(It also happened to be my last post at another christian site. I found myself banned a short while after starting the thread. (The reason given for my banning was that I was being hostile to christianity.)
Anyway...
I am, using a christian site...as the foundation of this topic :
http://www.gotquestions.org/council-of-Nicea.html
(Please go through their statement of faith here : http://www.gotquestions.org/faith.html)
Here, we understand that Early Christians were debating on various issues that involved the nature of Jesus. (Ref : Points in bold)The main theological issue and focus had always been about Christ. Since the end of the Apostolic Age and beginning of the Church Age, saints began questioning, debating, fighting, and separating over the question,
“Who is the Christ?� Is He more divine than human or more human than divine? Was Jesus created / made or begotten? Being the Son of God, is He co-equal and co-eternal with Father God, or less and lower in status than the Father? Is the Father the One and only True God, or are the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit the One true God? “True God of True God,� “One Being, Three Persons�, a tri-unity called “Trinity�? Jesus said, “Who do you say that I am?� (Matthew 16:15).]
Here we understand that crucial issues in Christian theology was settled on a vote.Once the Nicea Council meeting was underway Constantine demanded that the 300 bishops make a decision by majority vote defining who Jesus Christ is. Constantine commanded them to create a “creed� doctrine that all of Christianity would follow and obey, a doctrine that would be called the “Nicene Creed,� upheld by the Church and enforced by the Emperor.
This site goes on to say that "the Council of Nicea did not invent these doctrines. Rather, it only recognized what the Bible taught, and systematized the doctrines."... but this is highly debatable as there were Christians (who read from the same scriptures) but did not believe in concepts such as the trinity and had a different understanding of the nature of Jesus.
Look up : Arianism
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arianism
Points for discussion (for trinitarian christians only)
The Arian concept of Christ is that the Son of God did not always exist, but was created by—and is therefore distinct from and inferior to—God the Father. This belief is grounded in John 14:28 "Ye have heard how I said unto you, I go away, and come again unto you. If ye loved me, ye would rejoice, because I said, I go unto the Father: for my Father is greater than I.
1. How do you percieve this event : that a mere vote by 300 men, none of who were prophets or apostles, under the command of a pagan emperor settled on crucial issues basis a mere vote. How confident are you that these people voted right... and why?
2. Does it ever bother you that Constantine was not yet baptized when he, at the Council of Nicea, "settled" matters on theological issues? (And was also part of a pagan cult called Sol Invictus.)
3. Also, how do you deal with the fact that the first christian emperor, Constantine happened to be part of a pagan cult called "Sol Invictus".
4. On a more personal note, had the Councils vote ended differently, say, they decided that the trinity was unbiblical, would it have changed any of your beliefs? If not... why?
Please address these 4 points.
NOTE : We are mostly discussing pure history here.... in regard to the formation of modern day Christian doctrine. Try and keep your replies as objective as possibles.