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reporter: Jonathan, 2.11.05

This is an extract from a book I'm reading.


Clue #4: Christ Is Equal to God the Father

The fourth reason we believe that head/kephale in l Corinthians 11:3 should be understood as "source/origin" rather than "authority/leader'' is based on the theological implications for the third pair in the series, Christ/God. We know that Jesus voluntarily yielded to His Father's will throughout His earthly ministry. But this doesn't mean that within the Trinity the Son is in some sort of permanent, one-sided submission to the Father. In fact, the mutual submission we're supposed to have in the Body of Christ flows out of the mutual submission of members of the Trinity to one another.

In the Bible we see each member of the Trinity lovingly bestowing honor on the others. The Father always commends the Son and works through the Spirit; the Son always yields to the Father and promotes the Spirit, and the Spirit always points to the Son and does what the Father says. The Trinity is the ultimate model of servanthood, preferring one another in love and honor, always submitting to one another in perfect unity.


The question I have is this.

"Can anyone see anything wrong with what is written here?"

I don't want people to comment on whether they agree with it or not. I don't want people to comment on the theological implications of what is written here. I just want you think as if you had never read anything about the trinity before. From that aspect is something wrong with what is written.

Does that make sence?

6 Comments:

Hehe! I know!

reporter - Blogger Scotty, at 9:35 am, November 02, 2005 

I don't understand...

reporter - Anonymous Anonymous, at 9:49 am, November 02, 2005 

hmmm..
i'm just trying to think how to explain it...

Do you think that what is written there is a logical flow of ideas?

reporter - Blogger Jonathan, at 9:55 am, November 02, 2005 

Yep.

The statement "...this doesn't mean that within the Trinity the Son is in some sort of permanent, one-sided submission to the Father..." directly contradicts the statement "...the Son always yields to the Father..."

reporter - Anonymous Anonymous, at 10:26 am, November 02, 2005 

by 'yep', I mean, 'yes, I understand what you're saying, and yes I can see something wrong here (no, there isn't logical flow of ideas).

reporter - Anonymous Anonymous, at 10:28 am, November 02, 2005 

Precisely!!

He talks about the mutual submission of members of the Trinity to one another, Yet goes on to say that the Son always yields to the Father and the Spirit ... does what the Father says

That's not mutual submission... that is quite obviously one-sided submission to the Father

reporter - Blogger Jonathan, at 10:44 am, November 02, 2005 

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