headed figure seen in the graffiti.

  • @bgp001

    @bgp001

    9 ай бұрын

    @@veronica_._._._ ok

  • @veronica_._._._

    @veronica_._._._

    9 ай бұрын

    @@bgp001 Are you really ok tho?

  • @suryatchandra
    @suryatchandra7 ай бұрын

    Hi, thank you for your wonderful videos ! Even if these topics are not new, you manage to explain everything very well, and personnaly I've learned a few things, especially what you have explained about the eucharist. In my opinion, the main problem in the christian trinity is the concept of "the Son", opposed to "the Father", as this implies an idea of generation.... The concept of logos is much more clear, as we can understand that the mind of God, or his intelligence, or his speech can manifest in his consciousness, so it is begotten, but not different in substance from the spirit that God is. It is like the supreme Spirit and his activity. When you said that the Son is always created, this makes perfect sense here. So we got this description of the trinity : - the principle, who is self-conscious - the logos / intelligence / speech - the holy breath, which is the divine power of action, and the source of life Now, the concept of "the Son" seems to come from another system, as when we talk about the father and the son, it implies that there should be the mother as well... In this case, we have this descritpion of the trinity : - the father : the principle, who is self-conscious, - the mother : the logos / intelligence / speech, the power of manifestation - the son, who is an union of the two : the spirit of the father starts to be fascinated by a concept created by his creative mind (the mother), then he unites himself with it, so that this concept becomes self-conscious and can experience itself. As a consequence, his divine freedom becomes a bit limited, but he can "expand himself" into a self-conscious creation, so to speak. I think that this second understanding of the trinity is the one of the gnostics ? In this view, we can uderstand why the son is the same as the father, it is the same consciousness and the same person, but limited to a certain form created by the mother. Besides, I don't understand why you discard all the miracles which are narrated in the gospels. Of course, we cannot be sure of that which really happened two thousands years ago, but, many christian saints "performed" some miracles, so I don't know why Jesus himslef would not have been able to produce some of them as well ?

  • @IsraelShekelberg
    @IsraelShekelberg9 ай бұрын

    Very informative review which will help my research. John Milton (at least as I recall from college) incorporated some Arian features into his masterwork 'Paradise Lost'.

  • @carytodd7211
    @carytodd72119 ай бұрын

    Excellent lecture. Well-organized, informative, and tantalizing historical analysis.

  • @andrewisjesus
    @andrewisjesus9 ай бұрын

    see we are the son of God. Great lecture. all time great

  • @meryemnesli3643
    @meryemnesli36433 ай бұрын

    Really enlightening. Thank you.

  • @luigigarciasaavedra655
    @luigigarciasaavedra6553 ай бұрын

    Regarding what you said about the eucharist, about transubstantiation, could it be said that since it is the purpose that changes, that what is happening (or taken as happening) is a symbolism? All the presentation was great. This part was illuminating as was the centre of a exchange I had with a person on a religious group some years ago.

  • @BryanKirch
    @BryanKirch2 ай бұрын

    As a Catholic I’m so Impressed and yet so confused how with all you understand you’re where you’re at. I really trust however that God is using you to help bring people back to the Universal Church

  • @adelaperezdelviso1
    @adelaperezdelviso17 ай бұрын

    Excellent lecture !! Thank you !! from San Luis, Argentina.

  • @Anarchy_NZ
    @Anarchy_NZ9 ай бұрын

    Thank you for these very important discussions on Christology. I really enjoy these lectures especially the ones relating to Gnostic Theology regarding Sophia, The Demiurge (Yaldabaoth) and the world being a cosmic mistake yet still only an illusion. I see the Christ as the Eternal Creation not born (begotten) in time but in Eternity and The Father the I AM, the First Cause, the Prime Mover, The Source of all Creation and The One True Un-begotten. I believe nothing exists outside of this Holy Relationship and The Holy One refers to the binding of Father and Son whom are not one but also not two. Forever Creating Infinitely together in Eternity. Many blessings to you and all who read this 🙏 ❤

  • @user-uj3zv8qd1f
    @user-uj3zv8qd1f8 ай бұрын

    When I was twelve, while attending a question answer session at my cousins' Southern Baptist Church, a parishioner asked the pastor a question that I still remember. He had been reading the

  • @user-uj3zv8qd1f

    @user-uj3zv8qd1f

    8 ай бұрын

    the bible and asked about the "Son of Man". The pastor replied that it was Jesus and that he preferred to be called that.

  • @Greenfrog777
    @Greenfrog7778 ай бұрын

    On the contradiction about God creating the universe at a point in time: Aristotle argued that the cosmos must be eternal for this very reason - his Prime Mover creates eternally, not at a specific point

  • @joanapira365
    @joanapira3659 ай бұрын

    Swastike is the symbol of the sun. It exists in Thibetian temple , in Acropolis Athens temple, also on hand tattoos of hindoeuropean people around West Balkans.

  • @EricToro-ef4hr

    @EricToro-ef4hr

    9 ай бұрын

    the swastika is a symbol of spirituality. and good luck it can be Christian or Hinduism anything that is positive. It's an Aryan race symbol. which was adopted by other cultures and races? The Aryans have mixed with. it's not a negative symbol like our communist schools and media tells us.

  • @ironbutterflyrusted
    @ironbutterflyrusted2 ай бұрын

    Arianism has a sound argument....as shown by the Christian failure to silence it.

  • @quackcdable
    @quackcdable9 ай бұрын

    John, as someone who grew up in the JWs and has studied theology since, I can confirm that your categorization of their theology as Neo-Arianism is factually correct. They hold Jesus to be a created being, specifically identified with Michael the Archangel, who was made incarnate and imbued with God’s power and authority through the Holy Spirit, which is itself held to be the noncorporeal vital force that emanates from the Father “Jehovah”, but is not considered a distinct person as such.

  • @Old_Patriot

    @Old_Patriot

    9 ай бұрын

    Thanks for your explanation of the JW view on the divinity of Jesus Christ (Yeshua Messiah) and of the Holy Spirit. I studied a little with a JW friend years ago and I've thought about this topic a lot. Never really knew what the full explanation was until now. Thank you for your concise and very clear explanation.

  • @prayunceasingly2029

    @prayunceasingly2029

    8 ай бұрын

    Is it possible original arianism held Christ to be more than just a created being but still less than God? Or am I thinking of semi Arianism?

  • @hereweare9096

    @hereweare9096

    8 ай бұрын

    Well Jesus was created. He is literally called Gods Son in scripture. Was the first of creation..

  • @benneal9309

    @benneal9309

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@prayunceasingly2029exactly, hes the begotten son of God, since before time existed, who created all as 1 Corinthians 8 v 6 tells us, If you really want to look into arianism from our view as opposed to a trinitarians view look up Nader Mansour, I have never seen him lose a single debate against trinitarians

  • @steveflorida8699

    @steveflorida8699

    7 ай бұрын

    @@benneal9309 the begotten son is surely the Creator Son of 🌎🌍 and the life that dwells there on. Jesus said "I am the way, the truth and the life".

  • @Cp6uH_
    @Cp6uH_8 ай бұрын

    Arianism makes sense to me. Trinity not.

  • @lewisjohnson8297

    @lewisjohnson8297

    6 ай бұрын

    Theoretically, "understanding" is not what is required of Christians. "Belief" is supposed to be the cornerstone of faith.

  • @Cp6uH_

    @Cp6uH_

    6 ай бұрын

    @@lewisjohnson8297 Believe based on something. You must have some pointers. If you just believe, you can worship Mickey Mouse in that way.

  • @junramos2002

    @junramos2002

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@lewisjohnson8297Yup, typical of god. He forbade Adam and Eve from having "knowledge of good and evil". What did he want? Obedience. In John 3:16, it says "whoever believes will have everlasting life"... in John 3:18 it says "whoever does not is already condemned". Believers are proud to say "they go by faith, not by sight". So even if we already see something, even if there already is evidence for something, the believer can ignore it and just walk by faith. God made believing so important... believing in things without proof... even if it goes against what the human mind is supposedly capable of understanding. And if you refuse to believe because the doctrine seems illogical/inconsistent, then what? You are doomed?

  • @ienjoyapples

    @ienjoyapples

    6 ай бұрын

    If an explanation of God, who is incomprehensible, makes sense to you, then it's probably a bad explanation.

  • @lewisjohnson8297

    @lewisjohnson8297

    5 ай бұрын

    @@junramos2002 , according to what is claimed to be His word, yes! You're doomed ...unless you repent. That is the Jesus part: If you "believe" in him and repent your past mistakes, you need no longer be Jewish as a prerequisite to avoid Hell.

  • @doughylkema2920
    @doughylkema29209 ай бұрын

    I've watched some of your lectures. I come from the Roman Catholic belief and very much appreciate your detailed, thorough, thoughtful insight and explanations into the history and background of Christianity and Judeo-Christian religions.

  • @johnschuh8616

    @johnschuh8616

    6 ай бұрын

    Very useful, but differ basically because you seems to “buy” so much of the historical critical method. That method elevates the scientific method by attributing to it too much explanatory power. For instance, the dispute within physics. The 20th century saw an abandonment of the classical atomic theory. Since the word atomic is latinized as indivisible, then the concept of atomic particles along with the Einsteinian equivalence of matter and energy, means that philosophic materialism seems to loose its utility as a basis for naturalism. Forget everything that Hume said. Miracles can happen.

  • @jeffreyelliottcruz8095
    @jeffreyelliottcruz80952 күн бұрын

    Professor John Hamer you just gave one of the best lectures , I have experienced re Tritariasm and the nature of the divine. Thank you Now having said this I believe the epherial fluidity of triantarism is an excellent methodology to attempt to absorb the mystery of the infinite divine from the perspective of a finite coporeal material world. I especially enjoyed your salient points regarding the somewhat diminished distinction, most particularly, the unnecessary rivalry between polytheism versus monotheism. In actuality, your clarification of what some ancient people believed re the idols, that is , the idol was not the divine God, but rather an conduit or portal, or Stargate , wherein, the divine would transfer supernatural energy via the idol to the material world. Thus, when one ponders upon this the ancient monotheistic culture such as the post polytheistic Israelites also utilized their temple structures in similar fashion. That is, like the philistine idol the temple was a gateway, a conduit , a portal for the incorporeal divine to manifest power through the material edifice of the Israelite sacred temple. In some cases, the polytheist demanded sacrifice; so did the ancient Leveriate deity . However, a moral distinction was annunciated quite early, in that the Caanite God Molech demanded child and virgin human sacrifice. While the ancient Leveriate manifestations of Diety developed to require animal sacrifice. The holy man, Joseph Smith, as a restorationist also required his people to erect holy edifices as sacred temples. And as you often state in your lectures, the nature and purpose of these Latter Day Temples would change. A truism, nonetheless, the foundational fundamental purpose of the Latter Day Temples remained constant, in that, as the ancients the temple functioned as a conduit, a portal, a Stargate wherein the varied manifestations of the divine connected to the material world. ( Is the many manifestations of divinity and exalted celestial beings at the dedication of the Kirkland temple) Your point regarding the concept of the prophet Joseph, in relationship, to the nature and development of his progressing and transformative nature of divinity was well articulated. ( As highlighted and manifested via the very Pauline view of divinity oft cited in the Book of Mormon and thus the articulation and development of notions of the epherial and also corporeal nature of Diety in D&C 132 and other sections of the Doctrine and Covenants. Given legitimate inquiry into the historicity of the scriptures and the potent argument that the metaphysical energy and transformative healing process actually centers in gospel concepts such as love, mercy, forgiveness, grace and compassion. The prophet Joseph should be viewed favorably as a holy one that also uplifted and contributed to the metaphysical advancment and progress of humanity. As I have alluded too on earlier occasions. The account of Lehi's vision or dream of the tree of life deserves to take it's place among similar manifestations in Daniel, Ezekiel and revelations. Joseph Smith's work, therein, is a gifted masterpiece. In addition, as another illustration, the divine notions , he outlined , in DC 132 are amazingly stunningly pronunciation of his view of the divine nature of God, community , marital bonds, and the ancient Leveriate laws of procreation , marital union and celestial musings. Thus , this too earns him a place among the great contributors to celestial theology. As so often the case, it is not the quiet conformist that rises to greatness, but the thinker, the philosophers, the idealist, the innovator which rises from humble beginnings to a unique voice among the conventional and ordinary conformist. As in the case, of Christ, Socrates, Julius Caesar, Gandhi, Smith these men are martyred for their innovations . For example, Julius Caesar immersion in equitable land reform, diversity in granting Roman citizenship, providing more representation to the plebian class and conversely limiting the power of the patrician class guaranteed Cesaor a death sentence ( just as it did the Gracchi brothers) So it was with the Rabbi Christ and the scholar and professor Socrates. The prophet Joseph suffered the same fate for teaching a non Victorian view of marriage, an innovative , non Orthodox viewpoint of the divine. The rationale , trial and murder of these individuals of distinction always purport legitimate rationale for heinous crime, polygamy, corrupting the youth, granting citizenship to barbarians, land reform which steals from the patrician class and feeds the sloth of the plebian class, so forth and so on. Any and every rationale is supplied to justify murder , except for the trusm. That is, the extraordinary contribution each has made to the extension of human understanding, insight and development of thought. And yet, their discipleship often continues to grow long after the assassins knife extinguished the corporeal body because the divine spark is eternal and lives on in some methodology, concept and manner. This is true, whether , it is building a new Zion or building a new constitution including land reform.

  • @Robert_L_Peters
    @Robert_L_Peters9 ай бұрын

    Thank you. I look forward to the braided ponytail

  • @TobiramaRock
    @TobiramaRock7 ай бұрын

    “ If you say something against our beliefs we will slap you ! “ - the religion of love.

  • @andrewm000
    @andrewm00015 күн бұрын

    Wonderful scholarship

  • @MrDuvinci
    @MrDuvinci19 күн бұрын

    This was thorough

  • @garymensurati1631
    @garymensurati16312 ай бұрын

    Thank you John !

  • @Greenfrog777
    @Greenfrog7778 ай бұрын

    It might be interesting to do a lecture on monism in Polytheist traditions. Even in Greek tradition, the Stoics held the First Principle as nature, identified it directly as Zeus, and then the other Gods are created by Zeus as that divine fire separates out into different elements and divine principles. Meanwhile, Proclus's Neo-Platonism denies that The One is a particular god, but is instead the Principle of Godliness which all of the Gods/Henads/Ones participate, in the same way that Humanity is not a human, but is the principle which all humans participate.

  • @johnelwoodclarke5366
    @johnelwoodclarke53664 ай бұрын

    Very interesting lecture I enjoyed it.

  • @Sportliveonline
    @Sportliveonline9 ай бұрын

    How do get from the Aramaic vernacular to Greek literature is my question ?

  • @marialupal6541

    @marialupal6541

    Ай бұрын

    The Bible was written in Aramaic and then translated into Greek as that was spoken too

  • @TarekFahmy
    @TarekFahmy9 ай бұрын

    amazing video.. greetings from Egypt

  • @IanChrist-os3od
    @IanChrist-os3od6 ай бұрын

    I'm Christ ian and a confermed Catholic Only one Jesus Christ 🙌

  • @avg8or
    @avg8or9 ай бұрын

    I’ve watched so many of these lectures and they are really good. I was wondering if you could provide more detail as to your certainty that Mark (traditionally a child during Jesus’ life) was not written by a “witness.” My understanding is that after his time with Paul, he accompanied Peter and wrote down a combination of what he witnessed and what Peter witnessed. I don’t see the temple destruction argument overcoming the possibility that Mark wrote “his” gospel. (ESP if he was a child)

  • @michaelhenry1763

    @michaelhenry1763

    9 ай бұрын

    You have correctly identified Mark’s authorship as according to Church tradition especially according to second century church fathers. However, according to Biblical scholarship, the book of Mark was written anonymously in 70 CE after the destruction of the Temple.

  • @avg8or

    @avg8or

    9 ай бұрын

    @@michaelhenry1763 Yes, thank you. That is the point of my post. Dating of authorship after temple destruction works to rule out Matthew and John. It does not seem to rule out Mark (or Luke-separate discussion). Furthermore, if it wa sufficient to rule out part of Mark (who’d only be 42-55 years old at 70 CE), it would only mean that the temple prophecy part was ruled out. I don’t see the scholarly reason to rule out the tradition that Peter taught Mark and the Mark authorship, but I’d love to understand it.

  • @michaelhenry1763

    @michaelhenry1763

    9 ай бұрын

    @@avg8or Yes, I agree with you. Why could not Mark write the first gospel in 70 CE? It is ruled out mostly because of the unreliability of Papias in the early second century. He is the first one to suggest that the gospel of Mark was written by Mark the companion of Peter. He says that Mark wrote the recollections of Peter the best he could. However, this claim by Papias does not fit with the Mark we have. Mark writes about many things Peter is not witnessed to. Additionally, Mark appears to be Pauline and a Greek speaker. To be charitable, we could say that Mark wrote a gospel we both longer have.

  • @avg8or

    @avg8or

    9 ай бұрын

    @@michaelhenry1763 Thankyou. I think you are correct in some of your logic bc the unreliability of Papius is a sound reason for questioning some of the source, but not strong enough to rule it out. We certainly don’t know if he’s the first to source Mark-Peter for the gospel, just the first we know of. The Greek part seems not very sound, since he was supposedly in a wealthy family from Cyprus that owned the home in Jerusalem. At least, he and his family seem to be one of the wealthiest followers that we could fairly attribute some literacy to (unlike some other disciples or members of the “12”). As far as the parts Peter was not present for, I think the multiple source theory synchronizes with that issue. Sayings gospel, Signs gospel, Peter narrative, and Mark narrative seems like a four source theory at a minimum to form my opinion. It seems to me that rather than rule out Mark, we should probably give a statistic of greater than 50% chance the vast majority of the first 85-95% of the gospel of Mark we have today was composed/compiled by the one we know as John Mark.

  • @michaelhenry1763

    @michaelhenry1763

    9 ай бұрын

    @@avg8or Yes, you are correct, Papias is the first we know of. However, what he describes as Mark is not our Mark. I have never heard anything about Mark’s background. Where did you hear Mark was from a wealthy family from Cyprus and had another home in Jerusalem? Mark is not using sources in the multiple source theory because his gospel is one of the main sources for Matthew, Luke, and John ( less so). The Sayings gospel, or “Q”, is a hypothetical gospel devised by scholars to explain the similarities between Matthew and Luke that disagree with Mark. The only sayings gospel we have is the gospel of Thomas written in the early second century. The Signs gospel is another hypothetical document devised to explain the signs material in the gospel of John. What is the Peter narrative? We have nothing from Peter. The best we have is what Paul says about him . The Mark narrative is his entire gospel. The gospel of Mark was written by an unknown second generation Greek-speaking Christian writing outside of Judea and after the destruction of the second temple. I think he was a follower of a Pauline tradition. I believe he got the idea of the Lord’s supper from Paul, for example, and also invented the empty tomb narrative to try to align his story with Paul’s vision narrative in 1 Corinthians 15. I think that may be one reason why his gospel ends abruptly at 16:8.

  • @kimfleury
    @kimfleury5 ай бұрын

    Thank you for clarifying the doctrine of Transubstantiation. I'm Catholic, and understand that Jesus is really and truly present in the Eucharist, I know it in my heart, but I could only say, "I don't know how it's true, it just is." You've explained the concept more clearly than I've ever heard. I'm going to suggest to my parish priest that this explanation should be taught in religious instruction for Catholics and those who are seeking to know what the Church teaches.

  • @PhiloLogos777
    @PhiloLogos7778 ай бұрын

    I would love to understand how the Holy Spirit got thrown into the trinity. Can easily see how the biblical cannon contradicts itself on whether Jesus is God (capital G) or not but can’t figure out what scriptures would lead any ancient Christian to conclude it was also a third person of God

  • @Qumran1834
    @Qumran18348 ай бұрын

    Do you think the use of “Son of God” by Joseph Smith instead of “God” in John in the Inspired Version has Arian implications? This was written well before the Nauvoo theology.

  • @canisronis2753
    @canisronis27539 ай бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @centre-place

    @centre-place

    9 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for supporting the channel!

  • @yungkakashi2447
    @yungkakashi24477 ай бұрын

    Santa Claus slapping Arius across the face is crazy, lol

  • @edbrown6188
    @edbrown61886 ай бұрын

    Is not the father a metaphor for earlier reflections on life which projected one’s current situation?

  • @skyefarnam7857
    @skyefarnam78579 ай бұрын

    Wow. Your definition of the holy Spirit sounds a lot like what The New age spiritual movement describes as the oversole

  • @patrickkrueger8768
    @patrickkrueger87688 ай бұрын

    I had to finish watching , again your an excellent teacher , but it still remains that the image of God , is the truth. the son comes out of Father / Mother , they nurture the Born son to the The spirit of God , the spirit of wisdom, understanding knowledge, power , council, and the fear of the Lord. Teaching , guiding raising up the sons, which always come from and after the father and mother. Such an important part of reality said not to be relevant to God , that he would come and die for Mankind , to restore that Image , wow amazing.

  • @astropiote
    @astropiote9 ай бұрын

    Saint Nicolas was trying to teach Arius how to properly give the other cheek.

  • @lewisjohnson8297
    @lewisjohnson82976 ай бұрын

    The Jews who were expecting the appearance of a savior, needed imagery to become "relatable", if not physically, than at least metaphysically. They needed an ally with magical abilities.

  • @lewisjohnson8297

    @lewisjohnson8297

    5 ай бұрын

    ...and not only the Jews! They all believed in pretty much the same direction. Actually, they weren't even monotheistic. The statement is their God, to the exclusion of all others, for this particular group of people, whose membership could only be extended matralinialy, after Jacob's generation (I think).

  • @Brian-----
    @Brian-----2 ай бұрын

    One way I explain Catholicism in part to others who ask, is that the Catholic concept of God indeed defies "Greek logic" (32:00) because logic does not bind God, but instead is God's gift to us so we can make sense of God's creation. All-powerful God can be as illogical as God wants. The heresy of Arius was not in the idea, it's hardly a bad idea, but in his persistence in placing logic before God after being shown otherwise. Heresy requires persistence in error, not merely error or speculation. Heresy really can be a flavor of the sin of pride.

  • @GizmoFromPizmo
    @GizmoFromPizmo9 ай бұрын

    This is why Catholic Trinitarianism is such a mess. Why can't Jesus have been the begotten Son of God. The two persons of the trinity could have been in heaven together prior to Jesus' birth. What's wrong with that? The Father didn't become the Father until He conceived in that woman His Son. What is so hard about that? Jesus prayed that He would rejoin the Father in heaven when He prayed: "And now, O Father, glorify thou me with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was." (Jn. 17:5) So, Jesus was with God in the beginning and shared His glory. In fact, "before the world was", He was with God. Catholicism doesn't think through its doctrines very well at all.

  • @deborahdean8867

    @deborahdean8867

    9 ай бұрын

    Yes, and jesus was 'slain before the foundation of the world '. Meaning his purpose as savior was established from the beginning. Just like a parent knows before the child is born, they're willing to die for it if need be. And of course God knew what adam/people would do .

  • @sebolddaniel
    @sebolddaniel8 ай бұрын

    I have always wanted to go to Iznik (Nicaea), not just for the Christian history, but for the Islamic. Maybe I could find those kiln sites where that high quality Iznik ware, beautiful white porcelain vases with red, blue and green, sometimes peacocks, sometimes flowers. You can find them in the museums of Istanbul, or in any good US museum. Groovy stuff.

  • @skyefarnam7857
    @skyefarnam78579 ай бұрын

    Why were some Gospels hidden, lost , rejected? I have blamed Constantine and the bishops but get the impression it's more complicated than that. For some reason they were rejected and perhaps for that reason some were hidden to be discovered later. Thoughts? A whole lecture?

  • @str.77

    @str.77

    9 ай бұрын

    Constantine did not reject any gospels nor did the Council even discuss the Bible canon. The canon developed over a lengthy stretch of time (late 1st to late 4th century) but by 300 it was largely settled, with only a handful of books still disputed (they eventually all made it into the Bible). The alternative gospels you mention were all way younger than the four canonical ones and also were restricted to certain groups. E.g. one gnostic group hat their own gospel, another group another gospel.

  • @skyefarnam7857

    @skyefarnam7857

    9 ай бұрын

    @@str.77 so they were younger? That means they were closer to the time of Jeshua? Ok no wonder they are so good

  • @str.77

    @str.77

    9 ай бұрын

    @@skyefarnam7857 No, younger means closer away from Jesus. None of them would have called Him Jeshua as they were thoroughly non-Jewish.

  • @poi2lkj3mnb
    @poi2lkj3mnb9 ай бұрын

    Im rather sceptical as to what extent the common Roman pesant was committed to the Trinity. I know historians say that the Goths subjects were Trinitarians, but is this a justified belief about the common people, or an assumption that they agreed with the church hierarchy?

  • @str.77

    @str.77

    9 ай бұрын

    The Goths' Roman subjects were Orthodox/Catholic Christians - and thus "Trinitarians". It was the Arians who made a big fuss about being different.

  • @maxsonthonax1020

    @maxsonthonax1020

    7 ай бұрын

    I am sure the average goth, vandal, etc was supremely indifferent to such finnicky questions. 😃

  • @str.77

    @str.77

    7 ай бұрын

    @@maxsonthonax1020 The average Goth maybe But it was Ostrogoths and Vandals that even instituted a separate baptism, with the Vandals eben persecuting the Orthodox Christians. Way to make sure a kingdom stays divided.

  • @StanKindly
    @StanKindly9 ай бұрын

    I always imagined the first set of tablets Moses brought down had some of what we are talking about here - the mysteries of the cosmological and ontological nature of his being. But, the people obviously weren't ready for it ( worshiping golden calf and so on..). So he (Moses) broke them, went back and had to carve out the Ten Commands. Sort of a way of saying " just follow these rules." It's an very interesting event/story if you think about it... Christ added two more - love God and your neighbor - saying these are the main ones which all other commandments hang upon. It makes sense to me. Humans are still a long way off (collectively) to have God reveal these mysteries, albeit some receive insights

  • @gamejew38

    @gamejew38

    8 ай бұрын

    He didn’t add them. Those are also commandments in the Torah by the hand of moses

  • @jimdee9801
    @jimdee98014 ай бұрын

    Can we get to the subject

  • @jimdee9801

    @jimdee9801

    4 ай бұрын

    Ok and you sure did, sorry for impatience

  • @Sportliveonline
    @Sportliveonline9 ай бұрын

    its enlightening

  • @equinoxswine9132
    @equinoxswine91324 ай бұрын

    Jesus was at least an enlightened being, however I think he gained that enlightenment through travels and gaining wisdoms from multiple ideologies, and combining them with his own roots. Last we see of him before he's 30 in the Bible is when he's 12, debating with philosophers. He was certainly thirsty for knowledge, and there are 18 unaccounted for years of Yeshua's life. I believe he gained enlightenment and tried to spread that enlightenment to his own people.

  • @str.77
    @str.779 ай бұрын

    Topic starts at 7:05. BTW, the Y in Aryan is a purely English thing.

  • @donmilland7606
    @donmilland76069 ай бұрын

    What about the burning bush? The Father communicated with Moses or the Word or both?

  • @TheNikean
    @TheNikeanАй бұрын

    15:00 How is Jesus dispassionate in John? "Jesus wept" is from John. I've heard he's very emotionally removed in Luke.

  • @AJ21969
    @AJ219694 ай бұрын

    Psalm 110:1 Yahovah said unto My Adonia, Sit at my right hand until I make your enemies your footstool.

  • @hornplayer1228
    @hornplayer12289 ай бұрын

    The only way for Christianity to regain it's appeal and believability for the human masses is to return to the teaching of the Church Fathers of the 4th century like Origen and Arius. Modern spiritual teaching by God's Divine Spirits supports the beliefs and theology of their time before worldly men lead by Justinian expunged the concept of learning spiritual matters from spiritual beings as promised by Jesus.

  • @exoplanet11

    @exoplanet11

    9 ай бұрын

    Origen and Arius were certainly quite thoughtful theologians. But, the problem with the idea of 'returning' to their Christianity is that the closest approximation to that type of Christianity is JW, which is a disturbing cult using intimidation tactics.

  • @hiddebekaan2396
    @hiddebekaan23966 ай бұрын

    I think, once the fact that God is not tied down to time and space is considered, then a lot of the arguments dissolve. You mentioned it only very briefly.

  • @michaelhenry1763
    @michaelhenry17639 ай бұрын

    Thank you for an amazing lecture. Regarding monotheism, I do not think any religion is truly monotheistic. I think Jews, Christians, and Muslims simply redefine what a god is and relabel lessor gods as angels, demons, Satan, and saints. I think a better way to label Judaism, Christianity, and Islam as different variations of henotheism.

  • @wilsontexas

    @wilsontexas

    9 ай бұрын

    God is an uncreated being who created all things. Created beings can be called gods but are not the uncreated being who created all things.

  • @wilsontexas

    @wilsontexas

    9 ай бұрын

    I think the words are confusing you but i think the ancient jews knew very well the difference between the creator and created beings. Dr michael heiser talks about the use ofvthe word gods and the meanings based on hebrew and ancient worldview.

  • @michaelhenry1763

    @michaelhenry1763

    9 ай бұрын

    @@wilsontexas Ok, sounds good. Sounds like henotheism. In many mythologies, gods or god creates other gods.

  • @michaelhenry1763

    @michaelhenry1763

    9 ай бұрын

    @@wilsontexas - Yes, in the Hebrew Bible there is a tension between, polytheism, henotheism and monotheism. Most of the time, ancient Jews up through the second- temple period were either polytheistic or henotheistic. Monotheism appears only occasionally in the Hebrew Bible and is even rarer in the New Testament. For example, Philo of Alexandria is not a monotheist. The early Christian writers were not monotheist if they believed that Jesus was a god, either adopted or born or pre- existent. Christians, Muslims and Jews are better defined as henotheists.

  • @wilsontexas

    @wilsontexas

    9 ай бұрын

    @@michaelhenry1763 the biblical god is uncreated, other so called gods are not real gods and were craeted.

  • @jccklh
    @jccklh2 күн бұрын

    Curious about Unitarians. How are they compared to Trinitarians?

  • @cryador
    @cryador6 ай бұрын

    What a confusion! I wish the apostles were more intelligent and had asked all these questions when they had the opportunity...

  • @langreeves6419
    @langreeves64199 ай бұрын

    Great job explaining how Arianism is named after a person, while the Aryans were a group of people from an earlier time than Arius. There's the state in the US called Georgia and a country called Georgia. They are not related, even if spelled the same.

  • @sebolddaniel
    @sebolddaniel7 ай бұрын

    I did go to Ravenna and slept out there on the ground, but shot a lot of photos of those mosaics the next day. I will have to check if I got the one on your screen. I think it really groovy that you cover such things and see nothing abnormal about people who believe in such things, so don't feel bad.

  • @johnwilbur7707
    @johnwilbur77074 ай бұрын

    Did Athanasius I of Alexandria create another Creede that expands the roll of the holy spirit?

  • @CrisisOfFaith
    @CrisisOfFaith9 ай бұрын

    What a fantastic lecture!

  • @centre-place

    @centre-place

    9 ай бұрын

    Many thanks for supporting the channel!

  • @hjs9td
    @hjs9td9 ай бұрын

    John was not an eyewitness? The Gospel dedicated to explaining the place of Christ in the Cosmos was a report by CNN?

  • @brucekern7083
    @brucekern70839 ай бұрын

    As regards your question @ 22:32, I would say that our own broken and sinful nature is the only reason that question seems to have any merit. The Jesus I know did not think it robbery to equate oneself with God.

  • @Robb3348
    @Robb33489 ай бұрын

    between orthodox Christian faith and Arianism there is, to be sure, only an "iota" (the Greek letter "i") of difference (homoousios versus homoiousios)...but then, as Jesus implied in Matthew 5:18, itty-bitty iotas can sometimes carry a lot of weight when it comes to religious formulations

  • @str.77

    @str.77

    9 ай бұрын

    That's neat presentation but the difference between Orthodox and Arian was never "only an iota". That's a fairytale invented by Gibbon. The word "Homoiusios" only came when non-Nicenes triumphed and looked for an alternative word. The Arian mainstream favoured "homoios", the radicals "anhomoios". The moderates "homoiusios" and eventually joined the Nicene side ("Homousios").

  • @adelaperezdelviso1
    @adelaperezdelviso17 ай бұрын

    In Spanish we say "Arrianismo" with two rr

  • @sulongenjop7436
    @sulongenjop74369 ай бұрын

    God the Father had revealed himself and the Holy Spirit when His Son Jesus was baptized by John! So they had come as Trinity of God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

  • @arcuscotangens
    @arcuscotangens9 ай бұрын

    1:55:00 The question is probably referring to Arianism getting a second chance after Nicaea because the Germans were Arians.

  • @paolocasadio1317
    @paolocasadio13179 ай бұрын

    hi, i am from Ravenna....let me know if you come here!!!

  • @henrycobb
    @henrycobb16 күн бұрын

    Whataboutism comparing the Christian trinity to conceptions of quantum mechanics?

  • @lamontholm
    @lamontholm3 ай бұрын

    I wondered what your thoughts are on the Filioque. The upside down triangle is how Roman Catholic views the Trinity but the Eastern Orthodox has a triangle with the pointed upwards. With the same explanation of is and is it god. But it represents god emanates Jesus and then god and Jesus emanates the Holy Ghost. Thanks for these sessions. I’m enjoying them a lot.

  • @Puzekat2
    @Puzekat22 ай бұрын

    Referring to the Trinity as referring to the states of water, it might all be H2O, but in the different states it’s meaning is significant in of itself so I say, just like a substance that changed its molecular shape would be two distinct substances. I never knew that. I really believed that the father of the son and the Holy Ghost were three distinctive things, because I was never allowed to believe that until I heard of the great schism.

  • @user-fy3gl8nr6h
    @user-fy3gl8nr6h8 ай бұрын

    The relation >is is identical to For example, >The Son is (identical to) God God is (identical to) The Son Other than in normal language, the attribution of identity works here only in one direction. If it would work symmetrically, >Son = God = Father = God = Holy Ghost What seems to be an even more severe problem is, that the diagram only works if in addition to Father, Son and Holy Ghost, a fourth logical variable is introduced: God. Unfortunately, according to the diagram, God is even more than one of the three individual components, which can be understood as a degradation of the Father to the level of the Son / Holy Ghost. Somehow, the guys in Nicea were not able to find a way out of the dilemma.

  • @skepticalbaby7300
    @skepticalbaby73009 ай бұрын

    Great lecture. However, as a muslim (just to be upfront), i do think u misrepresent the sunni view of the uncreatedness of the Qur'an. It is viewed as the literal speech of Allah. That is, it is an attribute that is of Him, like His sight. That is not analogous to the christian view of Jesus in relation to the father. Allah has Sight to see and Speech to speak. But God doesn't need Jesus to be God, but he does need a son to be a father. So i think the difference in views really comes down to the christian view that one of God's attributes is "The Father" which muslims reject. This attribute necessitates a "Son" or "Daughter" and the subsequent theorizing on the relationship between the two and the further extension of "sonship" being anothe attribute of God. I would also note that shia muslims do believe in a created Quran. Ur description implies that sunni muslims engage in similar activity but just don't acknowledge it. I think that's overstating the situation. I would be interested to know why trinitarism prevailed?

  • @michaelhenry1763

    @michaelhenry1763

    9 ай бұрын

    Thank you for the greater clarity. Trinitarianism came to dominate simply because of the power dynamic in the Roman Empire.

  • @deborahdean8867

    @deborahdean8867

    9 ай бұрын

    The view of God as father refers to God's relationship with man. Adam is called a son of God because God created him. We are known as children of God because God created us. Jesus was known as the last adam prophetically. But that's a different discussion. I just wanted to point out that the reason God is called father is because He is the creator of all. Not because of a special and peculiar biological relationship to certain people. God is also called father because of His relationship to mankind.........protector, guide, teacher. He could have been referred to as mother , IF His sole relationship to mankind was simply nurturer .

  • @gideonopyotuadebo2304
    @gideonopyotuadebo2304Ай бұрын

    IT IS BETTER TO BELIEVE, HOPE AND TRUST IN YEHOVAH THE TRUE GOD THAN IN SOMEONE ELSE. IT IS BETTER TO OBEY YEHOVAH THE TRUE GOD THAN MEN BETTER BE A CONVERT OF YEHOVAH THE TRUE GOD RATHER THAN BEING A CONVERT OF ERROR RIFE SECTS GODLINESS IS SUPERIOR TO SECTARIANISM Psalm 51:10-13 ASV Create in me a clean heart, O God; And renew a right spirit within me. [11] Cast me not away from thy presence; And take not thy holy Spirit from me. [12] Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation; And uphold me with a willing spirit. [13] Then will I teach transgressors thy ways; And sinners shall be converted unto thee. Psalm 25:8 ASV Good and upright is Jehovah: Therefore will he instruct sinners in the way. Psalm 119:68 ASV Thou art good, and doest good; Teach me thy statutes. Psalm 86:10-12 ASV For thou art great, and doest wondrous things: Thou art God alone. [11] Teach me thy way, O Jehovah; I will walk in thy truth: Unite my heart to fear thy name. [12] I will praise thee, O Lord my God, with my whole heart; And I will glorify thy name for evermore. Isaiah 25:1 ASV O Jehovah, thou art my God; I will exalt thee, I will praise thy name; for thou hast done wonderful things, even counsels of old, in faithfulness and truth. Psalm 4:3-5 ASV But know that Jehovah hath set apart for himself him that is godly: Jehovah will hear when I call unto him. [4] Stand in awe, and sin not: Commune with your own heart upon your bed, and be still. Selah [5] Offer the sacrifices of righteousness, And put your trust in Jehovah. Proverbs 14:34 ASV Righteousness exalteth a nation; But sin is a reproach to any people.