Just came out of intense Bible study. I'm even more convinced that the trinity isn't true.

Just came out of intense Bible study.

I'm even more convinced that the trinity isn't true.

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  1. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Yes OP I agree

    The trinity is stupid

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      Do you wanna know what else is not true? All of it

      My religion is true thoughever

      Underage...

      • 4 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        not an argument

      • 4 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        Calling others underage while believing in israeli fairy tales must be a bit ironic, don’t you think?

  2. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Do you wanna know what else is not true? All of it

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      My religion is true thoughever

  3. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    The bible is a living document.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johannine_Comma

  4. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    why did god wait like 50k years before revealing himself, and only to a select few in the middle east?

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      It's what he promised to Abraham

      • 4 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        what the frick are you talking about, and how do you know this?

        • 4 weeks ago
          Anonymous

          God chose Israel to be an example to humanity, but most of them rebelled against God so God rejected them and chose Christians instead

          • 4 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            don't presume to know anything about some omnipotent entity, Black person

  5. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    It remains a fact that no Protestant can reasonably be a Trinitarian. A Protestant will be all "muh heckin soolie scriptoorie" until they hit the Trinity, and then they just cosplay as Catholics. If you're a Protestant, you should be Unitarian, and if you're Trinitarian, you should be Catholic. Simple as.

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      As much as the Trinity is stupid, it still solves the theological problems of what to do with worship and prayer, which is that it all goes to the same place. Jesus just turns into SSJ Elijah without that move.

  6. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Unless it is mentioned in the Holy Book explicitly, it is wank.
    See 90% of what the Catholic Church has added to the religion, including the supremacy of the Pope.

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      >Unless it is mentioned in the Holy Book explicitly, it is wank.
      So... Sola Scriptura is wank. Alrighty.

      • 4 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        exactly!

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      The Trinity is explicitly mentioned in the Bible. There are verses that say that Jesus is God, that the Father is God, that the Holy Spirit is God (not in so many words, but because Paul uses a verb for "worship" that is only ever used of God), and the relationships between them. There is no coherent way to make all the relevant verses work together except Trinitarianism. It's not something Christians arrived at from outside philosophy, it's just what the Bible says. You can find verses that appear to contradict it ('there is only one God'), and we know about them... that's how we arrived at the Trinity in the first place, trying to reconcile all these apparently contradictory verses.

  7. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Best way to understand the scriptural, logical, and philosophical rationale for the Trinity is Augustine's De Trinitate. Check it out, it's an excellent read. Any argument you can make against the Trinity, non-Trinitarians were already making it in Augustine's day, including the arguments in the OP picture. But the best thing about De Trin is he helps you understand what the Trinity really means and why it's important, as opposed to some confusing dogma.

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      How does Augustine's De Trinitate compare to Hilary of Poitiers' De Trinitate?

      • 4 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        Augustine is leagues better. He quotes from Hilary a bit but only the first book or so... scholars think he never finished reading it because he found it so boring and useless.

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      The Trinity is explicitly mentioned in the Bible. There are verses that say that Jesus is God, that the Father is God, that the Holy Spirit is God (not in so many words, but because Paul uses a verb for "worship" that is only ever used of God), and the relationships between them. There is no coherent way to make all the relevant verses work together except Trinitarianism. It's not something Christians arrived at from outside philosophy, it's just what the Bible says. You can find verses that appear to contradict it ('there is only one God'), and we know about them... that's how we arrived at the Trinity in the first place, trying to reconcile all these apparently contradictory verses.

      How does Augustine's De Trinitate compare to Hilary of Poitiers' De Trinitate?

      Augustine is leagues better. He quotes from Hilary a bit but only the first book or so... scholars think he never finished reading it because he found it so boring and useless.

      The weight of scriptural evidence supports subordinationism, the Son's total submission to the Father, and God's paternal supremacy over the Son in every aspect.
      We acknowledge the Son's high rank at God's right hand, but the Father is still greater than the Son in all things!

      Father, Son, and Spirit all participated in creation and salvation, but that in itself does not confirm that the three are each co-equal or co-eternal.

      God is only explicitly identified as "one" in the Bible, and the doctrine of the Trinity, which word literally meaning a set of three, ascribes a co-equal threeness to the being of the infinite God that is NOT scriptural!

      • 4 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        >thing that was formulated before the biblical canon was settled is "not biblical"
        You're right, because the Bible, as we have it now, presupposes it.

        • 4 weeks ago
          Anonymous

          According to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy:
          "No theologian in the first three Christian centuries was a trinitarian in the sense of a believing that the one God is tripersonal, containing equally divine “persons”, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit."

          https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/trinity/trinity-history.html

          >Holy Spirit is impersonal.
          If anything it's the opposite since the Holy Spirit is the only member of the Trinity we can directly interact with

          Is this really what JWs believe?

          The holy spirit is God’s power in action, his active force. (Micah 3:8; Luke 1:35) God sends out his spirit by projecting his energy to any place to accomplish his will.—Psalm 104:30; 139:7.

      • 4 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        I went to Scripture, and Matthew 18:17 told me that, if I believe you're sinning, because you're preaching heresy, to "tell it to the Church." So I did, and the Church agreed that you're preaching heresy and should repent, so repent.

        • 4 weeks ago
          Anonymous

          What heresy am I preaching?

          • 4 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            Denial of the one true God in favor of pagan idols (Bible).

      • 4 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        Like all heretics, you're hanging onto some verses and ignoring others. It's boring, we had these arguments 1500 years ago and you lost, get over it.

        According to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy:
        "No theologian in the first three Christian centuries was a trinitarian in the sense of a believing that the one God is tripersonal, containing equally divine “persons”, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit."

        https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/trinity/trinity-history.html

        [...]
        The holy spirit is God’s power in action, his active force. (Micah 3:8; Luke 1:35) God sends out his spirit by projecting his energy to any place to accomplish his will.—Psalm 104:30; 139:7.

        No one denies that theology evolved. I doubt that Paul or the apostles had any inkling of full-fledged Trinitarianism, even if it's implicit in what they say. But early Christians were probably more Trinitarian than their writings imply... Trinitarianism wasn't something they went around advertising, any more than eating the flesh of Christ, because they knew it wouldn't make sense to others and would be ridiculed. This was common in mystery religions, and later Church fathers write about it. No I doubt they had any opinion on the flilioque or any deep understanding of the logic of it, but they definitely believed that Jesus was God and the Father was God and Jesus was not the Father because the Bible says that quite explicitly.

        • 4 weeks ago
          Anonymous

          Actually the doctrine of the Trinity was developped by the Egyptian Christian theologians of Alexandria.

          Alexandrian theology, with its strong emphasis on the deity of Jesus, served to infuse Egypt's pagan religious heritage into Christianity. They adopted these pagan tenets after adapting them to Christian thinking by means of Greek philosophy.

          • 4 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            Damn, bro. You believe everything atheist trannies write on Wikipedia pages? That's rough.

          • 4 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            As much as the Trinity is stupid, it still solves the theological problems of what to do with worship and prayer, which is that it all goes to the same place. Jesus just turns into SSJ Elijah without that move.

            Jesus never claimed to be equal to God. Instead, Jesus worshipped God. (Luke 22:41-44)

          • 4 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            Jesus claims to be God multiple times in John.

          • 4 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            “My Father is greater than I [Jesus].”—John 14:28.

            “I [Jesus] ascend unto my Father, and your Father, and to my God, and your God.”—John 20:17.

            Why did you lie?

            Shame on you

          • 4 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            Every time we have these threads, some moron like you pops up with "Oh yeah? Well what about... THIS one!" as if the bishops at Nicaea had never read the NT.

            We know about those verses. They're part of why Trinitarianism and Christology are how they are in the first place.

          • 4 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            The idea of a co-equal triune godhead was based on pagan Greek and Platonic influence, including many basic concepts from Aristotelian philosophy, and they were incorporated into the biblical God.

            Why did you lie again?

          • 4 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            John 1:1 & 1:14
            >In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.
            >And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen his glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth.
            John 8:58
            >“Truly, truly, I say to you, before Abraham was, I am.”
            John 10:30
            >“I and the Father are one”

          • 4 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            >John 1:1 & 1:14

            The statement “the Word was with God” indicates that TWO separate gods are discussed in the verse.
            It is NOT possible for the Word to be “with God” and at the same time be God Almighty. The context also confirms that the Word is not Almighty God. John 1:18 states that “no man has seen God at any time.”

            However, people did see the Word, Jesus, for John 1:14 states that “the Word became flesh and resided among us, and we had a view of his glory.”

            >John 8:58

            The Living Bible puts John 8:58 very nicely. The israeli leaders complaint that Jesus was too young to have seen Abraham, and Jesus answered:
            “The absolute truth is that I was in existence before Abraham was ever born!”

            We understand that that is the point of his answer: he had seen Abraham because he existed even before Abraham. And this is by far the most natural way to understand this verse.

            >John 10:30

            In John 10:30, when Jesus said "I and the Father are one," he did not mean that they were actually "one substance", or "one God", or co-equal and co-eternal.
            Rather, Jesus was saying he and the Father have a unity of purpose. The context indicates that Jesus was saying that they were "one" in pastoral work. The point being that the Father and the Son were united in the divine work of saving the 'sheep'.

            Why did you lie three times? Shame on you.

          • 4 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            Yeah you’re so much smarter than literally every Christian church, including many denominations who hated each other and spent centuries literally killing each other wholesale during various religious wars, yet somehow still all remained trinitarian

          • 4 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            Jesus prophesied that many would claim to be Christian yet fail to obey his commands and that he would reject such ones. (Matthew 7:21-23; Luke 6:46)

            Some people would be misled by religious leaders who corrupt true worship to further their own interests. (Matthew 7:15)
            However, other people would actually prefer imitation Christianity because it would tell them what they want to hear rather than the truth from the Bible.—2 Timothy 4:3, 4.

          • 4 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            Not gonna argue with some Arian nutcase, have fun

          • 4 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            If the Father begat the Son, he that was begotten had a beginning of existence: and from this it is evident, that there was a time when the Son was not.

          • 4 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            >hated each other and spent centuries literally killing each other wholesale
            >somehow still all remained trinitarian
            So Trinitarianism causes major psychological problems?

  8. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    HEATHEN.

    There is only one God, and his name is Pooby Glercho. Worshiping a fake "Bible" god is only going to get you tortured in hellfire.

  9. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    >Holy Spirit is impersonal.
    If anything it's the opposite since the Holy Spirit is the only member of the Trinity we can directly interact with

    Is this really what JWs believe?

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      JWs believe in childish superstitions. They have rejected Pooby Glercho in their hearts. They are to be pitied.

  10. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    wow. you thought you had a better understanding of some universe-creating superbeing than some other moron else on earth? what the frick is wrong with you? fricking disgusting

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      >you thought you had a better understanding of some universe-creating superbeing than some other moron else on earth?

      Yes

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