There is no Trinity. Jesus was clear, he is NOT his father.
Depends on which gospel you refer to. According to John he was, according to Mark he wasn't. Matthew and Luke depict Him as slightly more divine but not nearly as much as John. In John, the author starts to establish Jesus and God as one right from the very beginning
The gospels cover different angles. Their focus varies. Son of Man, Son of God, I AM.
Well kind of yes, but if you look at the depiction of Jesus in the order in which they were written you will notice that the divinity of Jesus increases over time. For example, in the Epistles of Paul Jesus is simply portrayed as the "first fruits". That's a thread unto itself, but just take it and run for now. Later in Mark, the author goes to some extreme measures to differentiate between insiders and outsiders. Insiders refer to Jesus as "teacher" while outsiders don't use a title at all or refer to Him as...oh....what would be a good translation? "Sir" maybe...kinda sorta. There's not a great English translation.
Later in Matthew everyone refers to Jesus as "teacher" whether they are insiders or outsiders. But Matthew takes great pains to establish Jesus as the new authority of God, not necessarily God Himself. In Matthew, Jesus is kind of a "new Moses" who is bringing a new covenant for mankind. He does have some divine suggestion as the Son of Man but he is not God Himself. In Luke, Jesus is often referred to as "teacher" but the Greek word used is a very specific kind of teacher. It refers specifically to a teacher of philosophy so in Luke, Jesus is portrayed kind of like a "new Socrates". Again he has some divine elements as the Son of Man but He is still not quite God.
Now in John...oh it's right from the start. "
In the beginning....". The author quotes Genesis directly from the Septuagint. In the beginning the word was God,
in God was the light of mankind. John the Baptist came to testify to the divinity of the light. The light was Jesus. Hence Jesus
is God and was from the beginning of time. This is a very different depiction than Mark or the letters of Paul and it's no surprise (nor coincidence) that the depiction of Jesus' divinity increased over time.
Simple
BluePhantom
The Gentiles focus on Jesus as teaching natural justice under natural laws by example.
This is no more more less "divine" than the concept of Equal Justice which is faith-based.
The Believers under church law and authority recognize Jesus as representing God's divine justice and perfect will. And see a spiritual process of redemption, healing and reconciliation.
BOTH are going on, both are true, consistent and valid.
There is no either/or about it.
Both Jews and Gentiles are governed under the same Christ Jesus,
one see the spirit of the laws manifest as Restorative Justice fulfilling natural laws and joining man's laws with universal laws; the other sees the spirit of the laws manifest as Salvation and Healing Grace, Justice with Mercy,
and God's unconditional love joining the love of man with the love of God as one.
Again, both are valid. All of the above.
Only man's fear and selfish division over conflict makes these adverse to each other.
Church and State laws ideally agree, science and religion, faith and reason.
The truth encompasses and fulfills all these approaches without contradiction.
The fault lies with our own biases and perceptions causing projection and division.
The real universal truth, by definition, includes and explains all things without conflict or omission.