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Calling Christians Worldwide to Return to the Creed of Jesus

Commentary on John 2.19  [2 pages]
by John Schoenheit, Mark Graeser, John Lynn rated at 1.0 (5 votes so far)

Christ knew that by his thoughts and actions he could guarantee his own resurrection by being sinlessly obedient unto death. That made it legally possible for God to keep His promise of resurrecting Christ, who was without sin and therefore did not deserve death, the “wages of sin.”



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difficult texts (118) 
Who is Jesus? (73) 
Trinity (57) 
Who is God? (41) 
unitarian texts (35) 
Jesus is Human (25) 
pre-existence (22) 
What is the Holy Spirit? (21) 
three persons (21) 
debates (20) 
Church History (20) 
The Shema (19) 
Old Testament God (19) 
incarnation (18) 
Creed of Jesus (15) 
Jesus is God (15) 
New Testament God (14) 
Jesus as Messiah (13) 
co-eternality (13) 
Jesus is God's Agent (13) 
Nicene Creed (12) 
Jesus' Birth (12) 
Eternal Generation (11) 
Dual Natures (11) 
Elohim (11) 
Jesus had a Beginning (11) 
Faith Story (10) 
Jesus Died (10) 
co-equality (9) 
Singular Pronouns (9) 
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Echad (9) 
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Adoni (7) 
oneness (7) 
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mistranslation (5) 
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circular logic (2) 
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books

These books, written by people from diverse backgrounds, express the simple truth that God is one. Some of them are more scholary while others are more autobiographical. In addition, a few of them are available to read online. If you would like more in depth treatment of christian monotheism, these books are the next step to take. Note: if you know of other books, not listed here, please leave us feedback.


featured item

Debate: Open Discussion on the Trinity
by Faircloth and Gaston vs. Fox and Halls [170:46]
rated at 2 (out of 8 votes)

The Biblical Unitarian Society at the University of Southampton, UK, has hosted a debate on the Trinity. The debate occurred on June 16th, 2008. Representing the trinitarian side were two Anglicans, Prof. Keith Fox and Chris Halls both from Highfield Church. The two biblical unitarians that participated in the debate were Ray Faircloth of Restoration Fellowship and Thomas Gaston, a Christadelphian. The debate lasted nearly three hours and is available now online in both audio and video formats.

Program Timetable
Introduction by Michael Ng [5 min]

Opening Statement by trinitarian Chris Halls [20 min]
Opening Statement by unitarian Thomas Gaston [20 min]
Opening Statement by trinitarian Prof. Keith Fox [20 min]
Opening Statement by unitarian Ray Faircloth [20 min]

Rebuttal by trinitarian Chris Halls [5 min]
Rebuttal by unitarian Thomas Gaston [5 min]
Rebuttal by trinitarian Prof. Keith Fox [5 min]
Rebuttal by unitarian Ray Faircloth [5 min]

Q&A [approx 45 min]

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