One God, in Trinity

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Page Contents

  1. What's the point?
  2. Contradiction? or just confusion?
  3. One tri-personal God
  4. Three differentiable persons
  5. Each is divine
  6. There is only one God
  7. Resources
  8. Contrary Views

1. What's the point?

If God exists in Trinity, it means that relationships are not a accidental by-product of our existence, or even a designed aspect of creation, but rather an integral part of God’s nature -- meaning that reality itself is personal and relational.  The question of God's motive in creating us (why would a transcendent being need anyone or anything else?) finds answer in the fact that God already exists in relationships characterized by love and perfect unity.  Just as parents may desire to expand the circle of their own love by starting a family, God's choice to create can be understood as an invitation into his (his?) own circle of relationships, and the qualities that characterize it.

(The term perichoresis is sometimes used to describe the eternally interacting nature of the Trinity.  Searching for this on the net turns up some interesting sites.)

2. Contradiction? or just confusion?

Often people don't know what to make of the concept of Trinity, and either accept it dogmatically, or consider it disposable. Neither option is at all helpful, but there is a still worse alternative. Some believe it to be a logical impossibility, and then try to convert 'believing it anyway' into a virtue (via 'mysteries of faith', etc). It is one thing to say that God's nature is not fully comprehensible — that is to be expected. It is quite another thing to say that it's a logical impossibility. If it were, that should disqualify it from belief by anyone. You might as well say God does AND does not exist.

To say that God is a tri-personal being, is not intrinsically contradictory. It is unlike anything in the rest of our experience — we ourselves are mono-personal, and we have no analogies for this. But we have no a priori reason to suppose that God should be particularly similar to creation in the first place. It would be stranger if he was. This is not to argue for the Trinity — there is no argument for this outside of Jesus and the New Testament's testimony to it. This is simply to argue that the concept is not contradictory, even though many people may conceive of it in a contradictory way; by bad analogies for example.

Most attempts to find analogies for the concept of Trinity fail completely, either "confounding the persons or dividing the substance" -- that is, losing track of either the distinctness of the Trinity's persons, or their fundamental unity. Perhaps the best analogy is the three most common states of matter, illustrated as say, water, ice and steam. While each are fundamentally the same chemical compound, they are nonetheless meaningfully distinct. But this analogy is also inadequate: Water can be heated to make steam, and so on. I don't think that there are any good analogies for the Trinity within creation.

Life would certainly be simpler if God were not Triune — it causes no end of confusion. The exact nature of the Trinity was discussed for hundreds of years by the early church theologians, with little more to show for it than a restatement of the verses which I list below, in the language of Greek metaphysics: natures, essences and substances. Amongst Muslims, it is sometimes believed that the Trinity refers to God, Mary and Jesus, and implies a sexual relationship between the first and second, to produce the third — a concept which they sensibly reject. And today, almost every alternative Christian movement takes a denial of the Trinity as its point of departure:  Jehovah's Witnesses, the Church of Latter Day Saints, and so on.

So why does anyone believe it? It best accounts for Jesus self-belief, and the resulting understanding in the New Testament of his nature and significance, as well as that of the Holy Spirit. Let's look at this now.

There are three basic themes to account for. The three 'persons' of the Trinity (to use the standard term), appear in scripture as distinct, divine and unified. Most arguments against the Trinity major on the theme of their distinctness. But that is only part of what Trinity means. What the concept of Trinity does better than any other idea, is it accounts for their distinctness AND divinity AND unity. But let's spell this out in more detail:

3. One tri-personal God

This is a brief synopsis of the reasons why Christians have usually understood God to exist as a (the) single, tri-personal being, whose nature is called Triune, or said to exist in Trinity.

The biblical reasoning comes in three parts:

  1. Distinct: Three persons, God the Father, Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit are constantly being referred to as if distinct from each other (they are listed one after the other; they interact with each other). This excludes the possibility of unitarianism, in which they are each viewed as different roles fulfilled by the same person, in which any appearance of them talking or interacting is merely for show.

  2. Divine: Each are called God in different passages. Moreover, each of the three is attributed qualities which God alone can possess, such as being eternal, omniscient or the creator. Additionally, the Holy Spirit is noted to choose, think, feel, etc. These points together eliminate the possiblities that Jesus was simply a man (or an angel, or any other created being), or that the Holy Spirit is simply a force, or a way of referring to God in action.

  3. Unified: At the same time, the Bible plainly maintains that there is only one God, often in the same verse as making either of these first two points. This excludes the possibility that the Bible teaches any kind of polytheism (in which there are multiple gods).

The next few sections list examples of each of these types of reference.

4. Three differentiable persons

There are three distinct persons called 'God the Father', 'God the Son' (Jesus), and 'The Holy Spirit'. In the following passages they are named, differentiated, and spoken of in personal terms.

5. Each is divine

Jesus the Son, a person not identical with the Father, is also Spoken of as Divine.  Refer to our page on the Incarnation for more.

Likewise, the Holy Spirit, a person not identical with the Father, or the Son, is also spoken of as Divine.

6. There is only one God

Scripture taken from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION
Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 International Bible Society.
Used by permission of Zondervan Bible Publishers.

7. Resources

For books, try Millard J. Ericksen, The Word Became Flesh (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 1991) and God in Three Persons (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 1995).

A Brief Definition of the Trinity — By James White, a short synopsis.
http://www.aomin.org/trinitydef.html
Christian Distinctives: The Trinity — detailed analysis from Christian Thinktank
http://www.christian-thinktank.com/trin01.html
The Trinity, the Definition of Chalcedon, and Oneness Theology — By James White, a long synopsis with particular reference to 'Oneness' theology.
http://www.aomin.org/CHALC.html

8. Contrary Views

Should you Believe in The Trinity? — from the Watchtower website, an online version of a short book.
http://www.watchtower.org/library/ti/index.htm
The Oneness of God — by David K. Bernard, a book-length defense of Oneness Pentecostalism's view of God.
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/pentecostal/One-Top.htm
The Trinity Doctrine/Dogma Exposed — a representative pop-level critique
http://www.angelfire.com/pa/greywlf/trinity.html