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Inspiring Philosophy Academy

69 members • $25/month

5 contributions to Inspiring Philosophy Academy
I need a couple 2 cents 🤣😅
Hey yall, I’m in the process to get baptized but, it’s been halted. Reason why is I think the reverend who was gonna do it has some… heretical theological views. Like really bad ones lowkey… It brought up the thought that, if the person who baptizes you is heretical does it still count 😅😅? But also one of her views makes me question if she is only into Christianity. So I’ve decided, after some good council from @Ruth Okezie , to not get baptized by her and wait for another time. The things I need help on are: Should I stay at the church under her leadership? And On my next session with her should I pushback on her theology? (Due to the differences in demographics between me and her I don’t think it will be taken well and I feel it in me it will actually upset/annoy her if I do.) Thanks yall for even reading look forward to y’all’s council! List of her Heresies: •She said that consensual sex is the main only point being made in the Bible when sexuality is a topic. •She stated she was an LGBTQ+ affirming Christian. •She called The Holy Spirit They/Them, She, He. •She said that if I was into Ancestors then getting baptized on All Hallow’s Eve is perfect for me. This is an Episcopal Church.
1 like • 4d
I would definitely find another church, one that is faithful to the scriptures. Whether you challenge her on these views is up to you, but I do not think staying is an option given how you've described it.
2 likes • 4d
Absolutely. I do not think it would be wise to sit under a false teacher for the sake of having a church to attend. Scripture strongly condemns these types As for finding a church. I would obviously pray about that. Maybe in the meantime, find a good, online church community if that is all that is available. Just my 2 cents. Galatians 1:8:-9 - But even if we or an angel from heaven should preach to you a gospel contrary to the one we preached to you, let him be accursed. As we have said before, so now I say again: If anyone is preaching to you a gospel contrary to the one you received, let him be accursed. Romans 16:17-18: I appeal to you, brothers, to watch out for those who cause divisions and create obstacles contrary to the doctrine that you have been taught; avoid them. For such persons do not serve our Lord Christ, but their own appetites, and by smooth talk and flattery they deceive the hearts of the naive.
How Many Gods Died on the Cross?
Let’s say a Muslim asks “how many gods died on the cross?” It seems like every obvious answer seems to land you in heresy: Say “one” and it sounds like you’re either claiming the Father suffered (patripassianism) or that there are multiple gods and one of them died (tritheism). Say “zero” and you’ve denied that God truly died for humanity. Say “the Trinity died” and you’ve collapsed the distinction between the persons. The model of Conciliar Trinitarianism dissolves the puzzle through a careful equivocation on the word “God.” Predicatively, “God” works like a descriptor, it applies to anything that exemplifies the divine nature. In this sense, the Father, the Son, and the Spirit are each “God,” because each exemplifies the one divinity-attribute. Nominally, “God” works as a proper name, and it refers to one entity alone: the Father, who is the unsourced source of the Son and the Spirit. There is exactly one “God” in this sense. With this distinction in hand, the crucifixion question splits in two: Nominally: zero gods died. The one God, the Father, did not suffer or die. Patripassianism is avoided. Predicatively: one entity that is “God” died. The Son, who genuinely exemplifies divinity, truly died on the cross. The reality of the incarnation and atonement is preserved. Without the equivocation, you’re trapped. Univocal use of “God” forces you to either deny the Son’s death, implicate the Father in suffering, or count multiple gods. The two-sense distinction lets you affirm what orthodoxy requires: the one God (the Father) did not die, and God (the Son, predicatively) genuinely did. This way, monotheism stays intact and the persons stay distinct. Thus, the Christian is not forced to take on unwanted consequences.
1 like • 9d
And we would not say there are 3 Gods by predication because all 3 persons have the 1 instance (or I guess "trope") of divinity correct?
⚠️ Get ready…
Dropping this for everyone: The One & the Three, a concise handbook on Conciliar Trinitarianism based on the lecture Joshua Sijuwade gave to us last week. This walks through ancient Jewish monotheism, the fourth-century conciliar debates, grounding, aspects, divine identity, and the aspectival model of the Trinity. The goal is to clarify what the doctrine actually says, cut through common caricatures, and show how Christians can coherently affirm one God, the Father, with the Son and Spirit as relationally distinct divine persons who share the same divinity.
⚠️ Get ready…
1 like • 13d
So in section 5.2, would we say that there is one act of knowledge, multiply located in 3 first-person perspectives? Or maybe the same act of knowledge is multiply accessible in 3 first-person perspectives? Trying to make sense of how there can be 3 uses of "I" without it being unique knowledge.
Why not? Let’s tackle a viral Muslim objection.
I’ve noticed that Muslims are going around with a silly objection lately. But sadly, it’s trapping a lot of Christians. I’ll share the objection here in hopes that we can workshop how to exegete the solution the VERY manufactured problem. The objection: Jesus says He will not drink of the “fruit of the vine” until the eschaton, but then later drinks wine. Matthew 26:29 “I tell you, I will not drink again of this fruit of the vine until that day when I drink it new with you in my Father’s kingdom.” John 19:28–30 Jesus, on the cross, is given sour wine, which he tastes/drinks. The basic inference line 1. If Jesus vows to not do X, and then later does X, then he broke his vow 2. Jesus vows to not drink the fruit of the vine (Matthew verse) 3. Jesus drinks sour wine which is from grapes still (John) 4. Therefore Jesus broke his Vow Looking forward to your thoughts guys!
1 like • 16d
I think the "fruit of the vine" in this context specifically refers to wine drank to represent the blood of the covenant, not just any old wine. So, Jesus is saying he won't partake of drinking wine in that context with the disciples until the eschaton (if I used that word correctly).
⚠️NEW MEMBERS START HERE!
STEP 1: Download the Skool App and turn on notifications. STEP 2: Comment below on this post with the following: - Who are you, and where are you from? - What is your current role or interest in apologetics? - What do you hope to achieve as a member of this community? STEP 3: Attend the weekly live mentorship calls hosted by me or a scholar/specialist! Check the calendar for the call schedule. During these calls, you can ask questions to support your journey in building a strong and confident worldview. Missed a live session? No worries—recordings will be available within 48 hours! Please remember to follow the community rules and guidelines to keep this space positive and productive. Violators will be removed. If you have any questions, feel free to DM me.
3 likes • 17d
Hi I'm Robert Anderson. I'm an engineer from Georgia, USA. I have been getting into online apologetics, specifically with Islam, and heard Than from IP mention your course recently on a youtube where y'all debated Mohammad Hijab. I've been doing a lot of learning and have a small little tik tok (roboftheway) where I go on Muslim live streams (not enough followers or experience to host my own lives yet). But eventually, I'd like to be skilled and competent enough to host live streams and spread the gospel that way. I guess this is more of a philosophy course, which is good because I want to be able to defend the Trinity in a coherent way. I've heard Sijuwadee's view along with relative identity views. So would like to master those views.
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Robert Anderson
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@robert-anderson-7575
Hey everyone. Georgia boy with a passion for apologetics

Active 3d ago
Joined Apr 23, 2026
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