Aggrad08 said:
ramblin_ag02 said:
Regarding the second, I get it. I guess another possibility emerges from a strictly Christian viewpoint. God existed from the beginning, and Christ is God. Existence was created through Christ. The decisions of Adam and Eve led to the deaths of men. Christ has an eternal human nature, including the ability to suffer and die. Since existence was created through Christ, suffering and death was baked into the fabric of reality from the start. So the death and suffering that exists prior to man could still be due to man, but only because Christ is both man and God and also fabric of existence
I get what you are saying here, but it feels pretty forced. It basically involves a causal paradox and I hate that like I hate almost every time travel movie and at the end of the day, it's not like god didn't play his own role in making an imperfect creation that was going to fall and corrupt part two of the trinity. Fundamentally I don't really think time travel backwards exists, nor backwards causation.
It also makes god, at least the jesus part of the god trinity as fundamentally imperfect and flawed. But you bring up an argument I hadn't heard before. I'd never heard of jesus being regarded as fully man before the incarnation. The second person of the trinity, the Son, the word, being eternal in christian dogma is nothing new. But I always understood the being fully man, as something he subjected himself to, "made himself lower than the angels" ect. And from then on was fully man and fully god.
It doesn't really even make sense to me to call the 2nd person of the trinity, or the word or whatever fully-or even a little bit, "man" when it existed as a nameless non-corporeal third of part of one omni-person. Without the incarnation the word of god has no body and isn't named yeshua. Unless we are calling "man" something pretty different than what I'm imagining.
Depends on how you look at it and no need for causality problems. Here's a very barebones version. God creates man with free will, knowing that man will sometimes chose to reject Him. This is by design, as God can't be maximally loving unless He is able to love beings that actively hate him. God knows that men will suffer for this, but that suffering is also somewhat His own fault for giving men a choice. So God being loving, just, and fair, decides to suffer as well. So the Logos, from before creation ever happens, is destined to be incarnated, suffer, and die. So suffering and death becomes an integral part of the Logos, and indeed is the lynchpin that keeps the whole set up from making God a narcissistic monster. Now creation is created through the Logos and can be done no other way, as the Logos is the interface between God and man, spiritual and physical, temporal and eternal, holy and banal. So creation is molded in the image of the Logos who has suffering, pain and death as a fundmental part of his nature. So suffering, pain, and death becomes a fundamental part of creation.
So it's not that man's choice ruins creation. Man was almost certain to fall before creation ever happened, and God took steps to share in man's misery and give man a path to redemption also before creation ever happened. This is how that works out. It's not that Christ is flawed or human before the incarnation, only that his essential qualities did not change by being incarnated.
I won't contest the bit of paradox, but you can't really avoid that when you believe that someone was both fully man and fully God. Fully eternal with finite lifespan. Paradox and contradiction is baked into the game. It's also a still a bit human-centric, but again that's hard to avoid when you think about God creating man specially, and the Logos being both God and man.
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