Holy Trinity (Repaired)
Holy Trinity (Repaired)
Holy Trinity (Repaired)
Deuteronomy, 32:39
Left to right: God the Son (auburn beard), God the Holy Spirit
(beardless) and God the Father (white beard). One halo with three
divine beams covers all three. Pressed together, they show they are
one God. Their age differences indicate that God the Father begot
God the Son, while the two together brought forth God the Holy
Spirit. In 1745 the Pope issued an edict against depicting the Holy
Spirit as a human being; today it may be shown only as a dove.
Preface
This book, The Holy Trinity: One God or Three? examines the
rationality of the Christian dogma of the Holy Trinity and
Christianitys claim to monotheism. It does not ask, is there a God?
Only, does God come in three persons? Practically all Christians
believe in the Holy Trinity; they are Trinitarians. Yet they insist they
are Monotheists, because they worship only one God, the three-in-
one God. However, this singular Deity accommodates three
PersonsGod the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit.
Each Person is unique; that is, the Father is not the Son and the Son
is not the Holy Spirit, etc. Each individual has its own origin and
mission. The Father existed always and is the maker of heaven and
earth. The Son (Jesus) was begotten by the Father, made man
and crucified for us. The Holy Spirit proceeded from the Father
and the Son and is the Lord and Giver of Life. Although, each
Person is different and each is God, they do not add up to three
Gods.
What serious objections is there to the doctrine of the Trinity?
There are many objections, answered John Norton Loughborough,
but we shall reduce them to the following: 1. It is contrary to
common sense, 2. It is contrary to Scripture, 3. Its origin is pagan
and fabulous. [Loughborough (1832-1924}, Review and Herald (Seventh
Day Adventists) Vol. XVIII, November 5, 1861, p. 184)]
Is the dogma of the tripartied God hocus pocus? The primary
logical arguments against the doctrine of the Trinity are that it is
contradictory, confusing, and incomprehensible. It is contradictory
in that Trinitarianism professes to be monotheistic (one God), while
insisting that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit all have separate
identities as full-fledged Persons; each being God, yet they are not
three Gods.... [Servetus the Evangelical (pseudonym of Kermit Zarley),
The Doctrine of the Trinity].
The Devils Catechism
Question: Is Jesus God?
Christians consider God the Father, God the Son and God the
Holy Spirit equally divine. Thus, they proclaim:
Through the highest heaven, to the almighty Three,
Father, Son, and Spirit one same glory be.
The word Trinity is a contraction of the terms tri + unity
(unity of three). Christians worship the Father, the Son and the Holy
Spirit; yet these three divine Persons constitute one God. They are
one because they share the same divine substance or essence. At
the same time, each is a distinct person, and each comprises the
entirety of God.
Michael A. Rizzotti wrote:
Not until late in the fourth century did the Churchs
teaching on the Trinity begin to take shape. The fundamental
tenets developed by the magisterium [the teaching office of
the Church] define the Trinity as an absolute mystery and
believe that one God exists in three persons: they are equal,
coeternal and omnipotent. God is one divine nature, one
essence, and one substance. In the Trinity, the three persons
are distinct from one another. The Father has no principle of
origin. The Son is born from the substance of the Father. The
Spirit is not begotten, but proceeds from the Father and the
Son, from one principle, in one single spiration; e.g., action of
breathing. [Rizzotti, The Holy Trinity and the Sacred
Triad (The Net Age) 2013.]
Within the one God of the Holy Trinity are three co-equal and
co-eternal Persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Each is distinct
and each is fully God, but the three together add up to only one
God. God the Son (Jesus) is the only begotten Son of God the
Father. However, after the Son was begotten there were as many
Gods as beforeone. After the Father and the Son spirated forth
the Holy Ghost there were as many Godsone. But we may not
say that one God is born of another God that would be two Gods
and a heresy that could jeopardize our eternal salvation.
This dogma of the Blessed Trinity is the creed of the Roman
Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Churches and the main-line
Protestant Churches. It is the mark of orthodoxy. The Catholic
writer Frank Sheed described the Trinity in its barest outline like
this:
In the one divine nature, there are three persons, the
Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. No one of the persons is
part of the others, each is wholly himself. The Father is God,
the Son is God, the Holy Spirit is God. But they are not three
Gods but one God. [Sheed,
Sheed and Ward]
The Father, Son and Spirit are each God and this God is one and
the same God. In other words, three divine individuals are at the
same time one divine being and this one divine existence is
simultaneously three divine entities.
O God the Father; God the Son, and God the Spirit, ever One.
Three Persons praise we evermore, and one eternal God adore.
Comment
In summary: Each of the three holy ones has all the attributes
of God and each is God, yet they are not three Gods but one. This
is no doubt important to understand, but it seems beyond my ken.
But if I dont understand it, how can I believe it? But I have to
believe it. So help me God!--Author
The Triangular Trinity
Above: The Blessed Trinity in the form of triplets. Left to right: God
the Son with image of lamb superimposed on his tunic; God the Father
with image of all-seeing eye while holding a royal scepter; God the Holy
Spirit with image of dove. The triangular halos signify membership in
the Holy Trinity. The heads of the angels serve as footstools for the
divinities. Note the marks of nails in the hands and feet of the Son.
(However, the Roman soldiers did not drive the nails through the hands,
because these would not have held the weight of the body; they drove
the nails through the wrists where bones are located.) According to the
Athanasian Creed, the three are completely equal; here, however, the
Father appears to be the first among equals. He is in the center and
slightly elevated. Rays extend out from him, and he is the one who is
giving the blessing.
Celestial Calculation
The three Christian personages offer certain advantages over
the singular God of Judaism and Islam. The pluralistic God of
Christianity presents more variety than plain monotheism, which
Friedrich Engels called monototheism. However, this variegated
God may cause a little problem for pupils. In arithmetic class they
learn that 1+1+1=3; however, in religion class they must remember
that 1+1+1=1.
Three
The Dogma of the Blessed Trinity
at the Heart of the Christian Religion
The doctrine of the Holy Trinity is the cardinal dogma of the vast
majority of Christian denominations. This tenet is crucial; without it they
would worship three Gods and be tri-theists. ..
Gannon Murphy
Catholic Church:
The mystery of the Holy Trinity is the most fundamental of
our faith. On it everything else depends and from it everything
else flows. [OConnor, Foreword, Handbook for Todays Catholic,
Liguori Publications, 1994, p. 16]
Reformed Dogmatics:
...the entire Christian belief system stands or falls with the
confession of Gods Trinity. It is the core of the Christian faith,
the root of all its dogmas, the basic content of the new
covenant.... [Herman Bavinck, Reformed Dogmatics, Grand
Rapids, Michigan, Baker Academic, Vol. 2, p. 260]
Wikipedia:
The Trinity is an essential doctrine of mainstream
Christianity. Father, Son and Holy Spirit represents both the
immanence and transcendence of God.... [Christianity,
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]
The Splendor of the Three-in-One God:
The monotheistic doctrine of God is at the headwaters of
the Christian faith, but it is the doctrine of the Trinity which
makes our doctrine of God distinctively Christian. Islam, one of
the worlds fastest growing religions, is monotheistic, but
rejects entirely the doctrine of the Trinity as unreasonable.
Jewish critics have long regarded the doctrine of the Trinity as
polytheistic. Clearly the doctrine of the Trinity is a stumbling
block to vast numbers of people, but without it we are no
longer Christians.... [The Splendor of the Three-in-One God, R.
Scott Clark, Resident Faculty, Westminster Seminary, California,
2008.]
He went on:
The doctrine of the Trinity is the interpretive principle of all
Christian doctrine, the ultimate basis of Christian ideals and
hopes, and the most vital and inspiring of all the truths which
human minds can contemplate.... The doctrine of the Trinity
must occupy the central place in any sound or adequate
conception of spiritual realities. It constitutes the postulate of
the doctrines of the Incarnation, of the Atonement, of the
Church, of justification and salvation, and of the coming
kingdom of God. If it were shown to be false, these doctrines
would have to be modified beyond recognition, and
Christianity would become something quite other than it
actually is. Its faith would become no one can imagine
what....its worship would suffer condemnation as hopelessly
polytheistic.... (emphasis added). [Hall, Dogmatic Theology,
Longmans & Green, New York and London, 1910, Vol. 4, p. ix.]
Four
There is but One Living and True God, the Great Creator,
and there are three persons in the Godhead. The Father, the
Son and the Holy Ghost. [Congregational
Holiness Church]
We believe in the one living and true God, both holy and
loving, eternal, unlimited in power, wisdom, goodness, the
Creator and Preserver of all things. Within the unity there are
three persons of one essential nature, power and eternitythe
Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. [ The Weslyan
Church]
The Triple God in the form of one head with three faces.
Five
The Three Persons of the Most Holy Trinity
Are Truly Distinct
Father, Son and Holy Spirit
are strictly, simply, truly and really so different or distinct
that one is born of another, and one is breathed out by the others,
and all these three are shut up in one jar.
Dr. Servetus
After God the Father created the universe and mankind, he sent
God the Son to earth to assume human nature so he could sacrifice
himself to the Father for the sins of mankind. He underwent the
passion and death on the cross to redeem mankind. However, he is
not only our redeemer but also the mediator between man and the
Father.
God the Holy Spirit impregnated the Blessed Virgin Mary so that
she begot God the Son as Jesus Christ. Later the Spirit in the form
of a dove descended on Jesus at his baptism in the Jordan River.
After his death, the Son with the Father sent the Spirit to earth
where he bore witness to the Son. The Spirit descended on the
heads of the Apostles in the form of flames to give them certain
powers. He continues to sanctify the faithful. Christians pray to:
God the Father, who created us,
God the Son, who suffered for us on the cross,
God the Holy Spirit, who sanctified us in Baptism.
In the Christian Trinity there are three Hims, three centers of
consciousness, said Joseph Kenneth Grider. However, they differ
in their font of knowledge; for example, God the Son doesnt know
all the Father knows. [Grider, (Wesleyan Theological Society).
Contemporary Evangelical Thought: Basic Christian Doctrines . New York: Holt,
Rinehart and Winston, 1962, p. 36].
Jesus said:
But as for that day or hour [when the world will end],
nobody knows it, neither the angels of heaven, nor the Son; no
one but the Father (Mark 13:32).
Moreover, they also have independent wills. Jesus said:
I have come from heaven, not to do my own will, but to do
the will of him who sent me (John 6:38).
They are not always of one mind: The Father decided his Son
should suffer crucifixion, but the Son wasnt so keen about it:
Father, he said, If you are willing, take this cup away from
me. Nevertheless, let your will be done, not mine (Luke
22:42-43 and Matthew 26:39).
The division between Father and Son is most pronounced when
Jesus cries out in his death agony:
My God, my God, why have you deserted me? (Mark
15:34).
Finally he says, Father, into your hands I commit my spirit.
After this he ascends to the Father and sits at his right hand.
Now, we wonder how beings so different could simultaneously
be exactly alike. But if they are completely alike, why have three of
them?
The Athanasian Creed compels us to acknowledge each Person
by himself to be God and Lord. A person is someone who posses
his own unique mind and will. Ebon Musings commented:
This is the fundamental paradox of the Trinity. If the
Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit have separate
consciousnesses or desires, then they are each separate gods,
and there is no sense in which they are the same being. In that
case, Christianity is polytheistic. But, on the other hand, if the
Son and the Holy Spirit have no separate consciousness or will
from the Father, then they have no independent existence at
all...then there is no Trinity at all.... Either way, the resolution is
the same: the Christian divinity can be either one or three, but
not both at the same time. [ Ebon Musings, Three in One:
The doctrine of the Trinity, The Atheism Pages. ebonmusings.org.]
THE CHRISTIAN GOD is not one person who assumes different roles
or modes as occasion arises. Instead, God is three separate,
simultaneous Persons each of whom has a unique and consistent
character that permanently differentiates him from the others.
God the Father is not God the Son, but generates the Son
eternally, as the Son is eternally begotten. The Holy Spirit is neither
the Father nor the Son, but a distinct person having his divine
nature from the Father and the Son by eternal procession.
Jerome the Elder of Prague taught that Father, Son and Holy
Ghost were simply three temporary modes or expressions of the
one divine substance, like water, steam and ice are three successive
forms of the earthly substance H2O. After being painfully chained
up for more than a year, Jerome, plus his writings, were burned at
the stake in 1416 by the Ecumenical Council meeting in Constance,
Germany. [Waclaw Urban. Der Antitrinitarismus
in den Bhmischen Lndern und in der Slowakei im 16. und 17. Jahrhundert.
Baden-Baden: Editions Valintin Koerner, 1986, p. 17].
PENTECOST
God the Holy Spirit is descending on Mary, the Mother of
Jesus, and on the Apostles after Jesus has ascended to heaven.
In the foreground is Mary with St. John, who was appointed by
Jesus as her care taker. The Spirit in the form of a dove is
bestowing his gifts on the Apostles along the red lines. (The
long neck and red beak of the dove resembles more a goose
but note the divine halo.)
Seven
God the Dove
You shall not have strange gods before me.
First Commandment of Yahweh
This might not have met the approval of St. Paul: The more
they called themselves philosophers the more stupid they
grew, until they exchanged the glory of the immortal God for a
worthless imitation, for the image of mortal man, of birds, of
quadrupeds and reptiles (Letter of Paul to the Romans 1:22-
24).
Left: God the Dove in the act of impregnating the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Right: The God Zeus in the form of a swan about to impregnate Leda.
The Spouse of the Holy Spirit
The oldest creeds, the Old Roman Creed and the Apostles
Creed, do not mention a Trinity; neither Jesus Christ nor the Holy
Ghost is identified as God. Jesus is called his only Son our Lord;
however, this does not necessarily mean that he was considered
Almighty God. Many people are called Sons of God in the Old
Testament. If Jesus is supposed to be the only Son of God what
about these others? (See Appendix EOld Roman Creed and
Apostles Creed).
Mackenzie-Hanson declared:
The early Church was NOT trinitarian. Even the Apostles
Creed...does not refer to the trinity, the divinity of Jesus or the
Holy Spirit, referring to them only as separate entities,
something that would have been far too important to miss-out
if it had been part of the doctrine of the early Church. In fact,
the concept of the trinity was unheard of by the early
Christians and never advocated by Jesus the Messiah. It is clear
that the early Christians were monotheistic both by instinct and
by teaching. [Rev. Dr. Brian Mackenzie-Hanson (Primate of the
Arian Catholic Church in the Archdiocese of York, UK), Disputation
on Apostasies and Heresies, Legitimacy of the twenty-one
Ecumenical Councils..., Oct. 2007, pp. 3-4. Arius was a Libyan-born,
Amazigh (Berber) descended, Catholic priest of Alexandria.]
Christians may reply that God waited until the birth of Jesus to
fully reveal himself. In other words, God had told the truth to the
Jews, just not the whole truth. However, God did not simply
withhold some of the information. God deceived his people into
thinking that he was a one-person God when he was actually a
three-person God. How could God, who is supposedly truth itself,
be so deceitful?
Below: Woodcut of God the Father (left) and God the Son
(right), with God the Holy Spirit (middle). Jesus wears only a cloak
to display his bare torso, which was pierced by a lance. All three,
including the dove, wear the divine halo with the three beams or
rays. The book they hold may contain the names of the saved.
Below: The Holy Trinity with one head, four eyes,
three noses and three mouths.
Nine
Is Jesus Christ God?
The Father is greater than I.
Jesus Christ
THE DOCTRINE OF THE BLESSED TRINITY is predicated on Jesus
and the Holy Spirit being of identical nature, substance and
stature as God the Father. Were Jesus and the Spirit not fully
equal to Almighty God, the Trinity would be impossible; God the
Father could unite only with beings entirely like himself to form
One God.
Jesus never claimed to be God. He repeated to his followers this
exhortation from Deuteronomy: Listen, Israel, the Lord our God is
the one, only Lord... (Mark 12:29-30). If the God of Israel is the
only Lord God, Jesus cannot himself be Lord God.
Jesus said, You must worship the Lord your God, and serve him
alone (Matthew 4:10 and Luke 4:8). If people are to serve
exclusively the Lord God they would not be obliged to serve Jesus.
In that case Jesus is not God.
Eleven
Jesus Christ Is Subordinate to God
in the Theology of Saints Paul and John
THE TRINITY IS POSSIBLE ONLY IF JESUS IS GOD. For St. Paul, Jesus
was always our Lord Jesus Christ but never God. He drew a clear
distinction between one God, the Father, from whom all things
come and one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom all things come.
Paul thought of Jesus as the agent through whom God created the
world. Therefore, Jesus was exalted above all men and the angels;
nevertheless, he was less than God, because he was created by him.
Jesus was the first-born of all creation; in other words, he was the
first to be created by God:
...for us there is one God, the Father, from whom all things
come and for whom we exist; and there is one Lord, Jesus
Christ, through whom all things come and through whom we
exist (First Letter of Paul to the Corinthians 8:6, Jerusalem
Bible).
The idea that Jesus or the Word was the agent of God in the
creation of the world was also expressed by St. John in the
Prologue to his Gospel:
In the beginning was the Word:
the Word was with God
and the Word was God.
He was with God in the beginning.
Through him all things came to be,
not one thing had its being but through him...
(John 1:1-3, Jerusalem Bible)
The Word or Logos was in the beginning. In the
beginning of what? In the beginning of the world. But God has no
beginning; he is always. If the Word were God, it would be
understood that he existed through all eternity. No one would
need to explain that he was in the beginning of the world. The
emphasis on the Word having existed only from the beginning of
creation shows that he was not really God despite the fact that John
entitled him God.
The Word is with God, says John. The Word is therefore a
separate being from God; otherwise it could not be with God.
Therefore, there are either two Gods or the Word isnt a real God.
Philo of Alexandria (20 BC50 AD), a Hellenized Jew, used the
term Logos [Word] to mean an intermediary divine being or
demiurge. It was Gods instrument in the creation of the
universe. Demiurge is a Platonic concept for an artisan-like figure
responsible for the fashioning and maintenance of the physical
universe.... Although a fashioner, the demiurge is not quite the
creator figure in the familiar monotheistic sense.... [Logos and
Demiurge, (Wikipedia]
While the Synoptic GospelsMark, Matthew and Lukefail to
present Jesus as God, the Gospel of John lays the groundwork for
the elevation of Jesus to God by the Council of Nicea in 325.
William Harwood explained:
It was the Gospel of John, written at about the time of bar
Kokhbas rebellion of 132-135 CE, that transformed Christianity
from a monotheistic sect of pseudo-Jews into a pagan
polytheistic mythology with two permanent gods, Yahweh and
Jesus. It did not, however, make Jesus part of a divine trinity.
The Trinity would not be inserted into Christianity for a further
two centuries after the publication of John. [Harwood, The
Making of a God, Mythologys Last Gods: Yahweh and Jesus.
Buffalo, NY, Prometheus Books, 1992, p. 342].
The Gospel of John calls Jesus the only Son of the Father and
Gods only Son. Some other verses from this Gospel could also be
interpreted as characterizing Jesus as God:
Jesus told the Jews, I tell you most solemnly, before
Abraham ever was, I am (8:58). [Jesus existed before
Abraham].
Twelve
First Passage:
Peter, apostle of Jesus Christ, sends greetings to all
those living among foreigners...who have been chosen, by
the provident purpose of God the Father, to be made holy
by the Spirit, obedient to Jesus Christ and sprinkled with
his blood (First Letter of Peter 1:1-2).
This verse does indeed refer to a holy trioGod the Father, the
Spirit and Jesus Christhowever, Peter referred to only one as God,
implying that the others are not God. For a true Holy Trinity, Spirit
and Jesus should have been identified as God the Holy Spirit and
God the Son.
. Second Passage:
This is the passage most often quoted by Trinitarians.
Jesus allegedly instructed his Apostles, Go, therefore,
make disciples of all nations; baptize them in the name of
the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit
(Matthew 28:19).
However, Harry Austryn Wolfson pointed out, scholarship on
the whole rejects the traditional attribution of the tripartite
baptismal formula to Jesus and regards it as of later origin.
[Wolfson, The Philosophy of the Church Fathers: Vol. I. Faith, Trinity,
Incarnation. Cambridge, Mass. Harvard University Press, 1964, p. 1431].
If Jesus instructed his Apostles to baptize in the name of the trio,
why did his followers continue to baptize in his name alone? This is
the baptismal formula used in the rest of the New Testament ( Acts
of the Apostles 2:38, 8:16, 10:48 and 19.5; Letter of Paul to the
Romans 6:3; and Letter of Paul to the Galatians 3:27).
Scholars agree that the earliest Christians baptized exclusively
in the name of Jesus. The late insertion in Matthew of a Trinitarian
saying by Jesus raises suspicions of fraud, not only about the
authenticity of the formula, but also about the Trinity itself. The
Trinity appears to have come as an afterthought here and
afterthoughts seem more human than divine. [William H. Trapnell,
Christ and His Associates, Voltairian Polemic: An Assault on the Trinity and
the Two Natures. Saratoga, California: Anma Libri, 1982, pp. 238-239].
Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, before he became Pope Benedict XVI,
said as much:
The basic form of our Matthew 28:19, the Trinitarian
profession of faith, took shape during the course of the second
and third centuries in connection with the ceremony of
baptism. So far as the place of its origin is concerned, the text
came from the city of Rome.
Third Passage:
This passage appears as follows in the Authorized Version of the
Bible:
For there are three witnesses, the Spirit, Jesus Christ
and God, and these three are one (First Letter of John 5:7-
8).
However, modern scholars reject [this version] because it
appears in none of the older manuscripts.
[Wolfson, The Philosophy of the Church Fathers, p. 142].
It is based upon an interpolation in the Latin
version of the New Testament and it is not found in
any of the original Greek manuscripts.
The original read, there are three witnesses, the
Spirit, the water and the blood, and all three of
them agree (Catholic Jerusalem Bible).
So we see Trinitarians correcting two Bible
passages to make them conform to the dogma of
the Trinity. However, if the Bible already validated
the Trinity, why did they have to alter it?
The Three-Faced God
The Blessed Trinitythe three-in-one / one-in-three manage
of Father, Son and Holy Ghostwas not accepted by the Church
until three or four centuries after Christs death. While the
concept of the Trinity seems indispensable to modern
Christianity, neither Jesus Christ, the originator of that religion,
nor St. Paul, its chief promulgator, seemed aware of it. They
certainly never mentioned it but sometimes contradicted it.
The Church claims that Almighty God descended to earth in the
form of Jesus Christ to instruct mankind but can point to no
authentic saying where he taught its cardinal doctrineand this a
dogma in which he allegedly plays such a prominent role.
The Church teaches that the Father is God, Jesus is God and the
Holy Spirit is God; however, as we have seen, the founder of the
Christian religion himself called his divinity into question.
Why did the progenitor of this religion keep a most
fundamental truth from his followers while among them on earth:
that he was God and there were two other divine persons besides
himself and that they all added up to one God? Why did Jesus
leave this important matter for his followers to puzzle out and fight
over? Couldnt a providential deity have foreseen such a turmoil
and averted it with a plain statement of the truth?
Sir Anthony F. Buzzard and Charles F. Hunting wrote:
Those Trinitarians who believe that the concept of a Triune
God was such an established fact that it was not considered
important enough to mention at the time the New Testament
was written should be challenged by the remarks of another
writer, Harold Brown: It is a simple fact and an undeniable
historical fact that several major doctrines that now seem
central to the Christian Faithsuch as the doctrine of the
Trinity and the doctrine of the nature of Christwere not
present in a full and self-defined generally accepted form until
the fourth and fifth centuries. If they are essential todayas
all of the orthodox creeds and confessions assertit must be
because they are true. If they are true, then they must always
have been true; they cannot have become true in the fourth
and fifth century. But if they are both true and essential, how
can it be that the early church took centuries to formulate
them? [Buzzard and Hunting, The Doctrine of the Trinity:
Christianitys Self-Inflicted Wound, Amazon Books, 1998]
The Doctrine of the Trinity: Christianitys Self-Inflicted Wound
challenges the notion that biblical monotheism is accurately
represented by the doctrine of the Trinity. The Bible presents
Jesus as Messiah and Son of God but not as God Almighty. False
teachings about the nature of Jesus, beginning in the second
century, perverted the biblical doctrine of God and Christ. These
false ideas became the foundation of the unscriptural doctrine
known as the Trinity.
In the Encyclopedia Americana we read:
Unitarianism [monotheism] as a theological movement
began much earlier in history, indeed it antedated
Trinitarianism by many decades. Christianity derived from
Judaism and Judaism was strictly Unitarian [belief in one God].
The road which led from Jerusalem to Nicea [325] was scarcely
a straight one. Fourth century Trinitarianism did not reflect
accurately early Christian teaching regarding the nature of
God; it was, on the contrary, a deviation from this teaching....
[Trinity, Encyclopedia Americana, 1956, Vol. XXVII, p. 2941.]
The dead Son of God in the arms of his father. In an act of fatherly love,
God the Father props up his dead Son. In accordance with the Fathers
command, Jesus had suffered an excruciating death. But this appeased
the Fathers anger against sinners, and he could forgive their offenses.
Thirteen
As we have seen, Paul and the author of the Gospel of John saw
in Jesus an exalted personage far above a mere human being. In
fact, he was the agent through whom Almighty God had created
the world. For John, he was also a titular divinity or God;
nevertheless, as a created being he remained subordinate to
Almighty God.
Were Jesus to be advanced to true or full God, the Christian
religion would become officially polytheistic. The gap between it
and Judaism would then be unbridgeable. Multi-god Christianity
could not claim to base itself on single-god Judaism. It was
essential that Christianity remain monotheistic, at least ostensibly.
The worship of a multiplicity of gods prevailing in the
surrounding Mediterranean region certainly exerted a pull toward
poly-god-ism. The Apostle Paul acknowledged the prevalence of
god-men in his time when he pointed out, in the sky or on
earth...there certainly seem to be gods and lords in plenty (First
Letter to the Corinthians 8:5).
The New Testament shows how eager the populace was to turn
living persons into gods:
...Herod, wearing his robes of state and enthroned on a
dais, made a speech to [Tyrians and Sidonians]. The people
acclaimed him with, It is a god speaking, not a man! (Acts of
the Apostles 12: 21-22).
Frederick Carl Eiselen declared:
To the Jew, the very idea of the deification of a man was
utterly abhorrent. Not so to the Greek. Apparently in the
earlier period of the Greek religion, heroic qualities or the
possession of unusual powers might lead to apotheosis. The
mortal, as in the mystery cults, might achieve divinity. The
extent to which this was carried out in the Hellenistic world
from the time of Alexander the Great and onward, when divine
honors were paid to living rulers, and legends grew up about
their supernatural origin, is well known. First the Seleucidae
and Ptolemies adopted the cult, and finally it was transferred
to the Roman world and culminated in the state worship of the
emperors. [Eiselen (editor), The Abingdon Bible Commentary.
Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Co., 1957, pp. 851-852]
When the Church Fathers decided to declare Jesus and the Holy
Spirit full God, they found themselves confronted with...the
problem of how to reconcile their new Christian belief in three
Gods with their inherited Jewish belief in one God. [Harry Austryn
Wolfson, The Philosophy of the Church Fathers, Volume I, Faith, Trinity,
Incarnation. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1964, p. 308].
Voltaire commented,
What can be said after that [about the Trinity]? How can
we help confessing, with grief, that nobody understands it?
How can we help confessing, that from the first...until the great
controversy of Athanasius, the Platonism of the Trinity was
always a subject of quarrels. A supreme judge was absolutely
required to decide, and he was at last found in the Council of
Nice, which council afterwards produced new factions and
wars. [The Works of Voltaire, A Contemporary Version. New York:
E.R. DuMont, 1901.]
It had taken about 350 years from the death of Jesus for the
idea of the Trinity to be accepted as official Christian doctrine.
Instead of calling Jesus, Holy Spirit and Yahweh three Gods,
theologians now called them three divine Persons. These three
Persons combined to form one God. This concept is expressed in
the Preface for Trinity Sunday:
Father, all-powerful and ever-living God.... You have
revealed your glory as the glory also of your Son and of the
Holy Spirit, three Persons equal in majesty.... [New Saint Joseph
Sunday Missal: Prayerbook and Hymnal for 1982. New York:
Catholic Book Publishing Co., 1981, p. 259].
Reportedly his son, whose name is Jesus, was not overly excited about his
fathers plan to hang him naked on a cross where birds could peck out his
eyes. But he didnt want to hurt his fathers feelings, so he tells him that he
will go along with whatever public humiliation pleased his old man, if thats
what he wanted.
The Roman philosopher Cicero described crucifixion as a most cruel and
disgusting punishment. It resulted in a prolonged, gruesome and
deliberately agonizing death. The crucified hung completely naked before a
taunting crowd, which mocked the emptying of his bowels and the erection of
his penis.
Iron spikes about 7 inches long were driven through his wrists or arms into
the cross beam. The points entered near the median nerve that runs from the
brain to the fingers; this caused shocks of pain to radiate through the arms.
After being nailed to the cross beam, Jesus was lifted up with it so that it
rested on the vertical post of the cross and formed a tau cross or a T. This
caused a tremendous strain on his wrists, arms and shoulders, resulting in a
dislocation of the shoulder and elbow joints. The arms, being held up and
outward, held the rib cage in a fixed position which made it extremely difficult
to exhale, and impossible to take a full breath.
The feet were then nailed to the vertical post of the cross. As time passed,
the muscles, from the loss of blood, lack of oxygen and the fixed position of
the body, would undergo severe cramps and spasmodic contractions.
Insects borrowed into the open wounds caused by the flogging preceding
the crucifixion. They borrowed into the eyes, ears and nose of the dying and
helpless victim, and birds of prey tore at those sites and dogs fed on the flesh
of his legs.
From the cross, Jesus cried to his father for mercy: My God, my God, why
have you forsaken me? (Mark 15:34 and Matthew 27:46). But Dad didnt
answer. God the Father ignored God the Son.
The slow process of suffering and resulting death during a crucifixion may
be summarized as follows:
If anyone does not confess that the Father and the Son and the Holy
Spirit are one nature or essence, one power or authority, worshipped as a
trinity of the same essence, one deity in three hypostases or persons, let him
be anathema. [Anathemas or banishments of the Second Council of Constantinople
(553 AD].
Punishment by death
The following were put to death for denying the doctrine of the Trinity
(partial list):
Adam Duff OToole was burned alive at Hugges Green in Dublin in 1327
or 28 for denying the trinity of persons in the unity of the Godhead.
Ludwig Haetzer (1500-!529), was beheaded Feb. 4, 1529, at Constance,
Germany, for denying the Blessed Trinity.
Katharine Weigel or Katarzyna Zalasowska was summoned several times
before an Episcopal court in Krakow, Poland, for opposing trinitarianism;
she was probably influenced by the book De Operibus Dei by Martin
Borrhaus. She defended her views before the Polish Parliament in 1538-
39. Shortly thereafter, the Bishop of Krakow charged her with apostasy.
On April 19, 1539, at the age of 80, Katharine was burned to death in the
market square of Krakow.
Stephen Dolet, eminent scholar and typographer, native of Orleans,
burned at the stake in Lyon, France, 1546, for atheismnonbelief in the
Trinity.
George Van Paris was a Dutch Arian who was burnt at the stake in
London with the approval of his fellow Protestants in 1551.
Condemned by Catholics and Protestants alike, Dr. Michael Servetus of
Aragon, Spain, was arrested in Geneva under John Calvin for denying the
doctrine of the Most Holy Trinity. He was burned at the stake in 1553 by
order of the Protestant Geneva governing council. The green wood
burned slowly, and it took the man no less than thirty agonizing minutes
to expire.
Patrick Patingham, burned at the stake, 1555.
Giulo Guirlada, executed by drowning in Italy, 1562.
Giovanni Valenti Gentile of Calabria, beheaded in Bern, Switzerland,
1566.
Ferancesco Sega de Rovigo, executed by drowning in Italy, 1566.
Hermann van Flekyk, burned at the stake in Flanders (now Belgium),
1569.
Johann Sylvanus, a teacher, was beheaded on December 23, 1572, in
the marketplace of Heidelberg, Germany, before his children. He had
drafted an anti-trinitarian treatise in 1570 entitled, Christliche Bekentniss
von dem einigen wahren Gott... (True Christian Confession of the
Ancient Faith of the One True God and of Messiah Jesus of the True Christ,
against the Three-Person Idol...). He had been asked to refute an anti-
trinitarian book, but he could find no evidence in the Gospels supporting
the dogma. Sylvan came to the conclusion that the apostolic teachings
on the messianic role of Christ had been corrupted by the intrusion of
Greek philosophy. While he continued to think of Christ as divine in some
sense, he judged the doctrines of the Trinity and the hypostatic union as
meaningless constructs that had themselves become the focus of
idolatry.... After decapitation, his body was burned along with the
offensive manuscripts and thrown into the Neckar River. [Christopher
Burchill, The Heidelberg Antitrinitarians: Johan Silvan, etc. Editions Valentin
Koerner, Tome XI: 1989, pp. 21-22.]
Punishment by Expulsion
William Whiston (16671752) was an English theologian, historian and
mathematician whose studies had convinced him that Arianism was the
creed of the early church. (Arianists revered Jesus but did not consider
him Almighty God.) In 1710 Whiston was deprived of his professorship
for antitrinitarianism and expelled from the University of Cambridge.
Until the passing of the Unitarian Relief Act in 1813, it was a criminal
offence to deny the doctrine of the Trinity in England.
The following law was in force in the Colonial Province of Maryland:
That if any person...shall deny the Holy Trinity, the Father, Son, and the
Holy Ghost, or the God-head of any of the three persons, or the unity of the
God-head, or shall utter any profane words concerning the Holy Trinity, or
the persons thereof and shall therefore be convicted by verdict, shall, for the
first offense, be bored through the tongue, and fined 20, to be levied on his
body. As for the second offense, the offender shall be stigmatized by
burning in the forehead the letter B, and fined 40. And that for the third
offense, the offender shall suffer death without the benefit of clergy.
Laws like this existed in all countries where the Church had power.
All this is based on the belief that revelation posits one God, Yahweh, the
God of the Hebrews. But also that Jesus and the Holy Ghost are equally god?
But this is not so certain. The three synoptic Gospels do not show that Jesus
is God. Some passages of the Gospel of John could be interpreted as
declaring Jesus God, but many more the opposite. (See chapters 9 to 12 of
this book.) Besides, just how sound are these revelations anyway? The books
that were included in the New Testament were determined by the vote of a
committee of bishops, which rejected many. The revelations recorded in the
New Testament were hand written almost 2,000 years ago. How do we know
that they were all conscientiously copied and passed along? Scholarship
proves that at least some passages were altered or inserted. How do we
distinguish between what is genuine and what not? A person receiving a
revelation from God knows if it is genuine, but everyone else has to rely on
his or her word. These stories passed down through countless generations
are all hearsay; something that would never hold up in court.
Normally we first study something before we believe in it. If I want to buy
a used car, I first look it over carefully, before I can convince myself that it is
sound. With the dogma of the Trinity, it is just the opposite: Since theistic
philosophy is unable to establish this dogma on the basis of unaided human
reason, the Catholic theologian is compelled to adhere closely to the teaching
of his Church. He must first believe; then he may inquire. [Rev. Joseph
Pohle, D.D. [Professor of dogma, Catholic University of America and University of Breslau),
Dogmatic Theology: The Divine Trinity. St. Louis: B. Herder, 1912, Vol. 2, p. 5].
The Christian divinity is both three and one; its three Divine Persons are
one God. An absurdity, you think; nothing but verbal gymnastics?
Christian theologians defend their Trinity from charges of irrationality by
declaring it a mystery of faith that is beyond human reason:
The Second Vatican Council, 1962-65, has explained the meaning to be
attributed to the term mystery in theology. It lays down that a mystery is a
truth which we are not merely incapable of discovering apart from Divine
Revelation, but which, even when revealed, remains hidden by the veil of
faith and enveloped, so to speak, by a kind of darkness.... In other words, our
understanding of it remains only partial, even after we have accepted it as
part of the Divine message. Through analogies and types we can form a
representative concept expressive of what is revealed, but we cannot attain
that fuller knowledge which supposes that the various elements of the
concept are clearly grasped and their reciprocal compatibility manifest....
The Vatican Council further defined that the Christian Faith contains
mysteries strictly so called. All theologians admit that the doctrine of the
Trinity is of the number of these. Indeed, of all revealed truths this is the
most impenetrable to reason.... [The Trinity, New Advent: The Catholic
Encyclopedia.]
For Christian theologians like Joseph Kenneth Grider, the Trinity is a matter
of faith, not reason: Logic and mathematics do not suffice, what is needed
is an obedient heart. [Grider, The Holy Trinity, Contemporary Evangelical
Thought: Basic Christian Doctrines. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1962, p. 35].
The Most Holy Trinity is one of the great mysteries of the Orthodox
Faith, said the Reverend Seraphim Holland of the Russian Orthodox Church.
With our finite and limited minds, we are unable to comprehend the Holy
Trinity at all, and yet with our hearts, we can believe in the truth of this
mystery. [Holland, The Holy Trinity, St. Nicholas Russian Orthodox Church,
McKinney Texas.]
Put in other words, if you try to understand the trinity, you may lose your
mind, but if you dont believe it, you will lose your soul.
The highly lauded St. Augustine explained,
...sin has corrupted our minds, so that we cannot understand the
doctrine, which we should still hope to understand in the next life. [On the
Trinity]
AN ACT OF FAITH
O MY GOD, I firmly believe that Thou art one God in Three Divine
Persons, Father, Son and Holy Ghost. I believe that Thy Divine Son
became Man, and died for our sins, and that He will come to judge the
living and the dead. I believe these and all the truths which the Holy
Catholic Church teaches, because Thou hast revealed them, Who canst
neither deceive nor be deceived.
Some people complain, why has not the All-Wise God better explained his
nature to his faithful or at least to theologians? Some things may be difficult
for the layman to understand; for example, the theory of relativity. However,
if Einstein could explain this difficult concept to scientists and
mathematicians, why couldnt Almighty God present a clearer picture of the
Trinity?
While the doctrine of the Trinity underpins all mainstream churches and
forms part of their official creeds, some emphasize it more than others. Some
denominations hardly mention it at all, treating it almost like an
embarrassment. Others, like the televangelists, talk only of Jesus (who is their
money machine).
Maurice Wiles noted:
The actual doctrine of the Trinity is a thorn in the side of modern
Christianity because it is (A) rather hard to grasp for those who spend
their lives outside a seminary, (B) not obviously supported by the New
Testament narrative, (C) smacks of Platonic philosophy and the trinities
of pagan gods and (D) seems to have popped up during the Nicene
period and is thus associated with many of the errors of [Emperor]
Constantine and his interference in the early Christian church.
[Wiles, Archetypal Heresy: Arianism Through the Centuries. Oxford University
Press, 2001.]
But the fact is that the Christian Churches officially worship God the
Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit. Are not these three Gods?
Should anyone raise this question, the Church leaders will trot out the Trinity.
They will contend, we are not polytheists because we believe in the Trinity
One God in Three Persons. The doctrine of the Trinity keeps the Christian
Church from being indisputably polytheistic. Therefore, Church leaders
cannot completely dispense with this doctrine however they might like. It is
useful when the occasion arises. To discourage a closer look at this dogma,
they call it a mystery of faith. Nobody can really understand it; there is no
point in delving into it too much. To stop further speculation into the
inscrutable mystery of the Trinity, the Church calls it an enigma that
transcends human understanding.
Two of the Holy Trio are enthroned on a chest, while the third dives
between them. God the Son on the left is identified by the cross and
his pierced hands. God the Father on the right holds the globe of the
world in his left hand and extends three digits of his right hand in the
Triniterian blessing. All three, including the dove, wear the divine halo
with its three beams or rays.
Sculpture of the Holy Trinity
in the form of three men
on a sarcophagus in the
Vatican Museum. Known
as the Dogmatic Trinity,
it is the oldest known
depiction of the triad.
They are apparently
engaged in the act of
creating Adam.
Faith, Creeds and Dogmas
Faith consists in believing when it is beyond the power of reason to
believe.Voltaire.
Faith is the effort to believe what your common sense tells you is not true.
Elbert Hubbard.
Eighteen
Is the Triune God of Christianity
Conceivable?
...no man ever had a distinct idea of the trinity.
President Thomas Jefferson
Dr. Servetus declared that three beings cannot exist in one God;
they cannot even be imagined. Moreover, it is wholly impossible to
have any notion of them. He stated:
We have become Atheists, men without any God. For as
soon as we try to think about God, we are turned aside to
three phantoms, so that no kind of unity remains in our
conception. What else is being without God but being unable
to think about God, when there is always present to our
understanding a haunting kind of confusion of three beings,
by which we are forever deluded into supposing that we are
thinking about God.
When Christians try to imagine a one God composed of
Father, Son and Spirit, they are actually thinking of a fourth
God. So Christians cherish a Quaternity in their minds though
they deny it in words. [ Servetus, On the Errors of the
Trinity.]
For these ideas Dr. Servetus was burned at the stake. However,
he was right. A closer examination of the Trinitarian deity yields
more than three entities. First, there is Yahweh, the God of the
Jews, whom Christians call God the Father. But Trinitarians teach
that Yahweh is really only one of three divine Persons Jesus and
the Holy Ghost being the other two. These three Persons form
One God, who is more than the three Persons side by side. This
One God, also known as the Triune God or the Godhead, is the
result of the union of the three Persons. This Triune God is the
fourth God of the quaternity to which Servetus was referring.
When I was a Catholic, I tried to pray to this One God or
Triune God. I tried to bring to mind a divine figure who was neither
Father, Son nor Spirit or the three in a group but their single
essence or substance. I came up with a deity remarkably like God
the Father. This new divinity I called the One God, but I soon
realized that he was not that but only one more God. When I
perceived that I had concocted a fourth divine being, I abandoned
my effort and fell back on God the Father. Other Christians may
have had a similar experience. When imagining addressing the
unimaginable One God, they may have really been praying to
God the Father, who is not the alleged Triune God but merely one
of the holy trio.
All this can be confusing. The Triune God is being mistaken for
God the Father in the following Prayer to the Blessed Trinity:
Let us praise the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit; let us
bless and exalt [the Triune] God above all forever.
Almighty and everlasting [Triune] God, to whom we owe
the grace of professing the true faith, grant that while
acknowledging the glory of the eternal Trinity and adoring its
unity, we may through Your majestic power be confirmed in
this faith and defended against all adversities, through Jesus
Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you [actually with
the Father, not the Triune God] in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, forever and ever. Amen.
In this prayer, the Triune God is sometimes confused with God
the Father. This prayer is first addressed to the Triune God, but then
this God becomes without warning God the Father. Contrary to
this prayer, the Triune God does not live in unity with Christ and the
Holy Spirit. It is God the Father who lives in unity with these two;
their union results in the Triune God or Trinity.
But the Blessed Trinity gets more complicated: The second
Person, Jesus, is not only God but also man. Catholics pray:
Blessed be God. Blessed be His Holy Name. Blessed be Jesus
Christ, true God and true Man.... [From the Divine Praises]
According to the Athanasian Creed, Jesus Christ is Perfect God;
and perfect Man, of a reasonable soul and human flesh subsisting.
The Catholic Catechism teaches: Jesus Christ possesses two
natures, one divine and the other human, not confused, but united
in the one person of God's Son.
Therefore, we also have to fit this God-man into our Trinity. So
the Triune God consists not only of God the Father and God the
Holy Ghost, who are pure spirits, but also of God the Son, who has
not only a divine spirit but is also a human being, complete with
flesh and blood. Thus, the One God of Christianity has to be
imagined not only with three divine minds and wills but also with a
fourth mind and will; that of a human. Can Christians cram all this
into their One God without stretching it to the breaking point?
Christian iconographers created numerous likenesses of God the
Father with his long beard, of God the Son as an infant in the arms
of his mother or as an adult hanging from a tree and of God the
Holy Spirit soaring through the air. Sometimes these artists
depicted the Most Holy Trinity as two animals and one human; that
is, a dove, a lamb and a grandfatherly type. At other times, as three
male triplets or alternatively as males of different agesa beardless
youth, a man in the prime of life (if he is not dead) and finally an
elderly gentleman. But they never succeeded in showing us even a
thumb-nail sketch of their all-inclusive One God. We search in
vain through the output of two millennia of Christian artistry for a
glimpse of this mono theos in whom Christians allegedly believe.
When Christians are so ready to draw us pictures of God the Father,
God the Son and God the Holy Spirit, why dont they show us even
a speck of their Triune God who supposedly subsumes all three?
Christian artists experimented with various means for conveying
the oneness of Father, Son and Spirit. Some crowded all three
beneath a single halo; others pressed them or even chained them
together. However, no matter how tightly they were joined, the
seams showed. A few resorted to such monstrosities as one head,
three faces and four eyes, but they were all unsuccessful. The
alleged One God of Christianity made up of Father, Son and Spirit
could not be visualized as one for the simple reason that three
Persons with four minds and wills cannot be imagined as being one
person.
Nineteen
Behind the Trinitarian Smokescreen:
Three Divine Persons Remain Three Gods
The dogma of the Trinity is an even more glaring logical contradiction.
God is one and three at the same time. His threeness
in no way detracts from his onenessand vice-versa.
Voltaire
16
substance. In addition Locke, Mill, and Taine, and in our day
Wundt, Mach, Paulsen, Ostwald, Ribot, Jodi, Hffding, Eisler,
and several others deny the reality of substance and consider
the existence of substance as an illusory postulate of naive
minds. The tendency of modern philosophy has been to regard
substance simply as an idea which the mind indeed is
constrained to form, but which either does not exist objectively
or, if it does so exist, cannot be known.
So we see that the existence of the Trinity hinges on this ancient
Greek notion. Should there be no such thing as substance, three
Divine Persons cannot be one Divine God on the basis of having the
same substance.
Rev. C. Randolph Ross declared:
From Moses to Jesus to us, our bedrock belief is that God is
one. All Christians, of course, claim to be monotheiststhey
believe in one God. At least, they believe they believe in one
God. However, if we pray to God the creator, and to Jesus as a
separate divine person, and perhaps to another divine
person called the Holy Spirit.... Well, it can be difficult to
think of this as a single God.
How, we may ask, could Christians form an idea of this
One God composed of three distinct beings with three
separate minds? Yet, Christians pray, O my God, I firmly
believe that Thou art one God in three divine persons.
Some orthodox Christian theologians have spent a lot of
energy to persuade us that these three--the Trinity--are indeed
one God. But...the explanations of the Trinity are not simply
obtuse or difficult to comprehend. To the extent that they
attempt to explain how three persons are one God, they are
illogical and nonsensical.... And too often, this turns into a
covert polytheism, with three deities who can be separately
worshipped and prayed to, as long as we believe they are
(somehow) ultimately one. So explanations of why the Trinity
is really monotheism sound very much like a Hindu
16
explanation of their gods. [Ross, Why I am a small u
unitarian, Common Sense Christianity. Occam Publishers, Cortland,
New York, 1990. Ross is a Methodist minister.]
In the Middle Ages the nature of the Trinity was the subject of
public disputations between Christians and Jews. Rabbi Moses
Nachmanides was ordered by King James I of Aragon to take part
in a public disputation with Pablo Christiani, a Jewish convert to
Catholicism. This Dominican friar wanted to test his new missionary
technique to bring Jews to Christianity. The Disputation of
Barcelona [July 20-24, 1263] was held in the royal palace in the
presence of the king, his court and many ecclesiastical dignitaries
and knights. Nachmanides related the following concerning this
debate:
Then Fra Pablo arose and said that he believed in the unity,
which, none the less, included the Trinity, although this was an
exceedingly deep mystery, which even the angels and the
princes of heaven could not comprehend. I arose and said: It
is evident that a person does not believe what he does not
know: therefore the angels do not believe in the Trinity. His
colleagues then bade him be silent. [Milhemet Hobah,
Constantinople, 1710, p. 13a].
16
Spirit are each a person, and they supposedly constitute together
another person, the One God. Three persons together equal one
person, and one person equals three persons. But this would be as
sensible as maintaining that three apples equal one apple and one
apple equals three apples. So we see that the doctrine of the
Trinity translates into gibberish
The purported One God of Christianity is beyond imagination
and conception, because no one can visualize or understand how
three persons could simultaneously be one person. Christians may
envision the three divine beings separately or side by side, but they
cannot picture them as a single being. Its like trying to conjure up
a three-cornered circle or a round triangle. Such a thing cannot be
grasped, because it makes no sense.
What cannot be envisioned or understood cannot be believed.
Nachmanides was right: its impossible for people to believe in
something of which they can form no conception. Since no one can
envisage God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit as a
single God, no one can believe in it. Neither the angels in heaven
nor the Christians on earth can really believe in a Triune God,
because they can form no idea of it. They may say they believe in
this something or other of which they have no concept, but they
are only fooling themselves; the One God is only a compound
word. People cannot worship something in which they do not
believe. Christians may pray to Father, Son and Spirit individually
or collectively, but they cannot pray to a One God who
encompasses all three. Therefore, Christians do not worship a
Triune God; instead, they worship God the Father, God the Son
and God the Holy Spirit as separate Gods. Thus, Christians are
functional tri-theists while imaging themselves monotheists.
Christians would point to the dogma of the Trinity, that
adorable mystery, if we questioned their belief in One God. But
we have seen how this construct violates logic and involves the
16
Christian religion in absurdities. The Trinitarian formula, which
allegedly transmutes three individuals into one being, is as
efficacious as those medieval formulas that purported to transform
iron into gold. This alchemist formula cannot transform three Gods
into One God; stubbornly they remain three.
The doctrine of the Trinity was conjured up by some Christian
theologians to paper over their act of joining Jesus and the Holy
Ghost with the one Jewish God, something that violated their First
Commandment. This doctrine is a linguistic deceit, a convoluted
attempt to hide the polytheism beneath Christian monotheism.
They passed off their Most Sacred Trinity to the world as a grand
mystery that is impossible to understand, because it is too
profound. In reality, it is impossible to grasp, because it makes no
sense; it is a fake facade and a false front.
In spite of its pretense and propaganda, Christianity is not a
monotheistic faith. Christian theologians, priests and ministers
have perpetrated a gigantic fraud; they have convinced two billion
Christians that their religion is top-quality monotheistic when it is
really commonplace polytheistic. How did theologians bring off
this gigantic hoax? By inducing the faithful to replace rational
thinking with emotion and faith, by stirring up the peoples
imagination so that it would overshadow their reasoning power. As
Thomas Paine wrote to Andrew Dean, it is the nature of the
imagination to believe without evidence.
Nonsensical as the notion of the Trinity may be, it has been
most useful. It enables Christianity to worship three Gods and still
pass as a monotheistic religion. By the use of this clever ruse,
Christian theologians managed to enthrone Jesus and the Holy
Ghost side-by-side with Yahweh in their holy of holies and claim
with a straight face to worship one God alone.
Anthony F. Buzzard and Charles F. Hunting wrote:
16
The God of Moses, Isaiah, Jesus, and the apostles was one
person, the Father. One cannot be made equal to two or three.
All that can be done with one is to fractionalize it. Divide it
into smaller segments and it is no longer one. Expand it, and
in spite of prodigious mental gymnastics on the part of
Trinitarians, it cannot be made into two or three and still
remain one....
One of the great marvels of Christian history has been the
ability of theologians to convince Christian people that three
persons are really one God. [Buzzard and Hunting, The Doctrine
of the Trinity: Christianitys Self-Inflicted Wound. University Press of
America, 1994-98.]
Even a Master of Divinity can get confused and call Jesus, Father
and Holy Spirit Gods. Gary C. Burger, Master of Divinity from
International School of Theology, San Bernardino. CA, wrote, Gods
triune nature means essentially that Jesus, the Father and the Holy
16
Spirit are all distinct personal Gods but share the same substance
and will to such a full and perfect degree they are one. What he
apparently meant to say was, Jesus, the Father and the Holy Spirit
are all distinct Persons...they are one God. Burger is director of
New Media Ministries, Greensboro, NC.
Margaret OConnell in her short story An Afternoon of
Christian-Jewish Friendship illustrates this Christian tendency to
think of each Divine Person as a God:
During the meeting, a man tried to focus the discussion on
what Christians and Jews supposedly have in commontheir
belief in one God.
Mrs. Harris, the Lutheran, suddenly jumped to her feet and
shouted.... Aha! she said, pointing her finger at the man in
the middle aisle. But thats the whole thing right there! The
whole thing! We believe in three gods!...
Father Reed stared at the reddish lady, who had gone
considerably redder, and stammered into the last of the stifled
chuckles, Are you a...a...I mean...What are you, Madam?
I am a Missouri Synod Lutheran, Mrs. Harris replied
staunchly, in a tone that proclaimed she was quite ready to
burn at the stake for it.
But surely, the moderator implored. Surely Madame you
believe in the Trinity? Three Gods in one... I MEAN, he fairly
shouted correcting himself. I mean three persons in one
God.
Well, of course, the lady acknowledged impatiently. She
pointed her finger at the man again. He knows what I mean.
I mean we believe in Christ Jesus and he doesnt. [A Funny
Thing Happened to the Church: The Critic edited by Joel Wells,
Toronto, Ontario, Macmillan Co., 1969, pp. 48-50].
16
.
2
.
,
16
Twenty-one
Other Views of Christian Monotheism
Anyone who can worship a trinity and insist that his religion is a
monotheism can believe anythingjust give him time to rationalize it.
Robert A. Heinlein, JOB: A Comedy of Justice.
Judaism
16
into practice. He deemed Christians to be idolaters and
bemoaned the fact that political necessity forced many
European Jews to live in Christian societies. [The Law of Moses
prohibited Jews from associating with idolaters.]
[David Novak, Jewish-Christian Dialogue: A Jewish Justification.
New York: Oxford University Press, 1989, p. 57, and The Mind of
Maimonides, First Things, February 1999.]
Islam
The core Moslem believe is: God is One. He is indivisible and
inseparable. There is no God but He. While Moslems agree with
Jews that Judaism is monotheistic and Jews with Moslem that Islam
is monotheistic, Moslems and Jews can muster no such agreement
with Christianity. Moslems hold that Christians worship more than
one God and are therefore polytheists. They will be punished for
this. The Koran says: Certainly they disbelieve who say: Surely
Allah is the third of the three; [when] there is no god but the one
God. [Glorious Koran, Surah Maidah, chapter 5, verse 73.]
The Koran declares:
...the Christians say: The Messiah is the son of Allah.... How
perverse they are! They have taken as lords beside Allah...the
Messiah, son of Mary, when they were bidden to worship only
one God. [Glorious Koran, Surah IX,verses 30-32]
Brown
together in a different form: one person, God the Father, plus one
person, God the Son, plus one person, God the Holy Ghost,
equals one person, God the What? Is this English or is this
gibberish?
It is said that Athanasius, the bishop who formulated this
doctrine, confessed that the more he wrote on the matter, the
16
less capable he was of clearly expressing his thoughts regarding
it. [Brown, Who Invented The Trinity? How the concept of the Trinity
was introduced into the Christian doctrine, The Religion of Islam.]
16
but what is clear is that the Hellenized Christ, who in one nature
was of one substance with God, and in another nature was of one
substance with humanity, bore no significant resemblance to the
ascetic prophet who had walked the roads of Galilee some three
centuries before.3 [Murad,The Trinity: A Muslim Perspective,
Text of a lecture given to a group of Christians in Oxford,
England.]
The Trinity? How the concept of the Trinity was introduced into the
Christian doctrine, The Religion of Islam.]
16
of one substance with God, and in another nature was of one
substance with humanity, bore no significant resemblance to the
ascetic prophet who had walked the roads of Galilee some three
centuries before. [Murad, The Trinity: A Muslim Perspective (Text
of a lecture given to a group of Christians in Oxford, England)].
Western Critics
Catholic theologian and priest Hans Kng pointed out that the
dogma of the Trinity is one reason why the churches have been
unable to make any significant headway with non-Christian
peoples. He stated:
Even well-informed Muslims simply cannot follow, as the
Jews thus far have likewise failed to grasp, the idea of the
Trinity.... The distinctions made by the doctrine of the Trinity
between one God and three hypostases [persons] do not
satisfy Muslims, who are confused, rather than enlightened, by
theological terms derived from Syriac, Greek, and Latin.
Muslims find it all a word game.... Why should anyone want to
add anything to the notion of Gods oneness and uniqueness
that can only dilute or nullify that oneness and uniqueness.
[Kng, Christianity and the World Religions: Paths of Dialogue with
Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism. Orbis Books.]
16
[Gunton, The Promise of Trinitarian Theology. Continuum
International Publishing Group, 1997, p. 32. Gunton, 1941-2003,
was a British Systematic Theologian and Professor of Christian Doctrine
at Kings College, London.]
Martin Borrhaus (Cellarius), born in Stuttgart, Germany,
published in 1527 De Operibus Dei (Concerning Gods Works). It
was the first book to openly question the doctrine of the Trinity.
Predating On the Errors of the Trinity by Servetus by 4 years, it
contributed to the founding of Unitarianism, the faith in one God.
Spanish physician Michael Servetus (1511-1553) was the first
European to correctly describe the function of pulmonary
circulation. He was also versed in theology. Servetus studied the
Holy Scriptures, and was surprised to find no reference to the word
Trinity. Hence, he questioned the validity of one of the
fundamental dogmas of Christianity: We must not impose as
truthscontended Servetusconcepts over which there are
doubts.
16
both; to believe three persons in one nature, and two natures
in one person....
How much this tradition of Trinity has alas! been the
laughing stock of Mohammedons [Moslems] only God knows.
The Jews also shrink from giving adherence to this fancy of
ours, and laugh at our foolishness about the Trinity, and on
account of its blasphemies, they do not believe that [Jesus] is
the Messiah promised in their Law. And not only the
Mohammedons and the Hebrews, but the very beasts of the
field, would make fun of us, did they grasp our fantastic
notion, for all the workers of the Lord bless the One God.
[John Redwood, Reason, Ridicule and Religion: The Age of
Enlightenment in England, 1660-1750. London: Thames & Hudson,
1976, p. 162.
The god of the Trinitarians is a 3-headed monster and a
deception of the devil. (Servetus may have been thinking of
Cerberus, the three-headed dog who guarded the gates of the
underworld.)
On 24 October, 1553, Dr. Servetus was sentenced to death in
Geneva, Switzerland. He was slowly burned to death with green
logs for denying the Trinity and infant baptism.
16
Although John Locke held many Christian beliefs, he rejected
the Trinity and original sin. This highly influential philosopher
got Newton to write an anti-trinitarian tract. Locke arranged to
have this work published anonymously in Holland; however, in
the end Newton decided this was too dangerous. This strongly
suggests that Locke too was by this time an Arian or unitarian.
(Locke, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.)
Enlightenment
16
irrational, a dead piece of tradition that could not survive into
modernity. Thomas Jefferson spoke for the educated classes
when he sneered at the incomprehensible jargon of the
trinitarian arithmetic which encumbered his simple view of
God. [Sanders, Theology: The Modern Doctrine of the Trinity.
scriptoriumdaily.com.]
According to Meslier,
Roman Christianity teaches that there is only one God, yet three divine
persons each one being God. This doctrine is absurd, for if there are
three who are truly God, then there are three Gods, not one God. If
there is only one God, it is false to say there are three who are God.
[A. J. Mattill, Jr., The Most Singular Phenomenon, The American
Rationalist, May/June 1999.]
16
Paul Heinrich Dietrich Baron dHolbach (1723-1789) asked,
...is it true that Christianity admits but one God, the same which
was revealed by Moses? Do we not see Christians adore a threefold
divinity, under the name of the Trinity? The supreme God begat from
all eternity a son equal to himself; from these two proceeds a third
equal to the two first; these three Gods, equal in perfection, divinity,
and power, form nevertheless, only one God. To overturn this system,
it seems sufficient only to show its absurdity. Is it but to reveal such
mysteries as these that the Godhead has taken pains to instruct
mankind? Have opinions more absurd and contrary to reason ever
existed among the most ignorant and savage nations? In the mean
time, however, the writings of Moses contain nothing that could
authorize the construction of a system so wild. It is only by having
recourse to the most forced explanations that the doctrine of Trinity is
pretended to be found in the Bible. As to the Jews, contended with
the only God which their legislator has declared to them, they have
never attempted to create a threefold one.... [Baron dHolbach,
Christianity Unveiled: Being an Examination of the Principles and
Effects of the Christian Religion, Chapter VII, Of the Mysteries of the
Christian Religion, 1761. New York: Gordon Press, 1974.]
Baron dHolbach exclaimed,
What has been said of [God] is either unintelligible or perfectly
contradictory; and for this reason must appear impossible to every
man of common sense. [Baron dHolbach, The System
of Nature, 1770.]
According to Meslier,
Roman Christianity teaches that there is only one God, yet three divine
persons each one being God. This doctrine is absurd, for if there are
three who are truly God, then there are three Gods, not one God. If
there is only one God, it is false to say there are three who are God.
[A. J. Mattill, Jr., The Most Singular Phenomenon, The American
Rationalist, May/June 1999.]
16
...is it true that Christianity admits but one God, the same which
was revealed by Moses? Do we not see Christians adore a threefold
divinity, under the name of the Trinity? The supreme God begat from
all eternity a son equal to himself; from these two proceeds a third
equal to the two first; these three Gods, equal in perfection, divinity,
and power, form nevertheless, only one God. To overturn this system,
it seems sufficient only to show its absurdity. Is it but to reveal such
mysteries as these that the Godhead has taken pains to instruct
mankind? Have opinions more absurd and contrary to reason ever
existed among the most ignorant and savage nations? In the mean
time, however, the writings of Moses contain nothing that could
authorize the construction of a system so wild. It is only by having
recourse to the most forced explanations that the doctrine of Trinity is
pretended to be found in the Bible. As to the Jews, contended with
the only God which their legislator has declared to them, they have
never attempted to create a threefold one.... [Baron dHolbach,
Christianity Unveiled: Being an Examination of the Principles and
Effects of the Christian Religion, Chapter VII, Of the Mysteries of the
Christian Religion, 1761. New York: Gordon Press, 1974.]
Baron dHolbach exclaimed,
What has been said of [God] is either unintelligible or perfectly
contradictory; and for this reason must appear impossible to every
man of common sense. [Baron dHolbach, The System
of Nature, 1770.]
16
Christianity is the most ridiculous, the most absurd, and bloody
religion that has ever infected the world, he wrote to Frederick.
In his Relation du banissement des Jsuites de la Chine [Account of the
banishment of the Jesuits from China], Voltaire gives a humorous
account of the Jesuit Rigolet instructing the Chinese Emperor in the
Christian faith: As His Majesty puzzles over the Christian worship of
two Gods, a carpenter [Jesus] and a pigeon, Rigolet hastens to add a
third, the father of the other two.... [Then] Rigolet burdens His
Majestys tolerance with an ultimate absurdity: au fond, ces trois dieux
nen font quun [the three Gods are one].
[William H. Trapnell, Christ and His Associates in Voltairian
Polemics.]
In regard to the doctrine of the Most Holy Trinity, Voltaire stated in his
Dictionnaire Philosophique:
That nothing is more contrary to strict reason than what is taught
among Christians about the Trinity of persons in a single divine
essence, the second of which was begotten by the first, and the third
of which proceeds from the two others.
That this unintelligible doctrine is nowhere found in scripture.
That there are several distinct persons in the Divine Essence, and
that it is not the eternal who is the only True God, but that the Son and
the Holy Ghost must be added to him, is to introduce the crudest and
most dangerous error into the church of Jesus Christ, since it
manifestly encourages polytheism.
That it implies a contradiction to say that there is only one God and
that nevertheless there are three persons, each of which is truly God.
That this distinction, one essence and three persons, was never in
scripture....
That it must not be believed that the most rigid and the most
convinced Trinitarians themselves have any clear idea of the manner
in which the three hypostases [persons] subsist in God without
dividing his substance and consequently without multiplying it.
That Saint Augustine himself, after he had advanced a thousand
reasonings as false as they are obscure on this subject, was obliged to
admit that nothing intelligible could be said about it. Then they quote
16
[Augustines] words, which are in fact very singular: When it is
asked, says he, what are the three, human language is found
inadequate, and there are no terms to express them: yet it is said that
there are three persons, not in order to explain something, but
because we must speak and not remain silent. Dictum est tres
personae, non ut aliquid diceretur, sed ne taceretur (De Trinitate, Vol.
IX).
That the modern theologians have not elucidated this matter any
better.
That when they are asked what they understand by this word
person, they explain it only by saying that it is a certain
incomprehensible distinction that causes one to distinguish in a
numerically single nature a Father, a Son, and a Holy Ghost.
That the explanation they give of the terms to beget and to
proceed is not more satisfactory since it comes down to saying that
these terms indicate certain incomprehensible relationships between
the three persons of the Trinity.
That from all this we can gather that the basic argument between
them and the orthodox turns on the question whether there are in God
three distinctions of which we have no notion and between which
there are certain relationships of which we do not have any notion
either.
That it would be wiser to abide by the authority of the apostles, who
never spoke of the Trinity, and to banish from religion for ever all
terms which are not in the scriptures, such as Trinity, person, essence,
hypostasis, hypostatic and personal union, incarnation, generation,
procession, and so many more like them, which, being absolutely
meaningless, since they have no real representative in nature, can
provoke only false, vague, obscure and incomplete ideas in the
understanding.
The Founding Fathers of the United States
How did the American Founding Fathers view the concept of the
Holy Trinity?
Samuel Adams believed in the Trinity; however, the Deists George
Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James
Wilson, Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Paine did not. [Jim Peterson,
16
The Revolution of Belief: Founding Fathers, Deists, Orthodox
Christians, and the Spiritual Context of 18th Century America, 2007.]
The Early American Presidents were Deists. They believed in the
God of Nature and rejected the divinity of Jesus Christ and therefore
the Holy Trinity.
The founders of our nation were nearly all Infidels, and that of the
presidents who had thus far been elected [Washington; Franklin;
Adams; Jefferson; Madison; Monroe; Adams; Jackson] not a one had
professed a belief in Christianity... said Rev. Bird Wilson. [The
Reverend Doctor Bird Wilson was an Episcopal minister in Albany, NY.]
Historian Gregg Frazier argues that the leading founders were
neither Christians nor Deists but rather supporters of a hybrid theistic
rationalism. [Founding Fathers of the United States, Wikipedia.]
(The Christian right is trying to rewrite the history of the United States
as part of its campaign to force its religion on others. They try to
depict the founding fathers as pious Christians who wanted the United
States to be a Christian nation, with laws that favored Christians and
Christianity. [Steven Morris, The Founding Fathers Were Not
Christians, Free Inquiry, Fall, 1995.]
16
President John Adams later called this the spark that ignited the
American Revolution. [Famous American Unitarians, American
Unitarian Reform unitarianreform.com! ]
George Washington
When Congress sat in Philadelphia, President George Washington
(1732-1799) attended the Episcopal church. The rector, Rev. Richard
M. Abercrombie, reported, on the days when the sacrament of the
Lords Supper was to be administered, Washingtons custom was to
rise just before the ceremony commenced, and walk out of the
church.
Paul F. Boller Jr. wrote:
Unlike Thomas Jeffersonand Thomas Paine, for that
matterWashington never even got around to recording his belief
that Christ was a great ethical teacher. His reticence on the subject
was truly remarkable. Washington frequently alluded to Providence in
his private correspondence. But the name of Christ, in any
correspondence whatsoever, does not appear anywhere in his many
letters to friends and associates throughout his life. [Boller, George
Washington & Religion, Southern Methodist University Press, Dallas,
TX, 1963, pp. 74-75.]
After George Washingtons death, his pastor Dr. Abercrombie was
interrogated about the Presidents religion by the Rev. Dr. Bird Wilson.
He replied, Sir, Washington was a Deist.
Thomas Paine (1737-1809) declared,
...the Christiane mythological idea of a family of gods, and the
Christian system of arithmetic, that three are one, and one is three, are
all irreconcilable...to the divine gift of reason, that God hath given to
man.... [Pain, The Age of Reason, Part I.]
Paine continued:
Of all the systems of religion that were ever invented, there is none
more derogatory to the Almighty, more unedifying to man, more
repugnant to reason, and more contradictory in itself, than this thing
called Christianity....when, according to the Christian Trinitarian
scheme, one part of God is represented by a dying man, and another
part, called the Holy Ghost, by a flying pigeon, it is impossible that
belief can attach itself to such wild conceits....
16
The book called the book of Matthew, says chapter iii, verse 16,
that the Holy Ghost descended in the shape of a dove. It might as well
have said a goose; the creatures are equally harmless, and the one is as
much nonsensical as the other.... [Paine, The Age of Reason, Part II,
Conclusion.]
Thomas Paine called the Christian creed a strange fable and absurd
jargon. He rejected the divinity of Jesus because he saw no evidence
in its favor. [If Jesus Christ is not divine, the Trinity is, of course,
impossible.]
Where is the evidence that the person called Jesus Christ is the
begotten Son of God? The case admits not of evidence either to our
senses or to our mental faculties: neither has God given to man any
talent by which such a thing is comprehensible. It cannot therefore be
an object for faith to act upon, for faith is nothing more than an assent
the mind gives to something it sees cause to believe in fact.
[Letter of Thomas Paine to Andrew A. Dean, August 1806.]
16
I have recently been examining all the known superstitions of the
world, wrote Jefferson, and do not find in our particular superstition
one redeeming feature. They are all alike, founded on fables and
mythology. [Letter of Thomas Jefferson to Dr. Woods.]
Unitarians
16
The faith known as Unitarianism derives from Christianity minus the
divinity of Jesus. Unitarians reject the Trinity as contrary to
monotheism. The doctrine of the Trinity is thought by some (e.g. the
Unitarians) to be incompatible with the monotheism taught by Jesus
Christ.... (Monotheism, The Standard American Encyclopedia,
Walter Miller, editor-in-chief. Chicago: Standard American Library,
1937, Vol. 9).
Joseph Priestley (17331804), the discoverer of oxygen, preached in
Unitarian churches and supported this religion for most of his life. He
encouraged the foundation of Unitarian chapels throughout Great
Britain. In 1791, an anti-Unitarian mob attacked and burned Priestleys
home, library and laboratory, sending him into exile. He founded two
Unitarian churches when he settled in Pennsylvania. Priestley wrote:
In the mean time, this doctrine of the Trinity wears so disagreeable an
aspect, that I think every reasonable man must say with the excellent
Archbishop [of Canterbury John] Tillotson, with respect to the
Athanasian Creed, I wish we were well rid of it.
For Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834) his period as a Unitarian
dates from his days at Jesus College. He wrote much of his finest
poetry while occupying Unitarian pulpits in the west of England. An
annuity provided for him by the Unitarian layman, Thomas
Wedgwood, enabled him to devote himself to writing.
Dr. William Ellery Channing (17801842) expounded the tenets of the
Unitarian movement, which included not only the rejection of the
Trinity but also the belief in human goodness and the subjection of
theological ideas to the light of reason.
16
edited by Gustav Karpeles. Leipzig, Max Hesses Verlag, undated, Vol.
7, p. 43 (translated by G. Grassl).
On another occasion Heine described a disputation between Frater
Jose, the Guardian of the Franciscans, and Rabbi Juda of Navarre. It
occurred in Toledo before the King and Queen of Spain, with the loser
being obligated to convert to the religion of the winner:
Disputation
Frater Jose:
He explains that the Godhead contains three persons,
who, however, can turn themselves into one when necessary
a mystery only he can understand
who has escaped the prison of reason and its chains.
Rabbi Juda:
The three-in-one doctrine wont interest our people
who have studied trigonomitry from their youth.
That your gods are only three is quite modest, I agree.
Your elders after all worshipped gods beyond recall.
Bruder Jose:
Er erzhlt, dass in der Gottheit drei Personen sind enthalten
die jedoch zu einer einzgen, wenn es passend, sich gestalten. .
Ein Mysterium, dass nur von demjengen wird verstanden,
Der entsprungen ist dem Kerker der Vernunft und ihren Banden.
.
Rabbi Juda:
Die Dreieinigkeitsdoktrin kann fr unsre Leut nicht passen,
die mit Regula-de-tri sich von Jugend auf befassen.
Dass in deinem Gotte nur drei Personen sind enthalten,
Ist bescheiden noch, sechstausend Gtter gab es bei den Alten.
16
[Heine, Disputation, Heines Werke in Fnf Bnden, Erster Band,
Gedichte in zeitlicher Folge. Berlin and Weimar: Aufbau-Verlag, 1964,
Vol. 1, pp. 326-340 (Translation by G. Grassl).]
Heine thought the old gods werent so bad; commenting on his
student days in Germany, he declared:
I did well in mythology. I dearly loved the godly rabble.... To tell the
truth, since we had to memorize the old gods anyway, we might as
well have kept them. I dont know if there is much advantage to our
New Roman Tridolatry.... [Heine, IdeenDas Buch Le Grand,
Heines Werke in Fnf Bnden, Dritter Band. Berlin and Weimar:
Aufbau Verlag, 1964, Vol. 3, p. 29 (translation by G. Grassl).
16
Trinity. [Ingersoll, The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll.
Dresden Memorial Edition. NY: The Ingersoll League, 1929, Vol.
IV, pp. 266-267.]
Ingersoll continued:
As we are compelled by Christian truth to acknowledge the
Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost each by himself to be God
and Lord, so we are all forbidden by the Catholic religion to say
that there are three Gods or Lords.... In order to be saved it is
necessary to believe this. What a blessing that we do not have
to understand it. [Ingersoll, The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll.
Vol. I, p. 494].
Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914) stated in The Devils
Dictionary:
Trinity, n. In the multiplex theism of certain Christian churches,
three entirely distinct deities consistent with only one.... The
Trinity is one of the most sublime mysteries of our holy religion.
In rejecting it because it is incomprehensible, Unitarians betray
their inadequate sense of theological fundamentals. In religion
we believe only what we do not understand, except in the
instance of an intelligible doctrine that contradicts an
incomprehensible one. In that case we believe the former as a
part of the latter.
H. G. Wells (1866-1946), later famous for his contribution to
science-fiction, wrote in The Outline of History, We shall see
presently how later on all Christendom was torn by disputes
about the Trinity. There is no evidence that the apostles of
Jesus ever heard of the Trinity, at any rate from him.
Henry Louis Mencken (1880-1956) thought the old polytheism
lingers on in the preposterous concept of the Trinity, defectively
concealed by metaphysical swathing that are worse, if
anything, than the i 2. [Mencken, Treatise on the Gods. New
York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1965, p. 284.
16
Ghost proceeded from the Father and Son, but was equal to the
Father and Son before he proceeded, that is to say, before he
existed, but he is of the same age as the other two. So it is
declared that the Father is God, and the Son and the Holy Ghost
God, and these three Gods make one God. According to the
celestial multiplication table, once one is three, and three time
one is one, and according to heavenly subtraction if we take
two from three, three are left. The addition is equally peculiar:
if we add two to one we have but one. Each one is equal to
himself and to the other two. Nothing ever was, nothing ever
can be more perfectly idiotic and absurd than the dogma of the
Trinity. [Ingersoll, The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll.
Dresden Memorial Edition. NY: The Ingersoll League, 1929, Vol.
IV, pp. 266-267.]
Ingersoll continued:
As we are compelled by Christian truth to acknowledge the
Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost each by himself to be God
and Lord, so we are all forbidden by the Catholic religion to say
that there are three Gods or Lords.... In order to be saved it is
necessary to believe this. What a blessing that we do not have
to understand it. [Ingersoll, The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll.
Vol. I, p. 494].
Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914) stated in The Devils
Dictionary:
Trinity, n. In the multiplex theism of certain Christian churches,
three entirely distinct deities consistent with only one.... The
Trinity is one of the most sublime mysteries of our holy religion.
In rejecting it because it is incomprehensible, Unitarians betray
their inadequate sense of theological fundamentals. In religion
we believe only what we do not understand, except in the
instance of an intelligible doctrine that contradicts an
incomprehensible one. In that case we believe the former as a
part of the latter.
H. G. Wells (1866-1946), later famous for his contribution to
science-fiction, wrote in The Outline of History, We shall see
presently how later on all Christendom was torn by disputes
about the Trinity. There is no evidence that the apostles of
Jesus ever heard of the Trinity, at any rate from him.
Henry Louis Mencken (1880-1956) thought the old polytheism
lingers on in the preposterous concept of the Trinity, defectively
concealed by metaphysical swathing that are worse, if
16
anything, than the i 2. [Mencken, Treatise on the Gods. New
York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1965, p. 284.
Robert G. Ingersoll (1833-1899) wrote:
Christ, according to the faith, is the second person in the Trinity,
the Father being the first and the Holy Ghost third. Each of
these persons is God. Christ is his own father and his own son.
The Holy Ghost is neither father nor son, but both. The son was
begotten by the father, but existed before he was
begottenjust the same before as after. Christ is just as old as
his father, and the father is just as young as his son. The Holy
Ghost proceeded from the Father and Son, but was equal to the
Father and Son before he proceeded, that is to say, before he
existed, but he is of the same age as the other two. So it is
declared that the Father is God, and the Son and the Holy Ghost
God, and these three Gods make one God. According to the
celestial multiplication table, once one is three, and three time
one is one, and according to heavenly subtraction if we take
two from three, three are left. The addition is equally peculiar:
if we add two to one we have but one. Each one is equal to
himself and to the other two. Nothing ever was, nothing ever
can be more perfectly idiotic and absurd than the dogma of the
Trinity. [Ingersoll, The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll.
Dresden Memorial Edition. NY: The Ingersoll League, 1929, Vol.
IV, pp. 266-267.]
Ingersoll continued:
As we are compelled by Christian truth to acknowledge the
Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost each by himself to be God
and Lord, so we are all forbidden by the Catholic religion to say
that there are three Gods or Lords.... In order to be saved it is
necessary to believe this. What a blessing that we do not have
to understand it. [Ingersoll, The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll.
Vol. I, p. 494].
Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914) stated in The Devils
Dictionary:
Trinity, n. In the multiplex theism of certain Christian churches,
three entirely distinct deities consistent with only one.... The
Trinity is one of the most sublime mysteries of our holy religion.
In rejecting it because it is incomprehensible, Unitarians betray
their inadequate sense of theological fundamentals. In religion
we believe only what we do not understand, except in the
instance of an intelligible doctrine that contradicts an
16
incomprehensible one. In that case we believe the former as a
part of the latter.
H. G. Wells (1866-1946), later famous for his contribution to
science-fiction, wrote in The Outline of History, We shall see
presently how later on all Christendom was torn by disputes
about the Trinity. There is no evidence that the apostles of
Jesus ever heard of the Trinity, at any rate from him.
Henry Louis Mencken (1880-1956) thought the old polytheism
lingers on in the preposterous concept of the Trinity, defectively
concealed by metaphysical swathing that are worse, if
anything, than the i 2. [Mencken, Treatise on the Gods. New
York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1965, p. 284.
Faith consists in believing when it is beyond the power of
reason to believe.Voltaire.
Faith is the effort to believe what your common sense tells you
is not true. Elbert Hubbard.
Metaphysics is almost always an attempt to prove the
incredible by an appeal to the unintelligible.H. L. Mencken.
16
Three are God, according to the Athanasian Creed, but they add
to only one. The Father is God, uncreated, unlimited, eternal,
and almighty. The Son is God, uncreated, unlimited, eternal,
and almighty. The Holy Ghost is God, uncreated, etc. Each one
is called God, and each one has all the attributes of God
uncreated, unlimited, eternal and almighty. But we are
forbidden...to say there are three Gods. He, therefore, that
will be saved, let him thus think of the Trinity. Salvation
depends on our counting correctly. Forget about what you
learned in the first grade. Remember: 1+1+1=1 if you would
avoid the fiery pit.
The idea that three Persons could be one God, who is also a
person, may seem crazy and impossible. It reminds one of
Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Carroll (1737-1832):
I cant believe THAT! said Alice.
Cant you? the Queen said in a pitying tone. Try again: draw
a long breath, and shut your eyes.
Alice laughed. Theres no use trying, she said: one CANT
believe impossible things. I daresay you havent had much
practice, said the Queen. When I was your age, I always did
it for half-an-hour a day. Why, sometimes Ive believed as
many as six impossible things before breakfast. [Charles
Dodgson (aka Lewis Carroll), Through the Looking Glass,
Chapter V.]
16
New Advent: Catholic Encyclopedia.
One of the main, fundamental, key doctrines of the Christian faith is the belief
in the
3
Trinity. . Southern Baptist Church, The Doctrine of the Trinity.
The doctrine of the Trinitythat God the Father, God the Son, and God
the Holy Spirit are each equally and eternally the one true Godis admittedly
difficult to comprehend, and yet is the very foundation of Christian Truth. 4
.
Mircea Elliade, The Encyclopedia of Religion. New York: MacMillan, 1987, Vol.
15, p. 53. .
The doctrine of the Trinity is the distinctive mark of the Christian religion,
setting it apart from all the other religions of the world. 8910 . J. Hampton
Keathley III, The Trinity (Triunity) of God. Biblical Studies Press, 1997.
... the doctrine of the Trinity separates Christianity from any other type
of theism. And, most importantly, its the only view that adequately
10 . The Nature of God and the Explanation of Why Evil Is Present in This World, Section VI,
Chapter 2.
16
describes Gods work in salvation. 9 . Father Greg Crosthwait, Anglican priest, What Difference Does the
Trinity Make? Probe Ministries, 1900 Firman Drive, Suite 100, Richardson, Texas 75081, www.probe.org.
16
1
APPENDIX B
There is but One Living and True God, the Great Creator, and
there are three persons in the Godhead. The Father, the Son, and
the Holy Ghost. Congregational Holiness Church
There is but one true and living God, an eternal Being, a Spirit
without body, indivisible, of infinite power, wisdom, and goodness, the
Creator and Preserver of all things, visible and invisible. In this
Godhead there is a Trinity, of one substance and power, and coeternal,
namely, the Father, the Son, and the
Holy Ghost.
Evangelical Congregational Church
This church confesses the Triune God, Father, Son and Holy
Spirit. Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
16
Presbyterian Church (USA)
We believe the one God reveals himself as the Trinity: Father, Son and
Holy Spirit, distinct but inseparable, eternally one in essence and
power.
The Evangelical United Brethren Church
There is but one living and true God, the maker and preserver of
all things. And in the unity of this Godhead there are three persons: the
Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. These three are one in eternity,
deity, and purpose;
everlasting, of infinite power, wisdom, and
goodness. Free
Methodist Church
We believe that there is one, and only one, living and true
God...that in the unity of the Godhead there are three persons, the
Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost; equal in every divine perfection,
and executing distinct and harmonious offices in the great work of
redemption.
16
The New Hampshire Baptist Confession, 1833:
In this divine and infinite Being there are three subsistencies, the
Father, the Word or Son, and the Holy Spirit. All are one in substance,
power, and eternity; each having the whole divine essence, yet this
essence being undivided.
The Baptist Confession of Faith, 1689
We believe in the one living and true God, both holy and loving,
eternal, unlimited in power, wisdom, goodness, the Creator and
Preserver of all things. Within this unity there are three persons of one
essential nature, power and eternitythe Father, the Son and the Holy
Spirit.
The Weslyan Church
There is but one living and true God, everlasting, without body,
parts, or passions; of infinite power, wisdom, and goodness; the Maker,
and Preserver of all things both visible and invisible. And in the unity
of this Godhead there be three Persons, of one substance, power, and
eternity; the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost.
The Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America
16
proceeding; the Son is eternally begotten of the Father; the Holy Ghost
eternally proceeding from the Father and the Son.
The Westminster Confession of Faith, 1646
16
APPENDIX C
I baptize you in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of
the Holy Spirit. Amen. [ Baptismal
Formula]
Glory be to the Father, and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit, as it
was in the beginning, is now and ever shall be world without end.
Amen [ Glory be to the Father. From the
Rosary.]
May almighty God bless you--the Father, the Son, and the Holy
Spirit. Amen. [Blessing at the conclusion of worship services.
Priests make the sign of the cross over the congregation while giving this
blessing. Prelates and the Pope make this sign three times; once for
Father, once for Son and once for the Holy Ghost.]
Glory to you God the Father. Supreme King, creator of the heavens
and the earth....
Glory to you God the Son of the Heavenly Father, my most loved
Lord Jesus Christ....
16
Glory to you God the Holy Spirit, Spirit of the Father and of the
Son, Voice of the Wisdom of God.... [ Litany of the Most Holy
Trinity]
Let us pray to the one God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit,
that our lives may bear witness to our faith.
Father, you sent your Word to bring us truth
and your Spirit to make us holy.
Through them we come to know the mystery of your life.
Help us to worship you, one God in three Persons,
by proclaiming and living our faith in you.
We ask you this, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit,
one God, true and living, forever and ever. [Collect for Trinity
Sunday]
16
im Wesen einem Gott und Herren,
den wir in drei Personen ehren.
With all our hearts and voices we acknowledge, praise, and thank you, God
the Father un-begotten, God the only-begotten Son, God the Holy Spirit, the
Paraclete, O holy and undivided Trinity! 11
. [Praise and Thanks]
Holy Spirit, Divine Consoler, I adore you as my true God, with God the
Father and God the Son. I adore You and unite myself to the adoration you
receive from angels and saints.... [ Prayer for the Gifts of the Holy
Spirit]
11
16
Comments
16
Blessed be God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit;
To Abba Father who chose Our Lady as His daughter and made her
Queen of all creatures and creation;
To the Incarnate Word who chose her as His mother and mediatrix of
His incarnation and salvific work;
To the Holy Spirit who chose her as His spouse, filled her with grace and,
together with the Father and the Son, made her Queen of the Most Holy
Trinity.12
Mary, the Mother of God, is intimately related to the members of the Holy
Trinity. The basic relationship among the three members of the Trinity is as
follows: Jesus is the only begotten Son of God the Father. The Holy Spirit is
the offspring of both God the Father and of God the Son. (Technically, he
proceeded from both the Father and the Son, but it comes down to the same
thing.)
The Holy Spirit impregnated Mary, and she bore Jesus. (The Holy Spirit is
referred to as the spouse of Mary, although they were never formally
married, and she was already engaged to her future husband Joseph.) Had
Mary been formally the wife of the Holy Spirit, she would have been the
daughter-in-law of God the Father from whom the Spirit proceeded. Since
Mary was not married to her impregnator, God the Holy Spirit could only be
called her common-law husband. And Mary could only be the common-law
daughter-in-law of God the
Father, the creator of the universe.)
The Holy Spirit, the spouse of Mary, was the father of Jesus, but he was
also the offspring of Jesus, because he proceeded from Jesus. Thus, the Holy
Spirit is both the Father of Jesus and also his offspring. And Jesus is both the
son of the Holy Spirit and his progenitor. Mary is also called the Mother of
God, because she is the mother of Jesus, who is God.
So Jesus has two fathers: God the Father and God the Holy Spirit. And God
the Holy Spirit has two fathers: God the Father and God the Son. But God the
Father has no father, instead he has two sons and one daughter-in-law. (Well,
not exactly according to the law, but God doesnt have to follow all the rules;
he is God after all.)
16
Mary has one husbandJoseph the carpenterand a quasi husbandGod
the Holy Spirit. Her son Jesus and the Spirit are brothers since both can trace
their origin to God the Father. Therefore, Jesus is not only Marys son but also
her brother-in-law.
APPENDIX D
Although not written by the Apostles, the Apostles Creed and its shorter
predecessor the Roman Creed are the oldest extant creeds. They cite the three
members of the TrinityGod the Father, Christ Jesus his only Son and the
Holy Spirit. However, only the Father is named God; the other two are not
identified as part of a divine Trinity.
I believe in God, the Father almighty, Creator of heaven and earth, and in
Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord,
who was conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary, suffered
under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died and was buried;
he descended into hell; on the third day he rose again from the dead;
he ascended into heaven, and is seated at the right hand of God the Father
almighty; from there he will come to judge the living
16
and the dead. I believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy catholic Church,
the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins,
the resurrection of the body, and life everlasting. Amen.
And I believe in the Holy Ghost the Lord, and Giver of Life,
16
who proceedeth from the Father [and the
Son]; who with the Father and the Son
together is worshipped and glorified;
who spake by the Prophets.
And I believe one holy Catholic and Apostolic
Church; I acknowledge one baptism for the
remission of sins; and I look for the resurrection
of the dead, and the life of the world to come.
Amen.
Jesus was begotten by God the Father--Light of Light, very God of very
God. The Father begot God the Son like one light lights another. When one
burning taper ignites the wick of another taper, there are two lights. This
symbolizes the way the light of the Father ignites the light of the Son.
However, if there are two lights, why not two Gods?
The answer is simple: the subsequent Athanasian Creed forbids two Gods.
God the Son was born of God the Father declares the Nicene Creed. In a
human family, if a son is born of a father, we have two humansa father and
son. If God the Son was born of God the Father, why are there not two Gods?
See the subsequent Athanasian Creed.
Very God was born of Very God, declares the Nicene Creed. This sounds like
one
God was born of another God. But this would be two Gods, something
forbidden by the
Athanasian Creed. We may say one Divine Person (Jesus) was born of another
Divine Person (the Father). And while each Divine Person is God, we may not
say there are two Gods.
16
The Athanasian Creed
The Athanasian Creed has been used by the Christian Church since the sixth
century. It is the first creed in which the equality of the three Persons of the
Trinity is explicitly stated. A medieval account credited Athanasius of
Alexandria, the famous defender of Nicene theology, as the author of the
Creed. However, it was probably written in Southern Gaul in the late fifth or
early sixth centuryat least 100 years after Athanasius.
...the Catholic Faith is this: That we worship one God in Trinity, and
Trinity in Unity; Neither confounding the Persons; nor dividing the
Essence. For there is one Person of the Father; another of the Son;
and another of the Holy Ghost. But the Godhead of the Father, of
the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, is all one; the Glory equal, the
Majesty coeternal. Such as the Father is; such is the Son; and such is
the Holy Ghost. The Father uncreated; the Son uncreated; and the
Holy Ghost uncreated. The Father unlimited; the Son unlimited; and
the Holy Ghost unlimited. The Father eternal; the Son eternal; and
the Holy Ghost eternal. And yet they are not three eternals; but one
eternal. As also there are not three uncreated; nor three infinites,
but one uncreated; and one infinite. So likewise the Father is
Almighty; the Son Almighty; and the Holy Ghost Almighty. And yet
they are not three
Almighties; but one Almighty. 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 Lord; and the Holy Ghost
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 are three Gods, or three Lords.... He therefore
that will be saved, let him thus think of the Trinity.... This is the
Catholic Faith; which except a man believe truly and firmly, he cannot
be saved.
The Athanasian Creed is recited on Trinity Sunday, which is the first Sunday
after Pentecost in the Western liturgical calendar.
16
Creed of the 11th Council of Toledo, 675
This Creed buttresses the divinity of Jesus. He is not only born of God the
Father but from his very womb. Although he is begotten of the Father, he is as
old as the Father, because the Son always existed alongside the Father.
Although the Son exists because of the Father, the two are equal in all things.
Although the Son has never begun to be been born, he continues to be born
ceaselessly.
We also confess that the Son was born, but not made, from the
substance of the Father, without beginning, before all ages, for at no
time did the Father exist without the Son, nor the Son without the
Father. Yet the Father is not from the Son, as the Son is from the
Father, because the Father was not generated by the Son but the
Son by the Father. The Son, therefore, is God from the Father, and
the Father is God, but not from the Son. He is indeed the Father of
the Son, not God from the Son; but the latter is the Son of the
Father and God from the Father. Yet in all things the Son is equal to
God the Father, for He has never begun nor ceased to be born. We
also believe that He is of one substance with the Father; wherefore
He is called homoousios with the Father, that is of the same being as
the Father, for homos in Greek means one and ousia means being,
and joined together they mean one in being. We must believe that
the Son is begotten or born not from nothing or from any other
substance, but from the womb of the Father,1 that is from His
substance. Therefore the Father is eternal, and the Son is also
eternal. If He was always Father, He always had a Son, whose Father
He was, and therefore we confess that the Son was born from the
Father without beginning. We do not call the same Son of God a
part of a divided nature, because He was generated from the Father,
but we assert that the perfect Father has begotten the perfect Son,
without diminution or division, for it pertains to the Godhead alone
not to have an unequal Son. This Son of God is also Son by nature,
not by adoption; of Him we must also believe that God the Father
begot Him neither by an act of will nor out of necessity, for in God
there is no necessity nor does will precede wisdom....
16
Note: The Son...is God from the Father, declares this Creed. But we
may not say that he is a God or one God from the Father. To say, A
God implies the presence of other Gods, a heresy. We must confine
ourselves to the phrase God from the Father to avoid endangering
our soul.
1
1. Emphasis added.
APPENDIX E
Other universities:
Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland.
Trinity College, Cambridge, Great Britain.
Trinity College (The College of the Holy and Undivided Trinity),
Oxford, Great Britain.
16
APPENDIX F
Faith is the effort to believe what your common sense tells you is
not true. Elbert Hubbard.
All religious notions are uniformly founded on authority; all the
religions the world over forbid examination, and are not disposed that
men should reason upon them.DHolbach.
Metaphysics is almost always an attempt to prove the incredible by
an appeal to the unintelligible.H. L. Mencken.
"When he that speaks, and he to whom he speaks, neither of them
understand what is meant, that is metaphysics."Voltaire
The truth is that Christian theology, like every other theology, is not
only opposed to the scientific spirit, it is also opposed to all other
attempts at rational thinking.H. L. Mencken, Treatise on the Gods.
Take from the church the miraculous, the supernatural, the
incomprehensible, the unreasonable, the impossible, the unknowable,
the absurd, and nothing but a vacuum remains.Robert G. Ingersoll.
Nothing can be more contrary to religion and the clergy than reason
and common sense.Voltaire.
16
CERBERUS
In Greek and Roman mythology Cerberus was a three-
headed hound who guarded the gates of the Underworld
preventing the dead from leaving. Dr. Servetus and Thomas
Jefferson compared the Trinity to Cerberus.
Twenty-one
Other Views
Jewish
Islam
16
Certainly they disbelieve who say: Surely Allah is the third of the three;
[when] there is no god but the one God, and if they desist not from what
they say, a painful chastisement shall befall those among them who
disbelieve. [Glorious Koran, Surah Maidah, chapter 5,
verse].
...the Christians say: The Messiah is the son of Allah.... How perverse
they are! They have taken as lords beside Allah...the Messiah son of
Mary, when they were bidden to worship only one God.
...the Nicene talk of a deity with three persons, one of whom has two
natures, but who are all somehow reducible to authentic unity, quite
apart from being rationally dubious, seems intuitively wrong. God, the
final ground of all being, surely does not need to be so complicated....
16
Trinity Gallery
God the Father in a red robe holding up the naked God
the Son, who has just expired on his cross. The Holy Spirit
in the form of a dove comes in for a landing.
17
THE DEAD GOD
God the Father holding up the dead God the Son (Jesus)
while being assisted by God the Holy Spirit in the form of a
young man with wings. The three divine persons are shown
at different ages, because, according to the Nicene Creed,
first came God the Father, who begot God the Son and the
two together brought forth God the Spirit. However, this
contradicts an article of the Athanasian Creed according to
which they are of identical age since they existed from all
eternity and are coeternal. By papal decree the Holy Spirit
may no longer be shown in the form of a human being.
Alabaster sculpture of the Holy Trinity in the National
Gallery of Art, Washington. D.C. God the Father on his
throne holds up the crucified Jesus, while the Holy Spirit
pecks at his head.
Trinity from Palmyra, Syria, First Century C.E. Left to right: (1)
moon goddess (with sickle of the moon in her halo), (2) lord of
heaven and (3) sun goddess.
T
17
B
e
s
s
e
d
T
ri
n
it
y
:
T
h
e
d
e
a
d
G
o
d
t
h
e
S
o
n
i
n
t
h
e
a
r
m
s
o
f
h
is
F
a
t
h
e
r;
a
b
o
v
e
t
h
e
m
i
s
G
o
d
t
h
e
D
o
v
e
.
A
n
g
e
ls
h
o
l
d
t
h
e
i
n
s
t
r
u
m
e
n
t
s
o
f
C
h
ri
s
t
s
p
a
s
si
o
n
t
h
e
c
r
o
w
n
o
f
t
h
o
r
n
s,
t
h
e
p
il
l
a
r
t
o
w
h
i
c
h
h
e
w
a
s
ti
e
d
,
t
h
e
c
r
o
s
s
a
n
d
t
h
e
si
g
n
n
a
il
e
d
t
o
h
is
c
r
o
s
s.
The Most Blessed Trinity: God the Son holding a cross and blessing with three digits of his
right hand extended (the sign of the Trinity). God the Father with the triangular halo. God the
Dove beaming down on Son and Father. The globe, showing the Mediterranean Basin, serves
as a footstool for Father and Son. The thumb of the angel who holds up the globe points
toward Jerusalem, the place of Christs execution.
Jesus blesses with three digits of his right hand extended (the sign of the Trinity).
A Chinese Trinity
A fully clothed God the Son (Jesus) holds up the cross, while a
balding God the Father holds a globe with the Middle Kingdom
front and center. God the Dove is barely discernible above.
The God Delusion Bantam Books