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Is The Trinity
Truth Or A Just A False Tradition?

Great
indeed, we confess, is the mystery of godliness:
He was manifested in the flesh, vindicated by the Spirit, seen by angels,
proclaimed among the nations, believed on in the world, taken up in glory.
1Timothy 3:16
There is no greater
mystery than God. And perhaps there is no
greater quest than to answer the question who
is God? as truthfully as possible. When
the identity of God is discussed there are
a wide range of ideas put forward. Some have
gained acceptance and formed the basis for
the world's religions. For those who have
realised that God must have an identity they
conclude that He must be a person. This is
called theism- or more precisely, monotheism.
Judaism, Islam, and Christianity are three
great monotheistic religions of the world.
But Christianity is further distinguished
from these other monotheistic religions by
identifying God as Father, Son and Holy
Spirit.

The reason for
this is the clear presentation in Scripture
of God's identity by these three terms. For
example-
The
God of our fathers raised Jesus, whom
you killed by hanging him on a tree.
God exalted him at his right hand as
Leader and Savior, to give repentance
to Israel and forgiveness of sins. And
we are witnesses to these things, and
so is the Holy Spirit, whom God has given
to those who obey him."
Acts 5:30-32 ESV
For
there are three that bear witness in heaven:
the Father, the Word, and the Holy Spirit;
and these three are one.
1John 5:7 NKJV
But
the mystery of the Scripture's presentation
of God as the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit,
is that it in no way diminishes the emphatic
declaration of "one God"-
For
although there may be so-called gods
in heaven or on earth—as indeed
there are many “gods” and
many “lords”— yet for
us there is one God, the
Father, from whom are all things and
for whom we exist, and one Lord, Jesus
Christ, through whom are all things
and through whom we exist.
1Cor. 8:5-6 ESV
We
refer to the Scripture's presentation of
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, as the "Trinity".
Some have argued that this is a false conclusion
about the identity of God. Some of these
opponents of the Trinitarian concept of God
claim that God is a singular Person. This
is called "Unitarianism". One of the main
reasons for rejecting Unitarianism is that
it presents us with a major contradiction
about the Supreme Being. Since God is Supreme
He can not change- either in nature or character
(since this would bring into question whether
He has improved- then
He was never 'supreme'-
or diminished- maybe
He is no longer supreme?).
The unchangeable nature of God is called
immutability.
“For
I the LORD do not change..."
Malachi 3:6a
ESV
Since God is eternal
(always been) and immutable (unchanging)
it is just not possible for Him to be the
"Eternal Father" if there was ever a time
when He was not a Father. Likewise it is
not possible for God to have been indifferent
then to have become loving. This is the logical
equation of saying that God was a singular
being who originally dwelt alone. Genuine
love is only possible when there is an object
of love. To argue that God has always loved
even though He had no-one to love is to either
suggest that He was self-obsessed, or that
He needed to
create an object of love due to His desperate
loneliness. Both of these proposals are obnoxious
and impugn the nature and character of God.

.
When
we refer to God as Father, Son and
Holy Spirit, we use the term "Trinity" which
identifies them as three co-equal,
co-eternal, immutable persons, who
are one.
.
"Hear,
O Israel: The LORD our God, the LORD is one."
Deut. 6:4 ESV
We do
not claim that God is Three Gods. That is
not the Trinity. We worship One God. The
Hebrew word in Deuteronomy 6:4 for "one"
is echad. It can mean first, a unit,
or most commonly united. It is different
to the more common Hebrew word for a singular
unit iysh. Deuteronomy 6:4 declares
that God is echad - "united" - and
that is exactly where the Biblical revelation
of the Trinity begins: the Father, Son and
Holy Spirit are one God, not three.
This is monotheism. There are clues to understanding
this one-ness of God when the Scriptures
give us 'shadows' of God, such as marriage,
where a husband and his wife are referred
to as being "one". We refer to this as a
"shadow" because it is not the exact likeness
of what it illustrates (in much the same
way as a shadow is similar to, but not exactly
like, the object it shadows).
We also
get another picture of "one" from Christ's
statement in John 17-
[I pray] that they
may all be one, just as you, Father,
are in me, and I in you, that they also
may be in us, so that the world may believe
that you have sent me. The glory that
you have given me I have given to them,
that they may be one even as we are one,
John 17:21-22

The Father,
Son and Holy Spirit are eternal. Again, we
have no parallel, or even a shadow to compare
this concept to. The closest we can get to
defining 'eternal' is to say that something
had no beginning and will have no end. But
even this definition still attempts to describe
'eternal' in terms of time. And that's what
makes the no beginning and no end definition
so inadequate- since the very point of 'eternal'
is that it is not subject to any
form of time lapse (making such expressions
as beginning and end not
only irrelevant terms but absolutely foreign
concepts).
The Biblical
concepts for eternity include God's statement
to Moses that He was the "I AM" and that
He alone dwells in "today" or "now". Not
one of us live in the "now". We are either
going to do something (future),
or we have done something (past). Even if
we ask someone what they are doing "now"
they can never tell us because the moment
they tell us what they are currently doing
it is already in the past! Only God is constantly
in a state of "now" because only He is eternal.

When
Constantine converted to Christianity he
declared himself the Pontifex Maximus of
the Church. He called for a Council of Bishops
to come to Nicea to resolve the divisive
doctrine invented by Arius that Christ was
a created being and therefore the Trinity
was not a Biblical concept. It was Athanasius
(depicted above) who swayed the debate in
favour of accepting Christ's claims of divinity
and the Biblical presentation of the Tri-une
God. He argued that if it could be shown
that God the Father was eternal, then He must have
an eternal Son. Similarly, if Christ is eternal,
then He must be the eternal God. This is
what they conferred-
We believe
in one God, the Father, the Almighty,
maker of heaven and earth, of all that
is, seen and unseen.
We believe in one Lord, Jesus Christ, the
only Son of God, eternally begotten of the
Father, God from God, light from light, True
God from true God, Begotten, not made, Of
one Being with the Father;
Through him all things were made. For us
and for our salvation He came down from heaven,
was incarnate of the Holy Spirit and the
Virgin Mary and became truly human.
For our sake he was crucified under Pontius
Pilate; He suffered death and was buried.
On the third day he rose again in accordance
with the Scriptures;
He ascended into heaven and is seated at
the right hand of the Father.
He will come again in glory to judge
the living and the dead, and his
kingdom will have no end.
We believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord,
the giver of life, who proceeds from the
Father [and the Son],
Who with the Father and the Son is worshiped
and glorified, who has spoken through the
prophets.
We believe in one holy catholic and apostolic
Church.
We acknowledge one baptism for the forgiveness
of sins. We look for the resurrection of
the dead,
and the life of the world to come. Amen.
The Father,
Son and Holy Spirit are equal. This does
not mean that that they are a triumvirate
(the rule of three), but God is instead,
a Trinity (the rule of one). The Father,
the Son and the Holy Spirit equally deserved
to be honoured and worshiped. This is what
Christ taught-
that
all may honor the Son, just as they honor
the Father. Whoever does not honor the Son
does not honor the Father who sent him.
John 5:23
but
whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit
never has forgiveness, but is guilty of an
eternal sin”—
Mark 3:29

While each member of the Trinity
or the Biblical word: Godhead (Romans
1:20; Col. 2:9) [note Strong's Concordance
#2305, Greek: theiotes;
divinity — "Godhead"] are equal, there
is still order within that equality. This
is something that we often struggle to understand.
How can there be rank and order among persons
who are equal? The Scriptures present God
the Father, Son and Holy Spirit as equal
yet in that order. We have such a paltry
concept of "order" that we find such concepts
of submission and hetero-authority among
equals as inconceivable. That's why we need
to understand that "equal" does not mean
"the same" in all respects (especially in
role and authority). The Biblical presentation
of equality is that a husband and wife are
equal, while not being the same. In one respect
a cup of sugar is equal to a cup of flour,
but in another respect they are different.
Because Christ submits to His Father does
not mean that He is less than, or inferior
to, His Father.
For I have come down
from heaven, not to do my own will but the
will of him who sent me.
John 6:38
And
being found in human form, he humbled himself
by becoming obedient to the point of death,
even death on a cross.
Phil. 2:8
He
had equal status with God but didn’t
think so much of himself that he had to cling
to the advantages of that status no matter
what. Not at all. When the time came,
he set aside the privileges of deity and
took on the status of a slave, became human!
Phil. 2:6-7 THE MESSAGE
The
Trinity is sometimes presented as the One
divine Person who has either simultaneously
or progressively revealed Himself as Father,
then the Son and then the Holy Spirit. This
is variously referred to as "One-ness", "Unitarianism",
or "Modalism". In essence it says that the
one God has manifested Himself in three ways-
or that God is as three. But the
Bible presents God as Father, Son and Holy
Spirit who are eternally in communion with
each other which is revealed by their simultaneous
appearances and conversations. For example,
in the act of forming the earth it says that
God [the Father] created the Heavens and
the Earth in the beginning (Gen. 1:1) and
that the Spirit of God [the Holy Spirit]
was hovering over the surface of the waters
(Gen. 1:3). In Genesis 1:4 it says that God
spoke "Let there be light." The New Testament
reveals that this was Christ.
Christ
is the one through whom God created everything
in heaven and earth. He made the things
we can see and the things we can’t see—kings,
kingdoms, rulers, and authorities. Everything
has been created through him and for him.
Colossians 1:16
NLT
Therefore, we see the simultaneous
involvement of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit
in Creation. We also read of the members
of the Godhead in Isaiah 48:16-
Draw
near to Me [Christ], hear this:
from the beginning I have not spoken in secret,
from the time it came to be I have been there.”
And now the Lord GOD [the Father] has sent me, and his Spirit [the Holy Spirit].
Isa. 48:16 ESV

Some say that while all this
may be interesting, it cannot be true because
God cannot die. Since the doctrine of the
Trinity states that Christ is the co-equal,
co-eternal God, how could He die? After all,
wouldn't that immediately disqualify Him
from being God? This type of reasoning is
grounded in a faulty understanding of death.
For many, "death" means ceasing to exist.
But Biblically it refers to "separation"
between a body and its life-source.
For as the body
apart from the spirit is dead, so also faith
apart from works is dead.
James 2:26
While the eternal Son of God
is in eternal communion with His Father when
He entered into this dimension of time by
incarnation He also became subject to all
of the limitations associated with His humanity
(for example, He could "thirst", "grow older",
"get weary", and "hunger"). When Christ died
on the Cross He did not cease to exist. He
was simply separated from His body. In this
death He became the object of the wrath of
God in our place-
He was handed over
to die because of our sins, and he was raised
from the dead to make us right with God.
Rom. 4:25
For
our sake he made him to be sin who knew no
sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness
of God.
2Cor. 5:21 ESV
Because of Christ's death on
the Cross and His resurrection from the dead
(reunion with His body) we now know that
the highest possible price for our redemption
has been paid. Therefore the death of Christ
on the Cross is not an argument against the
Trinity but an argument for it.
We see several pictures of
the Trinity within Scripture. For example,
* At the baptism of Christ
the Father spoke from Heaven and the
Holy Spirit descended upon Christ.

* In Revelation 5 we are
given a brief glimpse of the centre
of Heaven
where we see the Glorious Father on
the Throne, the Majestic Holy Spirit
portrayed as the Seven Flaming Spirits
of God and the Son of God portrayed as
the Seven Eyed and Horned Lamb.

THE
IMPLICATIONS OF GRASPING THE TRINITY...
When
we appreciate that God is Father, Son and
Holy Spirit who are each co-equal and co-eternal,
we will realise that God has always lived
in community. Since we are created in the
image of God this explains why we are generally
drawn toward community as well. It should
also help us to appreciate that God wants
us to be in community and not to attempt
life as an independent venture. At the
very least we need to live in communion
with God.
The
doctrine of the Trinity is the only satisfactory
theological reason for explaining why Creation
reflects both diversity and unity. It is
in essence reflecting the nature of its
Creator. If God was monolithic (one Person)
rather than the (monotheistic) Trinity
then creation would more likely reflect
a monotone than the actual harmony which
we see.
But
the ultimate implication of understanding
the Trinity involves our worship. We are
called to worship God in Spirit and in Truth.
We are able to worship the True God accurately
because we are more accurately able to
identify Him. Worship is really the ultimate
response and purpose of mankind toward
God. This response is diminished if we
don't truly know who we are worshiping.
We acknowledge that the Father is God,
Jesus Christ is God and the Holy is God,
yet they are One God.
The
grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the
love of God and the fellowship of the Holy
Spirit be with you all.
2Corinthians
13:14

[Listen to this or download
the MP3]
Andrew
Corbett, January 2006
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