Consequences
of Pentecostalism
Oneness
Pentecostals affirm there is only one person of God, namely Jesus. They say
God has never been but one person, first manifest in creation as
“Father,” in redemption as “Son,” and by emanation or in the Church
as “Holy Ghost.” If that is true, there are several serious consequences
they face.
- While Jesus was on Earth, Heaven was Empty, if the Son and the Father
are one person.
- If Jesus Christ and the Father are the same person, then when the Jews
killed Christ they killed God the Father and for three days there WAS no
living God. Therefore, God was not in heaven, and after his death he was
not on earth for three days.
- Peter declares that God the Father raised Jesus from the dead (Acts
2:24) -- how could it be, if Jesus and the Father are the same person?
The Father would have been as dead as the Son if they are the same
person.
- If Jesus and the Father are the same person, then when Jesus
intercedes at right hand of God the Father for us he is merely talking
to himself, Rom, 8:34.
- Christ was confessed as the Son of God and He said, “Flesh and blood
hath not-revealed it ... but my Father which is in heaven.” God was in
heaven; Christ was on earth. Christ says, I have a Father; the Oneness
Pentecostal says, No, no, no, ... you have no father. Which will you
believe., Christ or the Oneness Pentecostal?
- On the cross Jesus asked God to receive his spirit (Lk. 23:46). How
could he do it if the Son and the Father are the same person. If one was
dead on the cross, both were dead on the cross and one could not receive
the spirit of the other. If they are the same person, that would
necessarily be true.
- When Stephen was martyred., he saw Jesus standing on the right hand of
God (Acts 7-55) which could not be true, if Jesus and the Father are one
person.
- Paul declares that Christ will deliver the kingdom to God (1 Cor,
15:24). Will he just deliver the kingdom to himself? This is the
ridiculous conclusion if Jesus and Father are same person.
- The Apostle said that God called (named) Jesus “Son” (Heb. 1:5).
Did Jesus’ name himself “Son?” This would be true if Jesus and the
Father are one person.
- Hebrews says Jesus entered heaven to appear in the presence of God for
us (Heb. 9:24). Did he merely appear in his own presence?
- The Oneness Pentecostal says that because Jesus said he was in the
Father and the Father was in Him (Jn. 10:38; 14:10) that makes them one
person. Then because the New Testament says we are in Christ (Gal.
3:27), it would mean that we are Christ, and when it says that the
church “in God”(1 Thes. 1:1), it would mean that we, the church, are
God. Notice: the Oneness Pentecostal deifies man and makes Christ a mere
man.
- Jesus said that the Father is “greater” than he (John 14:28). How
could that be true, if they are one person?
- The sin against the Holy Spirit (Mt. 12) would be more grievous than
for the Jews to have sinned against the Father or the Son. Why? If the
three are one person?
- Of the Son, God said, God, thy God hath anointed thee with the oil of
gladness above thy fellows (Heb. 1:8-9). How could this be if the Father
and Son are the same person? Does God anoint himself above his fellows?
We challenge any reputable representative of the Oneness Pentecostal
persuasion to respond to these consequences and show they are not valid. We
believe God, in three separate and distinct personalities make up what the
Bible calls the Godhead.
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