Some Trinitarians never learn, still at it? Ben Martin 16 - TopicsExpress



          

Some Trinitarians never learn, still at it? Ben Martin 16 July at 07:05 . THE TRINITY 101 Genesis 1 (THE FIRST CHAPTER OF FIRST BOOK OF THE REAL BIBLE; NOT THE BLASPHEMOUS JEHOVAHs WITNESS OR MORMON Bible Translations, God is used in the singular sense of the word in a plural context. Genesis 1:26 ESV Then GOD said, “Let US make man in OUR image, after our likeness. And let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over the livestock and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.” I need a Staples® Button because That was easy. Reply, The sad thing about Trinitarians, is that when a topic has been proved to be untrue, such as we see in the claims above, Trinitarians, for some unknown reason, seem the need to repeat their errors and theology all over again! Another Trinitarian had to taught a severe lesson on the proper use of the Hebrew term Echad and what does and does not constitute a compound term...Trinitarians are so dim, that they dont even realise, that the term Echad [one] is not pluralistic, it can be the noun associated with it e.g. Cake A Cake [a noun] is made up of several components, the cake is therefore a compound item e. g., apples, nuts, lemon, fruit..., but if John gives Anne one [1] cake, it does not mean that John gives Anne 2 or 3 or more cakes, 1 cake is one cake, even though it has several ingredients (compound, components, that go to make up the whole) likewise, when Deut 6:4 says Hear O Israel, Jehovah is God, Jehovah is one, the ancient usage of the term God [elohim] which is/was a pluralistic term (compound) was no longer seen as having a pluralistic meaning by the Israelites and so the term God [elohim] was used with singular pronouns and verbs by the Israelites and when the Hebrew OT was translated into Greek for the sake of the Greek speaking Jews, elohim which means gods (take note Trinitarian-GODS, not GOD) was translated not as the plural THEOI=gods but as the singular THEOS=god and again, still used with singular pronouns and verbs. So, the term one [Echad] means just that 1 and not more than 1, just like our Cake! And I got all this from the good old KJV bible, the one and only...?
Posted on: Fri, 18 Jul 2014 06:47:48 +0000

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