Throughout the centuries, the nature of God has
been at the center of many heated debates. Entire counsels have assembled to
discuss whether God is composed of three personalities having one nature,
whether Jesus is a part of the Godhead, how the Holy Spirit factors into the
equation, and a host of similar questions. The answers to these questions can
have far reaching theological and practical consequences. It is the purpose of
this article to prove the thesis that the Bible teaches that the Godhead is three
personalities—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—in one nature.
DEFINITIONS
As in all discussions dealing with a proper
understanding of truth, an agreed upon and acceptable, sufficiently precise
definition of the major terms must be set out in the beginning.
- Godhead or Divinity: A description of the totality, both of nature and personality, of the supernatural Creator of the world (see Lenski, 1961, p. 98).
- Nature: “The inherent character or basic constitution of a person or thing; essence” (“Nature,” 2015).
- Personality: A recognizable, distinct entity that has mind and desire. As described by Merriam-Webster: “The complex of characteristics that distinguishes an individual….The totality of an individual’s behavioral and emotional characteristics; a set of distinctive traits and characteristics” (“Personality,” 2015).
While most words that will be discussed
concerning the Trinity, such as “personality,” “nature,” and even “divinity” or
“Godhead,” are fairly easy to define, that does not mean the aspects of God
that they describe are easy to understand. In fact, the Godhead is so complex
and beyond human capability to fully understand, that any attempt to discuss
God quickly reveals the limitations of the human mind. We can never fully
understand the Godhead. As the apostle Paul so eloquently wrote about God’s
revelation of the Gospel: “Oh, the depth and the riches both of the wisdom and
the knowledge of God! How unsearchable are His judgments and His ways past
finding out” (Romans 11:33). We should not conclude, however, that nothing can
be known of God. Were that the case, to have any discussion about Him, say His
name, or even to identify the concept of God, would be impossible for us. On
the contrary, while we may not be able to understand fully all that the term
“nature” of God entails, and while we may not be able to define the concept of
a “personality” so that we comprehend everything about it, we can know enough
about the terms “Godhead,” “nature,” and “personality” to say that the Godhead
is three personalities in one nature.
THE BASIC ARGUMENT FOR THE TRINITY
The basic argument for the Trinity proceeds as
follows:
- Premise one: the Bible teaches that the Godhead is one in nature.
- Premise two: the Bible teaches that God the Father is one personality of the Godhead.
- Premise three: the Bible teaches that the Holy Spirit is one personality of the Godhead.
- Premise four: the Bible teaches that Jesus the Son is one personality of the Godhead.
- Conclusion: Therefore, God is composed of three personalities in one nature.
THE GODHEAD IS ONE IN NATURE
Various Scriptures demonstrate that the Godhead
is one in nature. One of the most well-known passages that relates this truth
is Deuteronomy 6:4, which states: “Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord
is one!” A similar passage is found in Ephesians 4:4-6, which reads, “There is
one body and one Spirit, just as you were called in one hope of your calling;
one Lord, one faith, one baptism; one God and Father of all who is above all,
and through all, and in you all.” In addition, Malachi 2:10 says, “Have we not
all one Father? Has not one God created us?” The fact that God is one is
clearly stated in the Bible.
The clear statements of God’s oneness lead some
to deny that God is composed of three personalities. They suggest that if God
is one, then He cannot be three in any way; so His oneness excludes the
possibility that the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit are all God. As M.
Davies wrote: “We have seen how that, throughout the Bible God is only
described as being one being…. So it is to the Bible we must turn, and when we
do, we do not find any evidence to suggest that God is made up of three beings”
(2009). Thus, the critics of the doctrine of the Trinity do not differentiate
between the concept of nature and that of personality. This idea will be
expanded upon in the section dealing with common objections. It is included
here simply to set up the argument for God’s oneness being in nature, and not
personality.
The Bible says that “one God” created us
(Malachi 2:10). A closer look, however, at the Creation of man shows that some
type of multiplicity was involved. Genesis 1:26-27 states, “Then God said, ‘Let
Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness.… So God created man in His
own image, in the image of God He created him; male and female He created
them.” The Hebrew language used in this passage cannot be definitively used to
prove a multiplicity, but it is written in such a way that certainly allows for
the one God to have some aspect of multiplicity or plurality. A better
understanding of this plurality is gained by looking at the verses in the Bible
that discuss the Creation. John 1:1 explains, “In the beginning was the Word,
and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God.
All things were made through Him, and without Him nothing was made that was
made.” Later in the first chapter of John we learn that the Word “became flesh
and dwelt among us.” Thus, the Word refers to Jesus, who was with God and was
God and created all things along with the Father (John 1:14). We can see, then,
that the oneness of the Creator must allow for at least some aspect of God to
have a multiplicity of something.
In logical form, we could arrange the argument
as follows. There is one God who created man. The concept of oneness either
means that nothing about God can have any type of plurality, or that some
aspect of God is completely unified but at least one other aspect of God can
have multiplicity to it. It cannot be the case that nothing about God can have
any multiplicity since the Bible gives at least one aspect of God (the Father
and the Son) that has multiplicity. Therefore, some aspect of God is completely
unified, but at least one aspect of God can have, and has, multiplicity.
Once we determine logically that at least one
aspect of God has to be “one” and completely unified without multiplicity, we
need to identify what that concept is. We see several ideas that are applied to
God in His entirety. God is eternal, from everlasting to everlasting (Psalm
90:2; Deuteronomy 33:27). God’s eternality applies to the Father, as well as to
God the Son, as is evidenced from the fact that Isaiah 9:6 describes the
Messiah (Who is recognized in the New Testament as Jesus) as being called “Everlasting
Father.” The concept of eternality equally applies to the Spirit, as the
Hebrews writer stated, “How much more shall the blood of Christ, who through
the eternal Spirit offered Himself without spot to God” (Hebrews 9:14, emp.
added). Since the concept of eternality equally applies to the Father, the Son,
and the Holy Spirit, then we have successfully determined at least one aspect
of God that is completely unified and applies equally to every aspect of God.
Such qualities compose the nature or essence of the being of God. And while it
is true that we cannot know or understand all of the aspects of God’s essence,
we can compile a list of ideas or attributes that make-up this unified whole
that applies equally to the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
- God’s essence is immutable, or unchangeable (Psalm 103:27; Hebrews 13:8).
- God’s essence is morally perfect (Habakkuk 1:13; 1 Peter 2:22).
- God’s essence is founded on justice (Psalm 89:14; Matthew 23:23).
- God’s essence is love (1 John 4:8).
- God’s essence is eternal (Psalm 90:2; Deuteronomy 33:27; Isaiah 9:6).
The Bible provides a much more exhaustive list
of the attributes of God’s nature or essence. This short list is provided to
make the point that all three personalities of God (i.e., the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit), share one unified nature that applies equally to all of them.
THE THREE PERSONALITIES OF GOD
Having established the fact that God is one in
essence or nature, we can now move to dealing with the idea that God is three
personalities. The burden of this portion of the article will be to establish
that the three personalities of God are God the Father, God the Son, and God
the Holy Spirit.
God the Father
The premise that one personality of the Godhead
is the Father is one of the least disputed and easily proven concepts in this
discussion. In fact, many people and religious groups consider the Father to be
the only personality of God (which we will show is not the case), but very few
who accept the Bible as the Word of God argue that God the Father is not God.
This is the case because there are so many verses in the Bible that identify
God in the personality of the Father. Let us examine a few of those. In 2 Peter
1:17, the text states that Jesus “received from God the Father honor and
glory.” Jude 1 is written to those “who are called, sanctified by God the
Father.” When Jesus was instructing His disciples to pray, He taught them to
say, “Our Father in heaven, hallowed be Your name” (Matthew 6:9). Paul wrote to
the Thessalonians, “Now may our God and Father Himself, and our Lord Jesus
Christ, direct our way to you” (1 Thessalonians 3:11). As with other aspects of
the argument, a much longer list could be compiled showing that the Bible
refers to God the Father as being part of the Godhead. Thus, as our argument
proceeds, we have now established that the Godhead has one unified nature, and
has at least one personality, namely, God the Father.
God the Holy Spirit
Because of the way many people view the term
“spirit,” it has often been the case that the Holy Spirit is misidentified. He
is often referred to as an “it,” and some do not recognize the fact that He is
a personality of the Godhead. The Scriptures, however, are clear that the Holy
Spirit is a personality of the Godhead in the same way as the Father and the
Son. First, recall that the Bible explains that the Spirit is eternal (Hebrews
9:14). That means that He is not a created being, but has always existed. In
argument form we would say, God is the only being that is eternal. The Holy
Spirit is eternal. Therefore, the Holy Spirit is God. In addition, we read that
just as God knows all things, the Spirit does as well. First Corinthians
2:10-11 states, “But God has revealed them to us through His Spirit. For the
Spirit searches all things, yes, the deep things of God…. Even so, no one knows
the things of God except the Spirit of God.”
The book of Acts contains a memorable story
about two early Christians named Ananias and Sapphira. These two sold a piece
of property, gave the money to the church, but lied about the price of the
land. When the apostle Peter rebuked them for their sin, he said, “Ananias, why
has Satan filled your heart to lie to the Holy Spirit... You have not lied to
men but to God” (Acts 5:3-4). Notice that Peter stated that by lying to the
Holy Spirit, Ananias had lied to God, equating God and the Holy Spirit. In
addition, 1 Peter 1:2 says that the Christians there had participated in the
“sanctification of the Spirit.” In 2 Thessalonians 5:23, the Bible says, “Now
may the God of peace Himself sanctify you completely.” Again, we see that the
work of sanctifying the Christian is accomplished by God, but is attributed to
the Holy Spirit. This line of reasoning can be extended to other aspects of
God’s action. In 2 Timothy, Paul states that “All Scripture is given by
inspiration of God” (3:16). Peter explains that the Scriptures were produced
when “holy men of God spoke as they were moved by the Holy Spirit” (2 Peter
1:21). We then can reason that God inspired the Scriptures, and the Holy Spirit
inspired the Scriptures, thus the Holy Spirit is God.
Once we establish that the Holy Spirit is God,
we next need to show that He is a person, not simply a nebulous force. We have
defined the word “person” as a recognizable, distinct entity that has mind and
desire. The Bible paints a consistent picture that the Holy Spirit, like the
Father, is a person. First, the Scriptures state that the Holy Spirit can, and
has, talked to people using language that those people can understand. In Acts
8:29, we read that “the Spirit said to Philip, ‘Go near and overtake this
chariot.’” This was not a nebulous, impersonal force, but a recognizable voice
used by a person to communicate His desire to a man named Philip. The apostle
Paul explained that “the Spirit expressly says that in later times some will
depart from the faith” (1 Timothy 4:1). Once again, the Spirit speaks in
understandable language. In Revelation, the text says that “the Spirit and the
bride say ‘Come!’” (22:17). Only a person with a will and identity could offer
such an invitation. In addition, consider that the Holy Spirit can be
blasphemed (Matthew 12:31-32), lied to (Acts 5:3), insulted or despised
(Hebrews 10:29), and grieved (Ephesians 4:30) (Olbright, 1999, p. 25). The Holy
Spirit is God, and has all the traits of a person. We therefore conclude that
the Father is one personality of God, and the Holy Spirit is another
personality of God, proving that the one God has a multiplicity of
personalities.
God the Son
In addition to the Father and the Holy Spirit,
the Bible mentions another person Who composes the Godhead—Jesus Christ the
Son. In fact, the Bible mentions these three together. Matthew 28:19 quotes
Jesus as saying that His followers should baptize disciples in the name of the
“Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.” Peter wrote that Christians
were “elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, in sanctification
of the Spirit, for obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus” (1 Peter
1:2). A straightforward reading of these passages seems to put the three on
equal footing. Some have contended, however, that even though Jesus is the Son
of God (which the Scriptures teach in numerous places; see Matthew 14:33;
16:16; Mark 1:1; Luke 8:28; John 3:16-18; 2 Corinthians 1:19), that does not
mean He was equal to God or had/has the same nature as God. Fred Pearce, who
denies that Jesus is God, wrote: “But he is God’s Son, because he has been
‘begotten.’ The ruler is not God; he is the Son of God; and he began to exist on
the day he was ‘begotten.’ Like all sons, he is preceded by his Father” (n.d.).
Some have contended that God created Jesus first, and then Jesus created
everything else. Thus, they would argue that Jesus is not God, but only the Son
of God, a creation of God, or an elevated angel. Others would argue that Jesus
was only a man and never claimed to be God or even an angel. The Bible,
however, denies both of these positions, and presents a thorough and consistent
picture of Jesus Christ the Son of God as God in nature and as a third
personality of the Godhead. Consider the following three affirmations:
I. Jesus the Son is Referred to as God
The prophet Isaiah predicted that the Messiah
would come in the form of a Child. That Messiah was going to be known as
“Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace” (Isaiah
9:6). Notice specifically that the coming Child would be called Mighty God. In
the New Testament, we see that Jesus was that Child, the anointed Messiah, the
Son of David described in Isaiah 9:6. In John 4:25, the woman with whom Jesus
talked at the well stated, “I know the Messiah is coming” to which Jesus responded,
“I who speak to you am He” (John 4:26). When we put the premises together, the
argument looks like this: The Messiah is Mighty God. Jesus Christ the Son of
God is the Messiah. Therefore, Jesus Christ is Mighty God.
In the first chapter of John, the text says,
“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was
God” (John 1:1). Again, notice that the Word is called God. Just a few verses
later, the text explains that the “Word became flesh and dwelt among us” and
that John “testified of Him” (John 1:14-15). In John 3:22-36, the person John
testified about is Jesus Christ the Son of God. Putting the pieces together, we
arrive at the following argument: The Word is God. Jesus Christ the Son is the
Word. Therefore, Jesus Christ the Son is God. The apostle Thomas added his
voice to this conclusion when he saw the wounds in Jesus’ body and proclaimed
to Jesus, “My Lord and my God!” (John 20:28).
II. Jesus the Son is Worthy of and Accepted
Worship
Matthew wrote a detailed account of Jesus being
tempted by the devil in the wilderness. During that temptation, the devil
enticed Jesus to fall down and worship him. Jesus responded by saying, “It is
written, ‘You shall worship the Lord your God, and Him only you shall serve’”
(Matthew 4:1). Jesus’ argument went as follows: All people are morally bound to
worship only one being, that is, God. The devil is not God. Therefore, no one
should ever worship the devil. From this line of reasoning, it is clear that
anyone who is faithful to God will not encourage the worship of any being other
than God. We see this truth played out in a number of episodes in the Bible. In
Acts 14, Paul and Barnabas were in the city of Lystra when they healed a
crippled man. The residents of the city were so enamored with the two, they
began to worship them. Paul and Barnabas rushed in among the crowd and tried to
stop their worship, crying out, “Men, why are you doing these things? We are
also men with the same nature as you” (Acts 14:15). Their argument was similar to
the one Jesus made. All people are morally bound to worship only one Being,
that is, God. Paul and Barnabas are not God. Therefore, no people should ever
worship Paul and Barnabas. The same thought process is used in Revelation
22:6-9. In that passage, the apostle John is introduced to an angel. The
apostle “fell down to worship before the feet of the angel” (Revelation 22:8),
but the angel said to him, “See that you do not do that. For I am your fellow
servant…. Worship God” (Revelation 22:9). The angel’s argument can be laid out
in the following way. God is the only Being any person should worship. I, an
angel, am not God. Therefore, no person should ever worship me.
When we consider how Jesus responded to being
worshiped, we can see that He readily accepted it as a proper response to His
personality and power. On numerous
occasions, the Bible records that people worshiped Jesus Christ. Matthew 14:33
says that his disciples “came and worshiped Him, saying, ‘Truly You are the Son
of God.’” Jesus accepted the worship and did not rebuke them. In John 9:38,
Jesus healed a man who had been born blind. Jesus then instructed the man to
believe in the Son of God. The man responded by saying, “Lord, I believe!” then
the text says, “And he worshiped Him” (see also Matthew 2:11; 28:9; John
20:28). As we analyze this argument, we see that Jesus said all people are
morally bound to worship only God, and Jesus accepted worship as the proper
attitude of people toward Him. Either Jesus violated Scripture and accepted worship
contrary to the Bible’s teaching, or Jesus is God. Jesus never violated
Scripture (Hebrews 4:15; John 8:46). Therefore, Jesus is God.
III. Jesus the Son is Equated with Jehovah
In the Hebrew Bible the special name for God is
called the Tetragrammaton. It is composed of four Hebrew letters and is
transliterated Jehovah or Yahweh. The actual pronunciation of the name has been
lost since the original Hebrew did not have vowels. This name is used only to
describe the eternal Creator God of the Universe. In Isaiah 6, the prophet
records a time when he saw God in a vision. The angelic beings who stood around
God’s throne addressed God as “Jehovah” of hosts in Isaiah 6:3 and used the
same name (the Tetragrammaton) in verse five. There is no doubt that Isaiah was
describing a vision of the eternal God. When we turn to the New Testament, we
see the apostle John describing this scene from Isaiah. John writes that
although He (Jesus) “had done so many signs before them, they did not believe”
(John 12:38). He then references Isaiah 6:9-10, and says, “These things Isaiah
said when he saw His glory and spoke of Him” (John 12:41). The fact that the
pronoun “Him” in verse 41 is referring to Jesus is verified by the use of the
pronoun to describe Jesus in verse 37 and verse 42. Thus, the argument can then
be made as follows: Isaiah saw the glory of Jehovah God in Isaiah 6. John says
that Isaiah saw the glory of Jesus and references the episode in Isaiah 6.
Thus, John equates Jesus with Jehovah.
Additionally, other passages reference Jesus as
being Jehovah. Isaiah 40:3 explains that a messenger would be sent as the
forerunner of the Messiah. This messenger would be “the voice of one crying in
the wilderness” who would “prepare the way of the Lord (Jehovah); make straight
in the desert a highway for our God” (Isaiah 40:3). The New Testament applies
this prophecy to John the Baptizer (John 1:11) and declares that John prepared
the way for Jesus, thus equating Jesus with Jehovah. Again, the argument is as
follows: Isaiah said the messenger would prepare the way for Jehovah. John was
the messenger Isaiah predicted. He prepared the way for Jesus. Thus, Jesus is
equated with Jehovah.
From these passages and the arguments they
present, the Bible student is drawn to a concrete conclusion about Jesus the
Son. Not only is Jesus directly called God, He accepted worship that is
reserved only for God, and the holy name of Jehovah is applied to Jesus; thus
Jesus is God. The idea that Jesus is a person who has a personality is
undisputed. Therefore, Jesus is one personality of the Godhead. [NOTE: For more
information on the deity of Christ, see the entire section of this site dedicated to that topic under the headings Theology/Christology and “Who is Jesus” at http://thewholecounselofgod.blogspot.cl/p/foundationdoc.html]
OBJECTIONS CONSIDERED
As with any subject pertaining to God and the
Bible, an exhaustive list of objections and responses to them would be so
extensive it would take hundreds or thousands of pages to complete. With that
in mind, we will have to content ourselves with responses to a few of the more
common objections to the thesis we have presented.
Objection 1:
The Word Trinity is Not in the Bible
The concept that the Godhead is three
personalities—the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—in one nature is often
summarized as presenting a triune God. The term triune denotes a trinity of
personalities in one unified nature. The noun form of the adjective is Trinity.
The term Trinity is used by the vast majority of Christians, and others who
accept the thesis of this article, to describe the nature and personalities of
God. One primary objection to the use of this word, and the conclusion that it
is used to describe, is that the term is not even used in the Bible. For
example, one critic of the idea of the Trinity wrote:
But did you realize that, even though it is a
common assumption among many sincere religious people, the word Trinity does
not appear anywhere in the Bible? In fact, the word Trinity did not come into
common use as a religious term until centuries after the last books of the
Bible were completed—long after the apostles of Christ were gone from the
scene! (“Is the Trinity...?” 2011, italics in orig.).
Supposedly, because the Bible does not use the
term Trinity to describe God, then the idea of a Trinity is an extrabiblical
idea that was forced into the text.
In truth, the objection that the term Trinity
is not used in the Bible can be refuted by showing that there certainly are
words used today that describe concepts in the Bible, but those words or terms
are not in the text. For instance, the Bible never uses the term “atheist” or
“atheism.” Can we argue from that fact that the Bible does not deal with the
concept of a person who does not believe in God? No, since we can see that
Psalm 14:1 states, “The fool has said in his heart, ‘There is no God.’” Our
modern term “atheism” accurately describes a person who says, “There is no
God,” even though the term is not used in the text. In addition, the Bible
never uses the word “Sunday,” yet we use that word today to accurately describe
the day the Bible calls “the first day of the week,” which came after the
Sabbath. Incidentally, we use the word “Saturday” to describe the Sabbath, even
though “Saturday” is never used in the Bible. These examples show the logical inconsistency
of claiming that a concept is not taught in the Bible if the word we currently
use to describe the concept is not in the Bible.
Objection 2:
If God is One, He Cannot Be Three
Another often heard objection to the thesis is
the idea that if God is one, there is no way that He can be three. Those who
use this argument quote verses such as Deuteronomy 6:4, “The Lord our God, the
Lord is one!” and Ephesians 4:6 which says there is “one God and Father of
all.” They argue that if God is one, as these verses say, then He cannot be
three at the same time, because this would be a violation of the law of logic
known as the Law of Contradiction.
In responding to this argument, it is helpful
to review what the Law of Contradiction actually says. Warren states the law
as: “Nothing can both have and not have a given characteristic (or property) in
precisely the same respect” (1982, p. 23). Another way to state the law is that
nothing can both be something, and not be that same thing at the same time, in
the same way. The pertinent aspect of the Law of Contradiction as it relates to
the Trinity discussion is the idea of a person or thing having a certain
characteristic “in precisely the same respect” or “in the same way.” For
instance, we could say that a person named Bob is very rich and very poor.
While it seems contradictory at first, we could mean that he is physically and
financially prosperous, but he is very shallow and spiritually poor. So, in one
sense he is rich (monetarily) and in another sense he is poor (spiritually).
Therefore, it can be true that he is both rich and poor at one and the same
time. In the same way, God can both be one and be three at the same time
precisely because the terms “one” and “three” apply to different aspects of God.
When we use the word “one” we are discussing God’s eternal nature or essence.
When we use the word “three” we are describing the personalities of God, not
His nature. Thus, it is important to understand that the Godhead is three
personalities in one nature. This statement does not violate the Law of
Contradiction and accords with what the Bible says.
Objection 3:
Jesus Denied That He is God
Some who argue against the Trinity claim that
Jesus did not view Himself as God, and on several occasions denied His deity.
One of the passages most often used to bolster this claim is Mark 10:17. In
this passage, a wealthy young man ran to see Jesus and asked Him, “Good
teacher, what shall I do that I may inherit eternal life?” Jesus responded by
saying, “Why do you call me good? No one is good but One, that is, God.”
According to the skeptical view, Jesus is denying that He is God. But a closer
look at Jesus’ comment reveals just the opposite to be the case. Notice that
Jesus never denies that He is the “good teacher.” He simply makes the comment
that there is only one Who is truly good, and that is God. Thus, if the young
man’s statement is true that Jesus is the “good teacher” (and it is), and there
is only one Who is “good,” and that is God, then Jesus is acknowledging His
deity, not denying it. As with all discussion of Scripture, it is important to
look at what the text actually says and not what other people claim the text
says [NOTE: For a more complete list of answers to objections to Christ’s deity
see Lyons, 2006; in addition, for a thorough case for the deity of Christ, see
Butt and Lyons, 2006.]
CONCLUSION
A discussion of the nature and personalities of
God is important for several reasons. First, if God includes information about
Him in the Bible, then He must want humans to study and learn that information.
Second, a misunderstanding of God’s personalities could result in a spiritually
catastrophic conclusion that is at odds with God’s Word. If a person
misunderstands that Jesus is the eternal God on par with the Father and Spirit,
that person may never grasp the significance of the fact that God in the flesh
came to Earth to die for his or her sins. Such a misunderstanding may also
cause that person to fail to honor Christ as the Bible commands. Jesus stated
“that all should honor the Son just as they honor the Father. He who does not
honor the Son does not honor the Father who sent Him” (John 5:23). Only if a
person understands that the Son is God just as the Father is God can that
person honor the Son “just as” he or she honors the Father. Thus, a discussion
of the Trinity is necessary to sound Christian doctrine and practice.
If a person approaches the sum of Scripture
motivated by an earnest desire to know the truth about the Godhead, that person
can, with complete confidence, infer from the biblical premises and
implications that the Godhead is three personalities—the Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit—in one nature.
REFERENCES
Butt, Kyle
and Eric Lyons (2006), Behold! The Lamb of God (Montgomery, AL: Apologetics
Press).
Davies,
Matt (2009), “God—A Single Entity and Not a Trinity,” The Gospel Truth,
http://www.the-gospel-truth.info/bible-teachings/god-unity-or-trinity/.
“Is the
Trinity Biblical?” (2011), United Church of God,
http://www.ucg.org/bible-study-tools/booklets/is-god-a-trinity/is-the-trinity-biblical.
Lenski,
R.C.H. (1961 reprint), The Interpretation of St. Paul’s Epistle to the Romans
(Minneapolis, MN: Augsburg).
Lyons, Eric
(2006), “Answering Christ’s Critics,” Apologetics Press,
http://www.apologeticspress.org/APContent.aspx?category=6&article=578&topic=71.
Miller,
Dave (2005), “Jesus’ Claims to Deity,” Apologetics Press,
https://apologeticspress.org/apcontent.aspx?category=10&article=2465.
“Nature”
(2015), Merriam-Webster, http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/nature.
Olbright,
Owen (1999), The Holy Spirit: Person and Work (Delight, AR: Gospel Light).
Pearce,
Fred (no date),“Jesus: God the Son or the Son of God? Does the Bible Teach the
Trinity?” http://www.christadelphia.org/pamphlet/jesus.htm.
“Personality”
(2015), Merriam-Webster, http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/personality.
Warren,
Thomas B. (1982), Logic and the Bible (Ramer, TN: National Christian Press).