Leolaia wrote: Hellrider....John Day has noted that Deutero-Isaiah is engaged in a polemic against the view of God in Genesis 1.
JosephMalik wrote: Leolaia, This much is true and supported scripturally
I have no problem in agreeing on this. I know very well that "God" in Genesis is plural, that there is a development from polytheism in the beginning of the OT, to monotheism later in the OT. However, the point is, that this doesn`t help one bit, when trying to look at the trinitarianism vs non-trinitarianism-problem from a christian viewpoint! This only helps in understanding the underlying process of the development of the Bible, from a historical perspective. The view of the "old-school" christian, the JW, or the ex-JW who still believes a lot of their doctrines are correct (Joseph...), this knowledge doesn`t solve the theological problem. The christian is obliged to read the Bible as Gods inspired words, you can`t, as a christian say, "well, Moses is just plain wrong here" (yeah yeah, I know Moses didn`t write the Torah). If Genesis says "gods", Isiah says "God" and John says "the Word", then this has theological consequenses, whether you like it or not, and whether you can "explain away" the disreprancies with historical/secular knowledge. The final "truth", as a christian, has to be an explanation which incorporates all these (three) views, an explanation that doesn`t exclude one or the other on basis of historical knowledge, because that would be like saying that one (or more) part(s) of the Bible was uninspired.
Joseph:
John was discussing the beginning of the creation of the human race (the world) when he introduced the Word.
Why? Why does "all things" only mean the human race? Where is that in the text?
Show me where he was talking about planets, stars and such things outside of time and space in eternity
Show me that he did NOT.