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Part 4
In attempting to interpret passages in the Bible which clearly point to a distinction in the persons of the Father and the Son, Oneness Pentecostals obfuscate the meaning of these passages by making an artificial distinction between Jesus' human nature and His divine nature.
In responding to this position, one cannot do so without referring to early Church history. Does Jesus have a dual nature such that His divine self-consciousness can be distinguished from His human self-consciousness? When Jesus forgave sins, calmed the storm, and cast out devils, did He do so as God but not as man? When Jesus grew weary, hungered and thirsted, did he do so as man but not as God? These questions and more shall be discussed in relation to the doctrine of the incarnation in this fourth teaching.
Download teaching notes (pdf) https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/bethesdashalom/4_The_Doctrine_of_the_Trinity_Pt._2.pdf
By Bethesda Shalom4.9
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Part 4
In attempting to interpret passages in the Bible which clearly point to a distinction in the persons of the Father and the Son, Oneness Pentecostals obfuscate the meaning of these passages by making an artificial distinction between Jesus' human nature and His divine nature.
In responding to this position, one cannot do so without referring to early Church history. Does Jesus have a dual nature such that His divine self-consciousness can be distinguished from His human self-consciousness? When Jesus forgave sins, calmed the storm, and cast out devils, did He do so as God but not as man? When Jesus grew weary, hungered and thirsted, did he do so as man but not as God? These questions and more shall be discussed in relation to the doctrine of the incarnation in this fourth teaching.
Download teaching notes (pdf) https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/bethesdashalom/4_The_Doctrine_of_the_Trinity_Pt._2.pdf

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