What Does the Bible Reveal About the Trinity? – Part 2

By: Dr. John Ankerberg, Dr. John Weldon; ©2007
Hypostasis? Personation? Tritheism? Sabellianism? God has revealed that He is three persons or centers of consciousness within one Godhead. Because the concept cannot be fully comprehended does not mean the doctrine cannot be accurately described or defined; however, precision here requires some technicality. The authors help you understand the terms used in an attempt to define the Trinity.

What is the Trinity?

God has revealed that He is three persons or centers of consciousness within one Godhead. Because the concept cannot be fully comprehended does not mean the doctrine cannot be accurately described or defined; however, precision here requires some technicality. One good definition of the Trinity is provided by noted church historian Philip Schaff:

God is one in three persons or hypostases [that is, distinct persons of the same nature], each person expressing the whole fullness of the Godhead, with all his attributes. The term persona is taken neither in the old sense of a mere personation or form of manifestation (prosopon, face, mask), nor in the modern sense of an independent, separate being or individual, but in a sense which lies between these two conceptions, and thus avoids Sabellianism on the one hand, and Tritheism on the other. [Sabellianism taught that God was one person only who existed in three different forms or manifestations; tritheism refers to a belief in three separate gods.] The divine persons are in one another, and form a perpetual intercommunication and motion within the divine essence. Each person has all the divine attributes which are inherent in the divine essence, but each has also a characteristic individuality or property, which is peculiar to the person, and cannot be communicated; the Father is unbegotten, the Son begotten, the Holy Ghost is proceeding. In this Trinity there is no priority or posteriority of time, no superiority or inferiority of rank, but the three persons are coeternal and coequal.[1]

It is important to note here that the Bible teaches both monotheism and trinitarianism. It teaches a monotheistic view—that there is only one true God—and a trinitarian view—that this one true God exists eternally as three persons. This triunity of God was defended from earliest times as Christian theologians and apologists were careful both to safeguard the unity of God against tritheism and also to maintain the respective deity of the three persons. As Gregory of Nyssa stated in his letter to Ablabius, “To say that there are three gods is wicked. Not to bear witness to the deity of the Son and the Spirit is ungodly and absurd. Therefore one God must be confessed by us according to the witness of Scripture, ‘Hear Israel, the Lord your God is one Lord’ (Deuteronomy 6:4), even if the word ‘deity’ extends through the holy trinity.”[2]

In his Christian Theology, Millard J. Erickson offers six points that must be in­cluded in a proper understanding of the doctrine of the Trinity:

  1. There is only one God.
  2. Each person in the Godhead is equally deity.
  3. The threeness and oneness of God constitute a paradox or an antinomy— merely an apparent contradiction, not a genuine one. This is because God’s threeness and oneness do not exist in the same respect—that is, they are not simultaneously affirming and denying the same thing at the same time and in the same manner. God’s oneness refers to the divine essence; His threeness to the plurality of persons.
  4. The Trinity is eternal—there have always been three persons, each of whom is eternally divine. One or more of the persons did not come into being at a point in time or at some point in time become divine. There has never been any change in the essential divine nature of the triune God. He is and will be what He has always been forever.
  5. The function of one member in the Trinity may for a time be subordinate to one or both of the other members, although this does not mean He is in anyway inferior in essence. Each person of the Trinity has had, for a period of time, a par­ticular function unique to Himself. In other words, the particular function that is some­times unique to a given person in the Trinity is only a temporary role exercised for a given purpose. It does not represent a change in His status or essence. When the second person of the Trinity incarnated and became Jesus Christ, He did not be­come less than the Father, although He did become subordinate to the Father functionally. In like manner, the Holy Spirit is now subordinated to the ministry of the Son (John 14-16), as well as to the will of the Father, but He is not less than they are. Certain examples may illustrate this. A wife may have a subordinate role to a hus­band, but she is also his equal. Equals in some business enterprise may elect one of their number to serve as head or a chairperson for a period, without any change in rank. During World War II, the highest ranking member of an aircraft, the pilot, would nevertheless carefully subordinate his decisions to the bombardier, a lower ranking officer.
  6. Finally, the Trinity is incomprehensible. Even when we are in heaven and fully redeemed, we will still not totally comprehend God because it is impossible that a finite creature could ever fully comprehend an infinite being. Thus, “Those aspects of God which we never fully comprehend should be regarded as mysteries that go beyond our reason rather than as paradoxes which conflict with reason.”[3]

This last point takes us to our next question.

Why is the Trinity a mystery?

Before we discuss what the Bible teaches about the Trinity, we must remember that this doctrine is something finite minds can never fully comprehend. The Trinity may be logically defined, but this is partly the problem because “the infinite truth of the Godhead lies far beyond the boundaries of logic, which deals only with finite truths and categories.”[4] In other words, as an infinite being, God can never be fully understood by any finite person. If we can’t understand something as basic as particle physics, who would argue we should be able to rationally comprehend all that an infinite God is? As Dorothy L. Sayers once stated in Current Religious Thought (1957), “Why do you complain that the proposition God is three in one is obscure and mystical and yet acquiesce meekly in the physicist’s fundamental formula, ‘two P minus PQ equals IH over two Pi where I equals the square root of minus one’ when you know quite well that the square root of minus one is paradoxi­cal and Pi is incalculable?”

Consider that an ant could never comprehend all that a human being is, even if it tried. Yet, if a human being could somehow become an ant, it might be able to explain enough about what a human is so that the ant could gain something of an understanding as to what a human is.

When we consider that God is, quite literally, infinitely removed from men, the parallel suffers immeasurably. All we can truly understand about God is what He has revealed to us in the Bible. And while this does give us a great deal of accurate information, it obviously does not give us exhaustive information that plumbs the depths of His infinity. Indeed, one of the glories of eternal salvation (John 5:24; 6:47) will be that finite creatures will forever learn wondrous things about the inexhaustible glories and perfections of an infinite God. This heavenly knowledge will make the things learned on earth pale in contrast.

The problems inherent in fully comprehending the doctrine of the Trinity are also inherent in the person of Jesus Christ. The doctrine known as the hypostatic union assimilates all the biblical data in order to accurately describe the nature of the Incarnation. It declares that Jesus is undiminished deity and full humanity in one person. Jesus Christ is both God and man. Jesus is not part human and part di­vine—He is fully man and fully God.

Because of this He has two natures, one divine and one human. But He is not two persons—He is not schizophrenic. Further, He is one person with two different kinds of consciousness (divine and human). Also, He is one person with two wills (if He truly has two natures, then He must have two wills, one human and one divine); however, Jesus Christ never had a conflict of wills.

Christ’s two natures were not altered by their union within the one person of Christ. Both divine and human characteristics and deeds may be attributed to the person of Christ under any of His names, whether divine or human. Also, both the human and divine natures of Christ may be manifested during a single event. Finally, the union of Christ’s two natures was not altered by His death, burial, resurrection, or ascension but will remain throughout eternity.[5]

The above material illustrates the importance of precision for accurately formulat­ing the biblical data—and also how easily misconceptions might arise concerning the nature of God. This is why God encourages and commands us to “Be diligent to present yourself approved to God as a workman who does not need to be ashamed, handling accurately the word of truth” (2 Timothy 2:15). Christians should therefore study the doctrine of the Trinity to know how to effectively deal with the biblical data and answer the arguments of those in opposition: “And the Lord’s servant must not quarrel; instead, he must be kind to everyone, able to teach, not resentful. Those who oppose him he must gently instruct, in the hope that God will grant them repentance leading them to a knowledge of the truth, and that they will come to their senses and escape from the trap of the devil, who has taken them captive to do his will” (2 Timothy 2:24-26).

Thomas à Kempis stated Christian priorities eloquently when he wrote:

Grant to us, O Lord, to know that which is worth knowing, to love that which is worth loving, to praise that which pleaseth Thee most, to esteem that which is most precious unto Thee, and to dislike whatsoever is evil in Thy eyes. Grant us with true judgment to distinguish things that differ, and above all to search out and to do what is well pleasing unto Thee, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. Christians can please God by accepting what God has revealed and what the Church has formulated historically that is in accordance with biblical teaching.

Must we believe in the Trinity in order to be saved?

Prior knowledge of the Trinity, especially in its theological formulation, is not necessary for a person to be saved. But once saved, it is vital for Christians to know the true nature of the God who has so graciously pardoned them. This explains why the Church has always recognized the importance of a proper understanding of God and maintained that those who reject the scriptural view of God, as long as they do so, cannot be saved.

The great Athanasian Creed of the Church declares,

So the Father is God: the Son is God: and the Holy Ghost is God. And yet they are not three Gods: but one God. So likewise the Father is Lord: the Son is Lord: and the Holy Ghost is Lord. And yet not three Lords: but one Lord. For like as we are compelled by the Christian verity: to acknowledge every Person by himself to be God and Lord: So are we forbidden by the Catholic Religion: to say. There be three Gods or three Lords. The Father is made of none: neither created, nor begotten, the Son is of the Father alone: not made, nor created: but begotten. Holy Ghost is of the Father and of the Son: neither made, nor created, nor begotten: but proceeding… the whole three Persons are coeternal, and coequal. So that in all things, as aforesaid: the Unity in Trinity, and the Trinity in Unity, is to be worshipped. He therefore that will be saved, must thus think of the Trinity.[6]

Noted Church historian Philip Schaff comments as follows concerning the creed’s placing of a divine curse or anathema on those who reject the Trinity. He points out the Athanasian Creed

…begins and ends with the solemn declaration that the catholic [i.e., universal] faith in the Trinity and the Incarnation is the indispensable condition of salvation, and that those who reject it will be lost forever. This anathema, in its natural historical sense, is not merely a solemn warning against the great danger of heresy, nor, on the other hand, does it demand, as a condition of salvation, a full knowledge, and assent to, the logical statement of the doctrines set forth (this would condemn the great mass even of Christian believers). But it does mean to exclude from heaven all who reject the divine truth therein taught. It requires everyone who would be saved to believe in the only true and living God: Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, one in essence, three in persons, and in one Jesus Christ, very God and very man in one person.[7]

As Vladimir Lossky once put boldly in The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church, “Between the Trinity and Hell there lies no other choice.”[8]

In fact, it is noteworthy that an examination of religions that claim to be Christian yet deny the Trinity invariably reveals that they also deny other key Christian doc­trines, such as salvation by grace through faith alone. In other words, without a proper respect for Scripture and its understanding of God, it is unlikely one will get much else correct biblically.

Throughout its history, the Christian church has maintained that in order to be faithful to the teaching of the New Testament, one must affirm at a minimum the following doctrines: 1) the doctrine of the trinity; 2) the doctrine of salvation by grace through faith; 3) the doctrine of the incarnation and sinlessness of Christ; and 4) the sacrificial death, atonement, and resurrection of Christ. It is almost exclusively true that those who deny point one, the Trinity, also deny point two and often points three or four as well.

As Dr. Harold O. J. Brown points out in his excellent historical survey Heresies, modalism, for example, makes the event of redemption almost a charade. Why? Because if the Son of God is not a distinct person, as modalism teaches, He can hardly represent us before God the Father. And if Jesus Christ is not a real, sepa­rate person from God the Father—One who can stand before Him, address Him and intercede for us—then what happens to the concept of substitutionary atone­ment? If Christ does not exist as a separate person, how did He pay for our sins on the cross to satisfy the justice of God the Father? Thus, Dr. Brown correctly states, “Where modalism prevails, the concept of… vicarious atonement, will necessarily be absent, and so modalism is sometimes adopted by those who object to the doctrine of vicarious atonement.”[9]

In other words, if there is no Trinity then there is no incarnation and no objective redemption or salvation. There is no one who is acting as a mediator between God and man.

When the Trinity has been denied, the other chief articles logically related to it such as atonement, regeneration, and so on are almost always altered or aban­doned. This is why theologian Loraine Boettner concludes,

In the nature of the case, anti-trinitarianism inevitably leads to a radically different system of religion. Historically the Church has always refused to recognize as Christians those who rejected the doctrine of Trinity. Also, historically, every great revival of Christianity down through the ages has been a revival of adhesion to fullest Trinitarianism. It is not too much to say, therefore, that the Trinity is the point on which all Christian ideas and interests focus, at once the beginning and the end of all true insight into Christianity.[10]

Notes

  1. Philip Schaff, ed., rev. by David S. Schaff, The Creeds of Christendom: With a History and Critical
    Notes—Vol. 1: The History of the Creeds (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983). The Greek
    term was transliterated by the authors.
  2. “Gregory of Nyssato Ablabius,” in William G. Rusch, trans. and ed., The Trinitarian Controversy
    (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1980), pp. 149, 151-152.
  3. Millard J. Erickson, Christian Theology (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 1986, one vol. edition), pp. 337-
    338.
  4. Schaff, ed., p. 38.
  5. For a good discussion see Robert Glenn Gromacki, The Virgin Birth: Doctrine of Deity (New York:
    Thomas Nelson, 1974), chaps 9, 11-13.
  6. Cited in E. Calvin Beisner, God in Three Persons (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale, 1984), pp. 12-13.
  7. Schaff, ed., pp. 39-40.
  8. Vladimir Lossky, The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church (1957), p. 66.
  9. Dr. Harold O. J. Brown, Heresies (Doubleday, 1984), pp. 99-100.
  10. Loriane Boettner, Studies in Theology (Nutley, NJ: Presbyterian and Reformed, 1980), p. 139.

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