Wednesday, March 15, 2023

03/13/23 DON'T TELL ME WHAT YOU BELEIVE

03/13/23 DON'T TELL ME WHAT YOU BELEIVE

Davidius told Russelonius that he believed in the one God of the Bible, Who is identified as Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

Russelonius corrected Davidius by saying that Davidius actually believes in three gods.

Davidius referred to Bible passages which assert that there is only one God and then pointed out verses which affirm that the Father is God, the Son is God and the Holy Spirit is God, which is the basis for Davidius believing in one God in Three Person's, aka the Godhead and also aka the Trinity.

Russelonius did not disprove the assertions but he did deny the affirmation, claiming again that Davidius believes in three gods.

When Davidius asked Russelonius if he accepted the verses which asserted the one God in Three Persons, Russelonius refused to address the actual Biblical witness and referred to supposed human logic, which erroneously says that one God cannot be three persons, therefore he says that Davidius does believe in three gods, regardless of what Davidius clearly says, concerning his beliefs.

As long as Russelonius denies Biblical evidence, he will never acknowledge that Davidius actually believes in the God of the Bible. Russelonius is committed to a human belief system that contradicts Divine revelation.

As long as "human wisdom" is accepted as being more authoritative than Biblical revelation, men will deny Divine truth.

Davidius did ask that question and made that same point. I have been surprised at how often "Russelonius" is not even aware of that problem. Of course, when I encounter one who is, they just fall back on Psalm 82:6, the use of "god's" (elohim), referring to men of importance. I hold them to the passage, the context and the fact that they are not being consistent. In conjunction, I ask the question, "Who raised Jesus from the dead," (which they should not even answer, since they don't believe in the resurrection). They tell me that God raised Jesus from the dead. I then point out that Jesus said He would raise Himself from the dead, which brings us back to the deity of Christ and the fact that He claimed He was God.

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