Trinity
The Godhead |
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God the Father God the Son God the Holy Spirit |
Although it is never made explicit in the Bible, the concept of the Trinity is embraced by the Roman Catholic Church, the Orthodox Church, and nearly all Protestant denominations, and denied by all Unitarians. The name was coined by the Church Father Tertullian (145-220 AD). It is based on inferences from texts emphasizing the closeness of God-the-Father and Jesus (such as Rom. 8:31-34), the role of the Holy Ghost, and especially the baptismal formula in Matt. 28:19
- Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.[1]
Contents
Illustrations and analogies
A good illustration is H2O. It can take three forms: solid ice, liquid water, and clouds, steam, formless fog and invisible vapor, all of which are considered water.
Another excellent non-physical illustration is the mind, which has three distinct powers of memory, understanding and will, which are not the same thing but are the essential expressions of one mind.[2]
A good three-fold human analogy is someone who is inwardly a healthy and intelligent individual, good, honest and truthful—someone who is outwardly modestly decent in dress, speech and actions, always kindly, generous, willing to help, and skillful in defending truth and right with wisdom, expressing good character—someone who with good reason is spiritually delighted and pleased with both the self-knowledge of true personal goodness and the personally reassuring, consistent, successfully genuine self-expression of goodness in being an actual benefit to everyone else in the whole community. We have the inner being, the outer expression, and a richly personal self-delight in both, as one well-balanced healthy individual.
In the same way, God exists as the three distinct but united whole persons of one divine being, utterly unique[3]. God is the Uncreated Holy Good[4], the Perfect, All-powerful, Eternal One, fully Self-expressing and Self-expressed with Loving Self-knowledge, totally Complete, limitlessly expressing the limitless expression of limitless self-giving loving Being. "God is love" 1 John 4:8b.
Filioque controversy
One of the causes of the Great East-West Schism of 1054 between the Catholic orthodox Church and the Orthodox catholic Church was the addition of the filioque clause "and the Son" to the Nicene Creed. This clause asserts that the Holy Spirit proceeds "from the Father and the Son".
See the Conservapedia article Filioque and the OrthodoxWiki article: Filioque.
Denials
The Arians of the 4th century denied the Trinity. They were condemned as heretics and they died out, but Arian ideas appeared in Europe after 1500. Isaac Newton was secretly an Arian. By the mid-18th century Unitarianism had emerged in England, and it spread to the U.S. by 1800. It dominated schools like Harvard by 1820.
In the 20th century Jehovah's Witnesses do not believe in the Trinity, and see it as contradicting the commandment to have no god but the one God.[5] Jehovah Witnesses disparage the Trinity by depicting it as a three-headed creature and claim the doctrine as a corrupt addition by Satan to Christianity. See Great Apostasy
Islam has falsely taught that the Trinity is Father, Son, and Mother (the Virgin Mary), and therefore represents the doctrine as promoting blasphemous idolatry.
Trinity Sunday
The Trinity is remembered in worship in liturgical churches each year on Trinity Sunday, the Sunday after Pentecost. In 2013, this will be May 26.
See also
- Arianism
- In the midst of a Maelstrom: the Holy Spirit and silence: an essay
- Johannine Comma, rejected text of John
- Seven Spirits of God
References
- ↑ The word "name" in this passage is singular. The plural word "names" is not said. Semitic peoples understood the name of something or someone was not merely a label, a sound, but the very nature of the subject as the referent. God is Trinity, but God's nature is unity, having one name, one nature.
- ↑ We can remember something we do not understand; we can understand something new which is not something we remember; and we can will to do something which does not need to be understood, which we have never done before.
- ↑ "unique" means the only one, one-of-a-kind. See Isaiah 45:21 and Isaiah 45:22
- ↑ The word "good" was originally the Old English and Middle English word "God".
- ↑ Watchtower, July 2008
External links
100 Bible verses about Trinity (openbible.info)
The Doctrine of the Trinity (A Brief Overview), by Kermit Zorley (21stcr.org) pdf
A Brief Declaration and Vindication of the Doctrine of the Trinity, by John Owen (ntslibrary.com) pdf
Reflections on the Doctrine of the Trinity, Raoul Dederen (adventistbiblicalresearch.org) pdf
Further reading
- Joyce, George. "The Blessed Trinity." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 15. (1912) online edition
- Kirn, O. "Trinity, Doctrine of the" in New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge (1911), Vol. 12: pp18-22, Protestant interpretation
- Slovan, Gerald S. The Three Persons in One God (1964) scholarly study online edition