Quartz Hill School of Theology

Re: Arian heresy


[ Follow Ups ] [ Post Followup ] [ Church History ] [ FAQ ]

Posted by Mark Schacknow on October 23, 19100 at 16:42:05:

In Reply to: Arian heresy posted by Sergio Blume on June 20, 1998 at 07:17:50:

: Was the Arian heresy the denying of divinity of Jesus Christ ? I think not at all,Jesus has divine
: origin,He is the Son of God,same sustance but not
: coeternal,in other words there was a time that Jesus was not,but the Father was,since the Father
: is eternal,no beginning no ending,Jesus may have
: no ending at all,but He had a beginning,since he is the beloved Son of God,the Arian heresy is the
: great claim against the tradition of the trinity,
: which was never mentioned by Jesus,but by other non christian religions,with a great influence during the days of Jesus (much earlier Egyptians had their trinity too,so did the later cultures,
: up to the romans themselves,with the helenic tradition)there's no trinity,we must worship 1 God
: the creator of all exiting things,otherwise we may
: fall into paganism

The religious world thinks that the Arian view is heresy, but what they don't understand is that all other doctrinal views are heresy because the bible clearly states over and over that Jesus is God's son and he is the only BEGOTTON son. One God and one Lord. one and one = two. For some reason the rest of the world can't see this truth.
In Genesis the phrase "let us make man in our image" suggest that there is more than one in the God Head, but after that the word "us" is vague.
If God and Jesus are the same as some would believe, then who raised Jesus from the grave?


Follow Ups:



Post a Followup

Name:
E-Mail:

Subject:

Comments:

Optional Link URL:
Link Title:
Optional Image URL:


[ Follow Ups ] [ Post Followup ] [ Church History ] [ FAQ ]