I have had interactions with a man named Kevin in the distant past. We've emailed, met each other at a camp meeting, and walked for less than an hour one morning to talk about the Bible... but I wouldn't consider him a 'friend' as he has represented me in a video. His wife and I had met through email (I didn't know they were married, neither did I know her name), and as a result of those emails, she felt like we too were friends.
Well, I was asked about a video I had posted online, so I interacted a bit with Kevin (not remembering our previous interactions, years ago). He was nice, so I responded positively when asked to be on his online show. He wanted me to present responses to his questions that were backed by the pioneers of the Seventh-day Adventist church. I declined that request, making it known that I'd much rather use the Bible, as I don't have a collection of all of what the pioneers believed on every subject. Too, I don't follow them necessarily, I'd rather bring people to the Bible.
Kevin wasn't willing to use the Bible, as I would say something about God or His Son, then he would have to refute what I said using his Bible, and it would just not work well... So his suggestion was I could be interviewed, then he would "need to be able to share with [his] audience why we believe you to be mistaken."
Again, I declined. In response I sent him the "50 Questions About the Trinity" in the Bible, and he later sent me a link where he had gone over the first five of the questions to help me understand the error of my thinking.
Would you like to see his response? The link is following, but I need your help. Please answer this question:
~ Should I post this video, as it is, on my YouTube channel--with my brief intro before this video starts--allowing people to be able to see for themselves what a dedicated trinitarian would say to these questions about the trinity?
This video is not yet public, but it is on my channel and may be made public in response to your responses. Please let me know what you think:
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