Saltmeister
The Dangerous Dinner
Jeannot said:It's still the same God, with some differences as to his nature. Whether Trinity (Xtian) or one (Jews and Muslims), our duty to draw closer to him remains the same.
Yes, but the names are connected. Same God. I think the primary is not getting the creed right, but getting your life right.
mansio said:I don't understand how it can be the same God when yourself you acknowledged that there are "some" differences. I would not talk of "some" differences but of a big difference. As far as I know the Trinity in the Christian version of God is not "some difference".
A religion is a right creed with a right life. Not just a right life.
Spirituality and the "one True God" can be seen in many different ways. Many hold the view that "all paths ultimately lead to God." Many others hold the view that "all paths aspire to lead to God," but we are led astray by other divine beings. Some religions have a concept of angels or angelic beings that are invisible and have the power to influence people's thoughts without being easily detected. We could well call them the archons, the spiritual rulers of the universe, of which the Most High God is one of them.
Within this archon theory, some of these archons work for God, while other archons, whether they themselves know it or not, are leading people away from God, distracting them from God. Because each religion is just another flavour of spirituality, a religion could also be seen as the voice of an archon, a signature of that archon's personality. The multitude of religions in today's world could well be the work of archons distracting us from a personal bond with God.
Does God really have a religion? Or is every religion just an archon distracting us from God?
It's also possible that there is no path leading to God. Heaven and Paradise is just a place for people with a personal understanding of God. God "intervenes" and lifts us up to heaven. We don't have wings of our own and can't fly up into heaven by our own power!!!!
As with the "Trinity," I think that concept is largely understood and perhaps misused. Because it's not a definition of God, we're not dividing God into three parts. The Trinity has to do with observation and discernment. We're observing God, not defining Him. When we observe our environment, we assign words to classify what our senses perceive: taste, touch, sight, smell, sound. They all come from the environment, but the environment is conveyed to us in different modes of perception. We're not defining our environment, we're classifying our observation of it. Father, Son and Holy Spirit are just words we use to classify what we can observe. They are words highlighting observable aspects of God's work on earth and depict the form that they take in both physical and spiritual existence. The Trinity is not a definition, it's an observation, depiction and representation.
That's perhaps why you won't find "Trinity" in the New Testament. It's not "essential" in Christianity. It's more like an "instrument of understanding" and "instrument of faith." It is still possible to understand Christianity with or without it.