Do you consider the incarnation a change, if not in substance, at least in form? Yes
Has God always been a man? No
Was God ever a man? Yes
Is God still a man today? Partially, yes
Did God really die on the cross? Yes, God the Son did.
Does Jesus have a glorified physical body today? Yes
Has He ever had one? Yes
Has He always had one? No
I CANNOT BELIEVE THIS POST!!!!
I mean wow! If everyone on this site answered genuine questions with genuine answers like this - holy cow!
I still consider God to be immutable.
Why?
I understand that you sort of answered this at the end of your post but I was hoping you could elaborate on just why it is you hold to such a doctrine in light of the answers you gave to my questions.
Has the Father ever Changed?
Well this is an interesting question. The simplest answer is, yes He has. That is assuming we are still implying the existence of the phrase "in any way whatsoever" at the end of that question.
There are two senses in which the answer is yes.
The first is that the bible, the book of Genesis in particular, is full of examples of God doing all sorts of things that He had never done before, changing His mind, being pleased then angry, etc.
The second, and I think more important sense in which the answer is yes is that we only worship one God. The Trinity is made up of three distinct persons but they are not separate from one another in the same sense that you are separate from your parents, for example. The Bible is not clear on just how that works. There is clearly missing information in regards to the exact nature of the Trinity but what is clear is there is only one God and Jesus is that God.
Further, even if we wanted to ignore the doctrine of the Trinity for the sake of argument, I think that God the Son dying implies a change in God the Father because up till that death took place, God the Father and God the Son had never been apart. But we read in the Gospels that the Father forsook Jesus when the sin of the world has been laid upon Him. Thus God the Son was separated from the Father. This is what it means to die, by the way. When your spirit separates from your body, that's physical death. When your spirit is separated from God that's spiritual death. Thus Jesus died in every sense of the word. So, I'd call that a change of colossal importance in both the Son and the Father, wouldn't you?
Should the God-Man Jesus be placed in the same category?
If He isn't in the same category then His death was in vain. Its precisely because it was God who was being sacrificed that make His death sufficient to pay the sin debt of the entire world.
If you do not believe God to be immutable is there not contradictions in the scriptures. Just curious. For me there are not.
What do you mean "For me there are not."? There either is or there isn't, right?
And no, there isn't any contradiction whatsoever because the Bible does not teach the Classical understanding of Divine Immutability. God doesn't change in His righteousness and wisdom, which is to say that God's character does not change. He is the same person today as He has always been. He always has been righteous, wise, just, loving, personal and kind and He always will be.
The idea that God cannot change at all in any way whatsoever comes straight out of the mouth of Aristotle not the Bible. The argument is called the argument from perfection. God is perfect thus no change could improve Him and being perfect He cannot change for the worse. God therefore cannot change. That's the whole argument! And no such argument exists in Scripture at all. The assumption is that there is no such thing as a change that is neutral in respect to "perfection" nor is there ever any effort to define what is meant by "perfect". More importantly, the very same argument made by any famous Calvinist you care to name, including Calvin himself, is a near verbatim quote of the argument made by Aristotle, a pagan Greek philosopher.
Resting in Him,
Clete