IS THE TRINITY BIBLICAL?
Many Christians are happy to worship and follow Jesus as Lord and God without worrying about how He can be God. But others want to understand more about - and make sense of - what they believe. For some people, the fact that the word 'Trinity' does not occur in the Bible is a stumbling-block; does that mean that the doctrine is a human invention?
The first disciples came to a full understanding of who Jesus was only gradually. Trust in Jesus as Saviour and Lord came first; working out the details of His exact nature followed afterwards. The doctrine of the Trinity is not stated as such in Scripture; it is, rather, a summary of everything that the Bible has to say about the relationship between God the Father, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit.
GOD
There is only one God: this is absolutely fundamental.
Deuteronomy 6:4,5 (Judaism’s confession of faith) (but note that the Hebrew word ‘one’ does not denote a mathematical singularity – it is the same word used to describe the oneness of husband and wife in Genesis 2:24)
Deuteronomy 4:32-35
Isaiah 43:11
Isaiah 44:6
And this doesn’t change when we come to the New Testament:
I Corinthians 8:5,6
And yet, it can’t be quite as simple as that...
I John 4:8
Love does not exist on its own; it presupposes a relationship in which it can be expressed by one and received by another. So the expression ‘God is love’ has no meaning if God is a single, undifferentiated being.
JESUS
Although Jesus was obviously a man (He was born, grew up, ate, slept, felt pain, sadness and fear, was tempted, and finally died), it gradually became clear to His disciples that He was more than just a man.
He had power over sickness, demons and the forces of nature (e.g. Luke 8:22-56)
He claimed authority over divinely given laws and institutions like the Sabbath (Luke 6:5)
He forgave sins (Isaiah 43:25; Luke 5:18-25)
He claimed to be the final Judge of mankind (Psalm 9:7,8; Matthew 25:31,32)
He spoke of Himself in ways that were interpreted as claims to divinity (John 10:31-33)
He claimed to be the embodiment of the Father (John 14:7-10)
He accepted the worship of others (John 20:26-29)
Yet He was clearly separate from the Father to whom he prayed.
HOLY SPIRIT
In Biblical thought, the spirit of someone is indistinguishable from the person himself (e.g. II Samuel 13:39). See I Corinthians 2:11,12, I Corinthians 3:16
But the Holy Spirit is also a person in His own right. He makes decisions (I Corinthians 12:11) and He has emotions (Ephesians 4:30, Hebrews 10:29). He teaches, reminds and guides (John 14:26, 16:13).
THREE IN ONE
Deep-rooted in our culture (and even in some of the Christian creeds) is the old Greek idea (from Aristotle) that God consists of some kind of ‘single divine substance’. But in the Bible, nobody ever meets a ‘divine substance’ – they meet the Father, the Son or the Holy Spirit. Our God is “Father, Son and Holy Spirit, all loving each other.”
Let’s go back to the beginning of God’s revelation:
The Hebrew word for God (Elohim) is plural.
At the very beginning of Genesis, God, Word and Spirit are all involved in the Creation. (Genesis 1)
When man is made ‘in God’s image’ it is as male and female – different, but in relationship to each other.
When God visited Abraham, He appeared as three men. (Genesis 18)
In the Tabernacle (Exodus 25), God was represented by three pieces of furniture: the Ark of the Covenant, the Table for the consecrated bread (John 6:32-35) and the Lampstand (Revelation 4:5).
In the New Testament, Father, Son and Spirit are not independent of one another. There is a reciprocal relationship between the Father and the Son (John 14:9,10). The Spirit is sent by the Father (John 14:26) and by the Son (John 16:7). Jesus glorifies the Father (John 17:4) and the Spirit glorifies Jesus (John 16:13,14).
All three are involved in the conception (Luke 1:35) and baptism (Mark 1:10,11) of Jesus, and in His great act of atonement (Hebrews 9:14).
And all three are manifested in the life of the Church (II Corinthians 13:14), including baptism (Matthew 28:19), prayer (Ephesians 2:18) and the bestowal of spiritual gifts (I Corinthians 12:4-6).
In actual Christian experience, all three Persons can be indistinguishable. The great blessing promised by God in the beginning was that He would live amongst His people (Leviticus 26:11,12, II Corinthians 6:16). That promise is fulfilled by God dwelling within each one of us – as Father, Son and Spirit (John 14:16,17, 21-23). Jesus promised that Christians would experience God’s presence in their lives (John 14:15-23) as the Spirit (verse16,17) and as the Son (verse 20) and as the Father (verse 23). Peace is the gift of all three (Philippians 4:7, John 14:27, Galatians 5:23). In the space of one short paragraph (Romans 8:9-11), the apostle Paul refers to the Spirit of God living in us, the Spirit of Christ living in us, and Christ himself living in us. These are not three different experiences, but three ways of talking about the same experience.
God is in fact a ‘society’ of three Persons (NOT three individuals). They are not identical: the Son expresses ignorance of some things that the Father knows, and is always dependent on the Father. They have different roles, and are distinguished by the nature of their relationships with one another. The Father is the Father of the Son. The Son is the Son of the Father. The Spirit is the Spirit of both Father and Son. And love is what makes God one. None of the three Persons stands alone; they are bound together by love and always operate as one. The Father always initiates. The Son executes the will of the Father. The Spirit provides the power with which the Son operates. So, for example, the Father makes Himself known through His Word – the Son (Matthew 11:27; John 1:18). The Son is made known through the Spirit-breathed Scriptures (John 5:39,40).
And finally, a quote from The Sacred Diary of Adrian Plass:
Frank lit his pipe and said, “You know, there are four things I like about the Trinity. First, I love having a father in God. Second, I love having a friend and brother in Jesus. Third, I love having a comforter and guide in the Holy Spirit. And fourth...”
“Yes?” we said.
“Fourth, I love the fact that it’s a mystery. God in three persons. Three persons – one God. Why would I want to spoil things by trying to explain it?”
Friday, 25 September 2009
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hi deborah,
ReplyDeleteI agree with all that you have written and in fact you are the only one i have found sound on WWCO to a good degree.
Please forgive me if you think i am contentious,for i do not seek to be,but will try to defend Gods word from those that talk error,unfortunately i get carried away and end up getting a bit irritated by the darkness i see in professing Christians.
I see you are from the UK,i am from the West Midlands.
I did ,however,see something in your Trinity post that i didn't quite agree with and it is a difficult point and doctrine to understand i admit,but i have learned that the Trinity is consisting in 3 individuals and the reason we can truly say that God is one and there is only one God is seen in the picture of a man/woman relationship,where Christ says they are no longer two,but one flesh.
However,due to our sinful nature,the picture of Triunity in the Godhead can never be reflected in the human relations between married men and women,nor could it do if we still retained what Adam lost in regard to moral perfection.
But i see,as you quite rightly point out,that whenever God does something it is always done by all 3,they never act,in the purpose of any given thing,alone.
To conclude,i think that God is one in reality due to their perfect concord in all things and having the exact same things in respect to their attributes.
I did notice you said that,'the Son expresses ignorance of some things that the Father knows',but i can only recount where that is mentioned once and i am not convinced that is due to being ignorant but maybe the Father has kept that knowledge of that day to Himself so that when the time comes and He reveals it to the Son it may be of greater joy,but i have trouble seeing that,and i have heard it said that Jesus only said that as the Son of man and not as the Son of God,which would make more sense,for even though He was God,he did feel tired,hungry etc in His human nature but His divine nature could not have been so and maybe that would explain His utterance of that verse.
Anyway,just a few thoughts on the subject
take care
Mark.