Because we have the canon - there is nothing missing. Remember we are discussing is the teaching biblical (found in the Bible) As demonstrated numerous times - it is not there
Not at all the Tri union of the Godhead is found numerous places in both the Old and New Testaments.
Purgatory is not,
I've already answered - even asked a question from Scripture as part of my response -
So would I - you have not answered the question I posed when I responded to you as referenced above.
Your last post does not contain a question to me and to my knowledge I have answered every question you have posed. So direct me to a question that I have no answered.
You need to point out to me exactly where you answered my question -- What does being saved
only as through fire mean to you? You said it means they are "saved". You have never addressed the bolded -- what does it mean when it says we will be saved
only as through fire. What does the reference to "fire" mean? And why is it written in a future tense at the time of our judgment?
Also you haven't answered this one -- at the moment of every believer’s death do you believe they are perfect, completely sanctified with no attachment to sin?
The Trinity can most certainly be found
conceptually in Scripture. But there is no direct and specific statement that there are 3 distinct persons in one God. That is why you have non-Trinitarian Christians who express their belief to be the Biblical one.
And Purgatory can most certainly be
conceptually found in Scripture. Let me recap for you:
1) Just become someone becomes saved, it does not mean they are immediately sanctified. Scripture is quite clear that God will discipline us as sons in order to bring us to holiness (
Hebrews 12:4-14)
2)
We will not see God until we have reached that level of perfected holiness (
Hebrews 12:4,
23)
3) There is nothing in Scripture that indicates that all believers will have reached that state of perfection by the time they die.
4) There is nothing in Scripture that says that once we’re judged our entry into heaven will immediately follow that judgement regardless of the state Christ finds our soul.
In fact, it says quite the opposite. Anything he finds that needs to be burned off before we enter heaven, he will. That is why even when referring to our judgment Paul writes that if any of our work is burned up, we
“will suffer loss, though he himself will be saved, but only as through fire” (
1 Corinthians 3:15).
“Will be saved.” In the future. When Christ is finished removing all that does not belong in heaven.