Aupmanyav
Be your own guru.
You're over-simplifying. That's like saying atoms aren't actually particles, so all physics is myth ...
You're over-simplifying. That's like saying atoms aren't actually particles, so all physics is myth ...
Photons have no mass, so are not particles .. neither are they waves.. When atoms are not particles, it does not make physics a myth, they are waves. Perspectives. The rest is not for me.
It is not necessary for particles to have mass.Photons have no mass, so are not particles .. neither are they waves.![]()
| Name | Symbol | Antiparticle | Charge (e) | Spin | Interaction mediated | Experimentally confirmed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Photon | γ | Self | 0 | 1 | Electromagnetism | Confirmed to exist. Confirmed massless. |
| Gluon | g | Self | 0 | 1 | Strong interaction | Indirectly confirmed to exist. Cannot be confirmed. |
| Graviton | G | Self | 0 | 2 | Gravitation | Never observed / entirely hypothetical |
Yeah, we call it a particle .. for want of a better word."In particle physics, a massless particle (luxon) is an elementary particle whose invariant mass is zero. ..
Mmm .. but you brought it up:I know we tend to wander around here at IO, but a discussion of atomic theory looks really peculiar under the title "Notes on God in the Gospel of John"..
Is the implication that issues with science is similar to issues with virgin birth, seven days of creation?Mmm .. but you brought it up:
"You're over-simplifying. That's like saying atoms aren't actually particles, so all physics is myth ..."![]()
Probably..Is the implication that issues with science is similar to issues with virgin birth, seven days of creation?
The point was contextual, with regard to Wil's statement, which I said was an over-simplification.. When atoms are not particles, it does not make physics a myth, they are waves. Perspectives. The rest is not for me.
Quite. It wasn't a comment about particle physics, it was about over-simplification.Mmm .. but you brought it up:
"You're over-simplifying. That's like saying atoms aren't actually particles, so all physics is myth ..."![]()
No.Is the implication that issues with science is similar to issues with virgin birth, seven days of creation?
Is the implication that issues with science is similar to issues with virgin birth, seven days of creation?
To clarify my point here ... yes, there are realistic theologies.Is there a realistic theology? I mean arent all origin stories so full of obvious holes they need to be taken as somewhere between mythology, allegory and parables?We aint so different...
Some scholars hold that this was the original ending of the Gospel, as it reaches a natural conclusion at this point. The last chapter then is a later addition, a kind of theological postscript that ties in with the theological prologue.
Thomas addresses Jesus as ho theos, which unambiguously means the God, the One True God, God in the absolute sense.
In my opinion, Thomas is acknowledging the Father in the Son.
This is a really good point that can be broadened... it seems to be the difference between modern day fundies and everybody else - the facticity of various biblical accounts. Fundies insist everything is literal/factual, other believers argue that it doesn't have to be to support theological beliefs.What is in dispute is the facticity of the account.
Have you a reference to this? Ehrman regards it as authentic.Not only does the last chapter (21) appear to be a later addition, but the verses after 20.28 appear to be later additions too if your reading is the correct one.
Because John regards Christ as God, the Son of God, the Incarnate Logos of God, and not another God, nor 'God Himself' as understood as the utterly transcendent deity of the Hebrew Scriptures?If the climax of the Gospel of John is the revelation that Jesus is the God (20.28), why in the world does the author summarize the book's purpose merely as believing Jesus is the “Christ, the Son of God” (20.31) instead of “God Himself?”
Ehrman is probably quoting the Second Council of Constantinople, in which these words were attributed to Theodore, but we have no way of knowing whether he actually said them, or whether they were invoked by a partisan accusers intent on destroying his reputation.Others like “Theodore of Mopsuestia argued that the words were not addressed directly to Jesus but were uttered in praise of God,” says Bart D. Ehrman.
You've rather made a point by the need to insert a parenthetical text to make the citation say what you want it to say.To understand what Thomas is actually saying, we only need to go back a few chapters to when Jesus last spoke to him (see John 14.20):
En ekeinē tē hēmera gnōsesthe hymeis hoti egō en tō patri mou kai hymeis en emoi kagō en hymin.
In that day [the day of His resurrection] you will know that I [am] in my Father, and you in me, and I in you.
The presence of the Father in the Son is not disputed, it's the nature of the presence that was the topic of centuries of Christological debate.In John 20.28 Thomas realizes “the Father is IN Jesus” (which Jesus promised his disciples they would realize soon in 14.20 and 14.9). He sees the Father’s authority and presence in the resurrected Son.
Yes.The purpose of John’s book is quite clear: “These are written so that you may believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God” (John 20.31; Romans 1.4).