No, Patripassianism would only hold if dying in the game means you die in real life.
As a simulated Avatar of God, Jesus was one with God in the spiritual sense but wholly separated in the physical sense.
Jesus pleading to God at the Mount of Olives was canonically a cut scene that broke the fourth wall. This was even more ironic, because God was also the Lead Dev on the game, meaning that Jesus was both literally and figuratively talking to himself despite being a distinct entity from his audience.
Thus it is that only a True Gamer can comprehend the most sacred mystery of faith.
Christ has died. Christ is risen. Christ will come again.
No, Patripassianism would only hold if dying in the game means you die in real life.
As a simulated Avatar of God, Jesus was one with God in the spiritual sense but wholly separated in the physical sense.
Jesus pleading to God at the Mount of Olives was canonically a cut scene that broke the fourth wall. This was even more ironic, because God was also the Lead Dev on the game, meaning that Jesus was both literally and figuratively talking to himself despite being a distinct entity from his audience.
Thus it is that only a True Gamer can comprehend the most sacred mystery of faith.
Christ has died. Christ is risen. Christ will come again.
It was right there!
I'm so sorry. :gamer-gulag: