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Showing posts from January, 2025

Who were the First Recipients of Jesus’ “Good News”?

  Who were the First Recipients of Jesus’ “Good News”? Arfad A. Razak 30 January 2025   Who were the first recipients of the message Jesus preached to his community? Jesus of Nazareth was a man living in ancient Palestine, in the northern city of Nazareth, in Upper Galilee, where our historical records seem to suggest his mother, Mary, was from. Jesus also spends most of his childhood and early adult life there. It is well known, at least as it is reported by two of the New Testament Gospels that Jesus was born in Bethlehem (Matt. 2:1-2; Luke 2:11-12). However, the Gospel narrates Jesus as spending more time in upper Galilee compared to his birth city, in fact, according to Matthew’s Gospel, he settled in Capernaum (Matt. 4:12-14), which is “a town near the Sea of Galilee…It has been identified with Kefar Nahum (Tell Hum)” (Oxford Concise Dictionary of the Christian Church, 93). Galilee is a cosmopolitan city with multilingual atmosphere “whereby towns with Greco-Roman...

The Logical Argument God is not Three Persons, One Being

  The Logical Argument God is not Three Persons, One Being Arfad A. Razak 30 January 2025   In this short article, we explore the reasons behind why it is illogical for the nature of God to be “Three Persons, One Being,” more commonly known as the Trinity or the majority (majority, because there are a handful of Christian groups who do not believe in the Trinity, for example, the Unitarian) Christian Doctrine of the Trinity, in full. The argument of this article is that if God is “three” and “one” at the same time (however this may be understood), then whosoever believes in this cannot be considered a monotheist. We begin, obviously, with the presupposition that God is one in his nature and essence (this word is complicated for the Christians if they view it from a Trinitarian perspective, we will explore this word in its original Greek below). The nature of God cannot be three or two or more than one, after all, if the nature of God is more than one, that means ther...