Interesting analogy - as well as illustration. (The main problem with the Trinity -as with any doctrine - is ofcourse that it has to be accepted.)
To a Dive Being a human form has no value. Ergo nothing of value is being sacfriced. (In other words, God just 'gives up' something that has no relevance to 'Him'-self. Since God is also omniscient, 'He' knows that the Divine part of Jesus can never die - it has no choice but being resurrected. Having a human die isn't a sacrifice by God, it is a sacrifice by a human only.)
Nor is this at issue. You asserted that Jesus has to be Divine. That is but one interpretation, as I've shown.
Your argument itself is a syllogism:
If man cannot redeem himself, then it follows he needs some agent of redemption. That might be Jesus, but it also might simply be the Grace of God (a Protestant doctrine), or faith alone. (To name but two examples.) At any rate, it does not necessarily lead to the Divinity of Jesus, as this is not necessarily a related doctrine. Logically speaking, if one believes in God, there will always be an agent of redemption - the belief in God being the first one, as it is a necessary premise for redemption in the first place.*
Note how that last sentence may be termed a syllogism.
His bodily self, which you can perhaps say is the form into which he was incarnated?
To a Dive Being a human form has no value. Ergo nothing of value is being sacfriced. (In other words, God just 'gives up' something that has no relevance to 'Him'-self. Since God is also omniscient, 'He' knows that the Divine part of Jesus can never die - it has no choice but being resurrected. Having a human die isn't a sacrifice by God, it is a sacrifice by a human only.)
His bodily self, which you can perhaps say is the form into which he was incarnated?Yes, but I'm not talking about who is right anyway.
Nor is this at issue. You asserted that Jesus has to be Divine. That is but one interpretation, as I've shown.
His bodily self, which you can perhaps say is the form into which he was incarnated?How so? Please post a syllogistic critique of my argument or something (i.e. put up).
Your argument itself is a syllogism:
If man cannot redeem himself, then it follows that Jesus can't have been just a man.
If man cannot redeem himself, then it follows he needs some agent of redemption. That might be Jesus, but it also might simply be the Grace of God (a Protestant doctrine), or faith alone. (To name but two examples.) At any rate, it does not necessarily lead to the Divinity of Jesus, as this is not necessarily a related doctrine. Logically speaking, if one believes in God, there will always be an agent of redemption - the belief in God being the first one, as it is a necessary premise for redemption in the first place.*
Note how that last sentence may be termed a syllogism.
