God has divine Kyana.
UNBELIEVERS have human Kyana.
Meshikha had both.
BELIEVERS have both also, according to 2 Peter 1:4 which says that WE are partakers and share fully of this divine nature. Isn't it called "the new man"? Isn't Meshikha the perfect mediator because he was tempted in all points as we are, and yet did not sin. Thus he can empathize with us. Isn't THAT what makes him the perfect mediator? Having divine kyana does not mean that he was incapable of disobedience. He still had to choose to follow one nature or the other, just like we do.
If having both Kyana made Jesus the perfect mediator BETWEEN God and men, how could he be God? What does BETWEEN mean? Doesn't it mean that something is on either side of him - ie. God and man?
Does having a divine kyana make Meshika God? ...No, otherwise we would be God as well, since we as born-again believers have the divine nature also.
Not all humans have divine kyana - only those who are born-again. The Bible calls those who are not born-again, "natural men" (1Cor.2:14).
An unbeliever is body and soul. A person who is born-again has received the gift of holy spirit, and is now body, soul, and spirit. It is the presence of holy spirit that gives us our divine kyana, or nature - ie. the new man. Body soul and spirit cannot be separated from the understanding of kyana, qnoma and parsopa. Somehow one is a characteristic of the other - ie. parsopa, in a manner of speaking (figurative).
Is this not correct?
Agape,
Don
VVVVV