Khaem
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I cam across this tiktok by Christians where they show jesus (isa pbuh) saying "God is upon me, because the lord has anointed me to bring good news to the afflicted"
How can Christians come to the conclusion that he is god if their book states jesus speaking of God as a seperate entity who has sent him to give a message to the people. He literally introduces himself as a prophet not a god or lord of any sorts. I keep seeing this inconsistency in Christianity and had a Scottish friend in school once try to explain the trinity to me but i couldn't understand it and when I asked him to explain the "3 in 1" thing further he couldn't and just said it's a thing you have to accept.
I have a theory that since the original bible written in the Semetic languages spoken in the Levant at the time are lost and the ones we have are from the Greek translation it might have been altered to call jesus a god. I mean greeks have been worshipping men as deities forever, they don't have a concept of a single omnipotent god as the semites do. So they changed it to represent god in a man, the prophet isa, to make it easier to accept for the greeks and later the wider roman empire. Christianity started as a radical Jewish sect, does a god represented by a man sound Jewish to you? Furthermore, early into Christianity, there was a debate between Christians on whether or not jesus was god.
This talks about the debate but it's written by a Christian so it's biased, I'm using it to prove that the divinity of jesus did come into question by the early christians.
The source:
How can Christians come to the conclusion that he is god if their book states jesus speaking of God as a seperate entity who has sent him to give a message to the people. He literally introduces himself as a prophet not a god or lord of any sorts. I keep seeing this inconsistency in Christianity and had a Scottish friend in school once try to explain the trinity to me but i couldn't understand it and when I asked him to explain the "3 in 1" thing further he couldn't and just said it's a thing you have to accept.
I have a theory that since the original bible written in the Semetic languages spoken in the Levant at the time are lost and the ones we have are from the Greek translation it might have been altered to call jesus a god. I mean greeks have been worshipping men as deities forever, they don't have a concept of a single omnipotent god as the semites do. So they changed it to represent god in a man, the prophet isa, to make it easier to accept for the greeks and later the wider roman empire. Christianity started as a radical Jewish sect, does a god represented by a man sound Jewish to you? Furthermore, early into Christianity, there was a debate between Christians on whether or not jesus was god.
This talks about the debate but it's written by a Christian so it's biased, I'm using it to prove that the divinity of jesus did come into question by the early christians.
The source: