Desert Snake
Veteran Member
Verses can't always be discerned as to a 'direct meaning', when read without other verses. Thusly, verse comparison is actually, necessary, to derive a meaning, that doesn't contradict something else noted in the Bible.
There are verses with variable meaning, when read without other verse comparison, like
'God hath made Jesus'...
Now, does this mean,
• God is a separate Being, who made a separate Being
• Jesus is God, in Spirit form, thusly incarnated Himself
• there is a binitarian nature in which Jesus is a separate aspect of God
Then, there are verses that when read together, there is no variable meaning, such as
1 Corinthians 8:6
[There is only one Lord, Jesus Christ
2 Corinthians 6:18
[Lord Almighty
Matthew 22:37
[Lord your God
Thusly, there is no way to read these verses, and not derive, that Jesus is the Lord, there is only one Lord, He is the Almighty, and it's He who is the God, of the Believers.
•
Hence, Jesus, is the 'same God', as who the Believers consider, their God, who is the Lord.
•••
You will note that if one says, 'j-sua isn't g-d', then actually, they are saying, neither is the Tetragrammaton, going by the Bible.
This then means that verses that might be a variable interpretation, must conform, to the fact that Jesus is called the Lord, who is God.
There are verses with variable meaning, when read without other verse comparison, like
'God hath made Jesus'...
Now, does this mean,
• God is a separate Being, who made a separate Being
• Jesus is God, in Spirit form, thusly incarnated Himself
• there is a binitarian nature in which Jesus is a separate aspect of God
Then, there are verses that when read together, there is no variable meaning, such as
1 Corinthians 8:6
[There is only one Lord, Jesus Christ
2 Corinthians 6:18
[Lord Almighty
Matthew 22:37
[Lord your God
Thusly, there is no way to read these verses, and not derive, that Jesus is the Lord, there is only one Lord, He is the Almighty, and it's He who is the God, of the Believers.
•
Hence, Jesus, is the 'same God', as who the Believers consider, their God, who is the Lord.
•••
You will note that if one says, 'j-sua isn't g-d', then actually, they are saying, neither is the Tetragrammaton, going by the Bible.
This then means that verses that might be a variable interpretation, must conform, to the fact that Jesus is called the Lord, who is God.
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