Oh, logos1560, why do you continue to pursue Steven Avery? Let us examine your statement carefully:

"Does Steven Avery 100% unequivocally and definitely assert that the Lord Jesus Christ is God who became flesh and thus was GOD manifest in the flesh"

Do you not see that a modalist could accept this statement as well? See, it is not enough to ask Steven Avery these questions. You are attempting to bind him with simple statements which give no answer to the lifelong debate of modalism versus polytheism.

"or does he assert that Jesus Christ was a person less than God but who manifested or revealed God?"

Well, at this point I cannot speak for Steven Avery, but I will chime in anyways. First Jesus was indeed a person because He was after all, "God manifest in the flesh." You accept that reading as is from the KJV or NKJV, right? Furthermore, what do you mean exactly by "less than God"? When you are saying "God" in that last clause, are you referring to the Father? You see, let us not forget that Jesus had a willful submission towards the Father. There is a very interesting relationship among Godhead that is fascinating. The Father, the Holy Ghost, and Jesus Christ are all eternal, and yet they are not 100% coequal (As people like James White asserts - to the Christian's detriment). Personally, I see the Trinity as 99% coequal, and I say that simply because defining "coequal" is a challenge. Are we to say then that because Jesus did the will of His Father that He is any less than the Father? Does that make Him any less than God? Well, yes and no. YOU would first need to clarify what you mean by "less than God". For all I know, you could be holding an anti-trinitarian view and suggesting that God transformed into Jesus, thereby suggesting that the "Father" was no longer to be found in Heaven when Jesus was born.. Really, I do not know what your statement even means. You will have to be specific.

Last Edited By: pianobomber Jun 9 12 9:47 AM. Edited 1 times.