Unitarianism vs Trinitarianism

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RLT63

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It did hide it from you. The Hebrew word occurs 172 times. KJV showed it to you only 99 times. They concealed it from you 43 % of the time.



I recommend using a tool that does.



You aren’t thinking hebraically. That was the major point of the article I linked. You’re imposing your non-Hebraic understanding
Bible Hub allows you to search for the Greek and Hebrew words.https://biblescan.com/searchhebrew.php?q=worshipped
 
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Matthias

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They have to think 100% opposite the Hebrew writers who wrote all of the Bible, every book except those perhaps by Luke, in order to justify their dogma.

Trinitarianism is dependent on Greek metaphysics. What came before it isn’t.

That new way of thinking is what gradually moved the church from unitarianism (Jerusalem) to trinitarianism (Nicaea).

It’s an incredible story.
 
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Wrangler

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Read it again. I do believe God raised Jesus from the dead. I don't believe like the Unitarians though and they use this verse as a proof text.
What would qualify as proof text? What set of words comprise a rejection criteria against this inherently contradictory doctrine of the trinity?
 

Matthias

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“The Trinitarian dogma was formulated and explained with the use of metaphysical concepts that acquired new meanings in the theological context and could in turn influence ontology.”

(Pawel Rojek, “Exploring the Porous Boundaries Between Theology and Philosophy”)


The Roman Catholics are the best source, imo, for information on the influence of Greek philosophy on the post-biblical understanding and interpretation of scripture which trinitarianism introduces us to.

My perspective: The church, which was on track without it, went off course with it.
 

Wrangler

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Trinitarianism is dependent on Greek metaphysics. What came before it isn’t.

That new way of thinking is what gradually moved the church from unitarianism (Jerusalem) to trinitarianism (Nicaea).

It’s an incredible story.
In short, the Jesus is the Jewish Messiah. The Jews are monotheists who reject the trinity to this day.

Gentile followers of Christ became influenced by mysticism and Paganism as they migrated West from Jerusalem.

One thing that surprised me about modern day Jews is the enmity they still hold toward Jesus. Some have put it this way. Among Jews, Jesus is the most despised Jew in their long history.

An incredible story.
 

RLT63

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In short, the Jesus is the Jewish Messiah. The Jews are monotheists who reject the trinity to this day.

Gentile followers of Christ became influenced by mysticism and Paganism as they migrated West from Jerusalem.

One thing that surprised me about modern day Jews is the enmity they still hold toward Jesus. Some have put it this way. Among Jews, Jesus is the most despised Jew in their long history.

An incredible story.
Then why do you see their rejection of the Trinity as helpful? They reject Jesus so are they really authorities on the scriptures?
 

Wrangler

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Then why do you see their rejection of the Trinity as helpful? They reject Jesus so are they really authorities on the scriptures?
The Scriptures do not contain the trinity - not the word and not the doctrine. If you begin with Scripture, you’ll be content to jettison the trinity as false doctrine. So, it’s very helpful.

Given that you start with the doctrine of the trinity, you claim all of Scripture ‘supports’ it while denying its explicit teaching is absent - and what that implies.

Obviously, the Jews do not embrace the NT as Scripture.
 

RLT63

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The Scriptures do not contain the trinity - not the word and not the doctrine. If you begin with Scripture, you’ll be content to jettison the trinity as false doctrine. So, it’s very helpful.

Given that you start with the doctrine of the trinity, you claim all of Scripture ‘supports’ it while denying its explicit teaching is absent - and what that implies.

Obviously, the Jews do not embrace the NT as Scripture.
But you look to them as authorities on the OT. If they missed Jesus then they can't be right about everything.
 

Wrangler

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But you look to them as authorities on the OT. If they missed Jesus then they can't be right about everything.
Indeed.

I’m not too big on prophecy & revelation in Scripture as it’s too symbolic to be practical for my tastes. However, my general impression is when the Jews start to embrace Jesus as their Messiah, it is a major milestone predicting the return of Christ.

Recently I learned that there are more Jews who accept Christ as their Messiah than at any point in the last 2,000 years.

This sort of thing gives me goose bumps. Prophecy playing out before our eyes, in our generation.
 

Matthias

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“No responsible New Testament scholar would claim that the doctrine of the Trinity was taught by Jesus, or preached by the earliest Christians, or consciously held by any writer of the New Testament. It was in fact slowly worked out in the course of the first few centuries in an attempt to give an intelligible doctrine of God.”

(A.T. Hanson, The Image of the Invisible God)

Trinitarianism has a history. A post-biblical history. A post-biblical history which is well preserved and readily available for us to read today.

What would church history look like had the church stayed with the intelligible doctrine of God it began with?
 
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RLT63

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The Trinity is Christianity’s most unique, defining, incomprehensible, and awesome mystery. It is the revelation of who our Almighty Creator actually is—not just a god, but an infinite Being existing in eternity as three co-equal, infinite Persons, consubstantial yet distinct. The origin of the doctrine of the Trinity is the Bible, although the word Trinity is not used in the Bible.

As all orthodox Christians agree, the doctrine of the Trinity holds that God is one essence but three Persons; God has one nature, but three centers of consciousness; God is only one What, but three Whos. Some unbelievers mistakenly call this a contradiction. Rather, the doctrine of the Trinity is a mystery revealed by God in His Word. A contradiction would be to claim that God has only one nature but also three natures, or that He is only one Person but also three Persons.

From the very beginning of the church, Christians have understood the mystery of the Trinity, even before they began using the term Trinity.

For example, the first Christians knew the Son was the Creator (John 1:1–2), the “I Am” of the Old Testament (Exodus 3:14; John 8:58), equal to the Father (John 14:9), and the Judge of all the earth (Genesis 18:25; John 5:22), who is to be worshiped as only God is allowed to be (Deuteronomy 6:13; Luke 4:8; Matthew 14:33).

The first Christians knew the Holy Spirit was a separate Person with His own thoughts and will (John 16:13), who intercedes for us with God (Romans 8:27), proving He is a distinct Person from God the Father—since intercession requires at least two parties (no one intercedes with himself). Furthermore, a human can be forgiven for blaspheming God the Son, but not for blaspheming God the Holy Spirit (Matthew 12:32).

New Testament writers mention all three Persons of the Trinity together numerous times (e.g., Romans 1:4; 15:30; 2 Corinthians 13:14; Ephesians 1:13–14; 1 Thessalonians 1:3–6). The early believers knew that the Father and the Son sent the third Person of the Trinity, the Holy Spirit—“another counselor”—to live in our hearts (John 14:16–17, 26; 16:7). These mysteries were accepted fully by the early church as revealed truth, yet without the label of “the Holy Trinity.”

The Old Testament gave glimpses of the Trinity, and no passage of Scripture contradicts the doctrine. For example, in Genesis 1:26 God says in the plural, “Let us make mankind in our image.” God declares that He was completely alone when He created everything, stretching out the heavens and spreading out the earth “by myself” (Isaiah 44:24). Yet Jesus was the instrument of God’s creation (John 1:1–3; Colossians 1:16), in the company of the Holy Spirit who was hovering over the primordial waters (Genesis 1:2). Only the doctrine of the Trinity can explain it all.

The Torah hinted at the idea of God existing in multiple Persons and predicted His coming in the flesh. The Old Testament is filled with references to a coming world ruler (Genesis 49:10) to be born in Bethlehem (Micah 5:2), who was not only God’s Son (Isaiah 9:6) but a Messiah who would be God in the flesh (Isaiah 7:14; Zechariah 2:8–11). But the Jews were looking for—and, under Roman occupation, desperately hoping for—a triumphant, conquering Messiah, not a lowly, suffering Servant (Isaiah 53). Israel failed to recognize the Son of God due to His ordinariness (Isaiah 53:2; Matthew 13:54–58; John 10:33), and they killed Him (Zechariah 12:10; Acts 2:36).

In the years after the death of the last apostle, John, there were many attempts by Christian theologians to define and explain God to the church. Explanations of spiritual reality to earthly beings will always fall short; some teachers’ explanations were a bit off, while others sank into heresy. The errors put forward in post-apostolic times ranged from Jesus being all God and only appearing to be human (Docetism), to His being created rather than eternal (Adoptionism, Arianism, and others), to there being three separate gods in the same family (Tritheism), to the one God playing three different roles at different times (Modalism, Monarchianism).

As no religion can exist without knowing who or what its followers worship, there was a great need to define God in a way that all followers of Christianity would agree upon as “official” or orthodox doctrine. And, if Jesus were not God, all Christians were heretics for worshiping a created being.

It seems that the church father Tertullian (AD 160–225) was the first to apply the term Trinity to God. Tertullian uses the term in Against Praxeus, written in 213 to explain and defend the Trinity against the teaching of his contemporary Praxeus, who espoused the Monarchian heresy. From there, we can jump forward over a century of church discussion, schisms, and debate to the Council of Nicea in 325, when the Trinity was finally confirmed as official church doctrine.

A final observation. Theology is the attempt by flawed humans to understand the words of the Bible, just as science is the attempt by flawed humans to understand the facts of nature. All the facts of nature are true, just as all the original words of the Bible are true. But humans are limited and make lots of mistakes, as history continually shows. So, where there is error or disagreement in science or theology, both disciplines have methods of correction. The history of the early church reveals that many sincere Christian believers “got it wrong” when it came to defining God’s nature (a great lesson on the need for humility). But, through a careful study of God’s Word, the church was finally able to articulate what the Bible clearly teaches and what they knew to be true—God exists as an eternal Trinity.
 

Matthias

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The Trinity is Christianity’s most unique, defining, incomprehensible, and awesome mystery. It is the revelation of who our Almighty Creator actually is—not just a god, but an infinite Being existing in eternity as three co-equal, infinite Persons, consubstantial yet distinct. The origin of the doctrine of the Trinity is the Bible, although the word Trinity is not used in the Bible.

As all orthodox Christians agree, the doctrine of the Trinity holds that God is one essence but three Persons; God has one nature, but three centers of consciousness; God is only one What, but three Whos. Some unbelievers mistakenly call this a contradiction. Rather, the doctrine of the Trinity is a mystery revealed by God in His Word. A contradiction would be to claim that God has only one nature but also three natures, or that He is only one Person but also three Persons.

From the very beginning of the church, Christians have understood the mystery of the Trinity, even before they began using the term Trinity.

For example, the first Christians knew the Son was the Creator (John 1:1–2), the “I Am” of the Old Testament (Exodus 3:14; John 8:58), equal to the Father (John 14:9), and the Judge of all the earth (Genesis 18:25; John 5:22), who is to be worshiped as only God is allowed to be (Deuteronomy 6:13; Luke 4:8; Matthew 14:33).

The first Christians knew the Holy Spirit was a separate Person with His own thoughts and will (John 16:13), who intercedes for us with God (Romans 8:27), proving He is a distinct Person from God the Father—since intercession requires at least two parties (no one intercedes with himself). Furthermore, a human can be forgiven for blaspheming God the Son, but not for blaspheming God the Holy Spirit (Matthew 12:32).

New Testament writers mention all three Persons of the Trinity together numerous times (e.g., Romans 1:4; 15:30; 2 Corinthians 13:14; Ephesians 1:13–14; 1 Thessalonians 1:3–6). The early believers knew that the Father and the Son sent the third Person of the Trinity, the Holy Spirit—“another counselor”—to live in our hearts (John 14:16–17, 26; 16:7). These mysteries were accepted fully by the early church as revealed truth, yet without the label of “the Holy Trinity.”

The Old Testament gave glimpses of the Trinity, and no passage of Scripture contradicts the doctrine. For example, in Genesis 1:26 God says in the plural, “Let us make mankind in our image.” God declares that He was completely alone when He created everything, stretching out the heavens and spreading out the earth “by myself” (Isaiah 44:24). Yet Jesus was the instrument of God’s creation (John 1:1–3; Colossians 1:16), in the company of the Holy Spirit who was hovering over the primordial waters (Genesis 1:2). Only the doctrine of the Trinity can explain it all.

The Torah hinted at the idea of God existing in multiple Persons and predicted His coming in the flesh. The Old Testament is filled with references to a coming world ruler (Genesis 49:10) to be born in Bethlehem (Micah 5:2), who was not only God’s Son (Isaiah 9:6) but a Messiah who would be God in the flesh (Isaiah 7:14; Zechariah 2:8–11). But the Jews were looking for—and, under Roman occupation, desperately hoping for—a triumphant, conquering Messiah, not a lowly, suffering Servant (Isaiah 53). Israel failed to recognize the Son of God due to His ordinariness (Isaiah 53:2; Matthew 13:54–58; John 10:33), and they killed Him (Zechariah 12:10; Acts 2:36).

In the years after the death of the last apostle, John, there were many attempts by Christian theologians to define and explain God to the church. Explanations of spiritual reality to earthly beings will always fall short; some teachers’ explanations were a bit off, while others sank into heresy. The errors put forward in post-apostolic times ranged from Jesus being all God and only appearing to be human (Docetism), to His being created rather than eternal (Adoptionism, Arianism, and others), to there being three separate gods in the same family (Tritheism), to the one God playing three different roles at different times (Modalism, Monarchianism).

As no religion can exist without knowing who or what its followers worship, there was a great need to define God in a way that all followers of Christianity would agree upon as “official” or orthodox doctrine. And, if Jesus were not God, all Christians were heretics for worshiping a created being.

It seems that the church father Tertullian (AD 160–225) was the first to apply the term Trinity to God. Tertullian uses the term in Against Praxeus, written in 213 to explain and defend the Trinity against the teaching of his contemporary Praxeus, who espoused the Monarchian heresy. From there, we can jump forward over a century of church discussion, schisms, and debate to the Council of Nicea in 325, when the Trinity was finally confirmed as official church doctrine.

A final observation. Theology is the attempt by flawed humans to understand the words of the Bible, just as science is the attempt by flawed humans to understand the facts of nature. All the facts of nature are true, just as all the original words of the Bible are true. But humans are limited and make lots of mistakes, as history continually shows. So, where there is error or disagreement in science or theology, both disciplines have methods of correction. The history of the early church reveals that many sincere Christian believers “got it wrong” when it came to defining God’s nature (a great lesson on the need for humility). But, through a careful study of God’s Word, the church was finally able to articulate what the Bible clearly teaches and what they knew to be true—God exists as an eternal Trinity.

You obviously didn’t post this for people like me. Who did you post it for?

Do you understand why - in general - it isn’t an effective approach, no matter what theology a person embraces?
 

RLT63

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You obviously didn’t post this for people like me. Who did you post it for?

Do you understand why - in general - it isn’t an effective approach, no matter what theology a person embraces?
It was posted on the thread not as a response to anyone. It is there for everyone to see. agree, disagree or be indifferent.
 

Matthias

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It was posted on the thread not as a response to anyone. It is there for everyone to see. agree, disagree or be indifferent.

That’s fine. Given what you said concerning people whose minds were made up, I deduced that you were probably posting with an eye toward those whose minds were not made up.

You should know why your approach isn’t effective with people like me who are historically grounded.

Do you understand why your approach isn’t effective with those whose minds aren’t made up? It’s really simple. I learned it in my preaching classes at school.
 
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RLT63

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That’s fine. Given what you said concerning people whose minds were made up, I deduced that you were probably posting with an eye toward those whose minds were not made up.

You should know why your approach isn’t effective with people like me who are historically grounded.

Do you understand why your approach isn’t effective with those whose minds aren’t made up? It’s really simple. I learned it in my preaching classes at school.
I don't see anything wrong with the article I posted. Here is one that you would probably prefer
 

Matthias

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I don't see anything wrong with the article I posted. Here is one that you would probably prefer

I didn’t ask you if you saw anything wrong with the article. I asked you if you understood why the approach you’re taking isn’t effective.
 

RLT63

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I didn’t ask you if you saw anything wrong with the article. I asked you if you understood why the approach you’re taking isn’t effective.
It's not going to be effective on someone who has their mind made up to believe otherwise.
 
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