Kwabena Donkor: Biblical Research Institute
Kwabena Donkor: Biblical Research Institute
Kwabena Donkor: Biblical Research Institute
Kwabena Donkor
RELEASE
09
God in 3 Persons —
in Theology
1
See Denis Fortin, “God, the Trinity, and Adventism: An Introduction to the Issues,”
Journal of the Adventist Theological Society 17.1 (2006): 4.
2
See Millard J. Erickson, Who’s Tampering with the Trinity (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel,
2009), 13–14.
3
See Jerry Moon, “The Quest for a Biblical Trinity: Ellen White’s ‘Heavenly Trio’ Compared
to the Traditional Doctrine,” Journal of the Adventist Theological Society 17.1 (2006): 141.
4
See Paul Tillich, A History of Christian Thought, ed. Carl E. Braaten (New York: Touchstone,
1967), xxxviii.
5
Alister E. McGrath, Historical Theology: An Introduction to the History of Christian Thought
(Malden: Blackwell, 1998), 61.
3
tional issue with the doctrine of the Trinity as it developed was not how
God is three and one, as if the ultimate concern is a mathematical one.
The basic concern of the doctrine was how the one God is Father, Son,
and Holy Spirit. It was the issues surrounding this basic concern that
required attention then as they do for some now. In this presentation,
we will provide a statement of the doctrine and trace the key dynamics
and moments of its development and reception throughout Christian
history until the present. After this discussion, which will necessarily
be brief, the question of the Trinity within Adventism will be addressed.
6
The practice of worshipping Jesus was not without difficulty even among the early Jewish
Christians. One early brand of heretical Jewish Christianity was Ebionism. Not only did the
Ebionites hold fast to the validity of the Law of Moses, in their writings (“Pseudo-Clement”)
they put Jesus on the same level as the prophets. Consequently, Ebionism was one of the
first attempts to conceive Jesus Christ in purely human terms. See Bengt Hägglund, History
of Theology, trans. Gene J. Lund (St. Louis, MO: Concordia Publishing House, 2007), 31–32.
4
As Christianity made its way into Greek culture, the potential
was there for the idea of divine plurality to be equally repugnant to
the platonically-inclined Gentile intelligentsia. The platonic God was
one, simple and indivisible. Yet we find in the writings of the early
Christian leaders oblique affirmative references to divinity in terms
of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.7 Later Gentile theologians found
a way to account for the potential philosophical problem in terms of
the Neoplatonic Logos concept.
The apologists were the first to employ the Logos concept in an
attempt to frame the relationship between Christ and the Father in
intellectual terms. The concept was familiar to late Judaism and Sto-
icism. Basically, the idea was that the Logos, as divine Mind or intel-
ligence, occupied an intermediary position between the Source of all
being and the visible world. Justin Martyr argued along these lines,
showing that the Logos had assumed shape and become a man in Je-
sus Christ. The functions of the Logos, however, preceded the incar-
nation, for Justin declared the Logos “to be the Father’s agent in creat-
ing and ordering the universe, and to reveal truth to men.”8 As to its
nature, the Logos is distinguished from “other things.” The latter are
“things made,” or “creatures,” but the Logos is God’s “offspring,” His
“child,” and “unique Son.”9 Justin remarks:
7
In 1 Clement 46:6, we read: “Do we not have one God and one Christ and one Spirit of
grace which was poured out upon us? And is there not one calling in Christ?” Similarly, in
the introduction of Ignatius’ letter to the Ephesians, he writes of the Ephesians as “united
and elect through genuine suffering by the will of the Father and of Jesus Christ our
God” (quoted in Roger E. Olson and Christopher A. Hall, The Trinity [Grand Rapids, MI:
Eerdmans, 2002], 17). In the Martyrdom of Polycarp, we also find the plurality slant. His
confession before martyrdom clearly had a triadic tone: “O Lord God Almighty, Father of
your beloved Son Jesus Christ . . . I bless you because you have considered me worthy of
this day and hour, that I might receive a place among the number of the martyrs . . . to the
resurrection to eternal life . . . in the incorruptibility of the Holy Spirit (“The Martyrdom
of Polycarp 14:1–2” in The Apostolic Fathers, 3rd edition, ed. Michael W. Holmes [Grand
Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2007], 321–323). Of the Apostolic Fathers generally, J. N.
D Kelly notes, “Of a doctrine of the Trinity in the strict sense there is of course no sign,
although the Church’s triadic formula left its mark everywhere” (J. N. D. Kelly, Early
Christian Doctrines [New York: Prince Press, 2003], 95).
8
Kelly, 97.
9
Ibid.
5
God, and then Lord and Logos; and on another occasion He
calls Himself Captain, when He appeared in human form to
Joshua the son of Nave (Nun). For He can be called by all
those names, since He ministers to the Father’s will, and since
He was begotten of the Father by an act of will.10
10
“Dialogue of Justin, Philosopher and Martyr with Trypho, a Jew,” in Ante-Nicene Fathers,
10 vols., eds. A. Roberts, J. Donaldson, and A. C. Coxe (reprint of 1885 edition, Peabody,
MA: Hendrickson, 1994), 1:227.
11
Justin explains, “Just as we see happening among ourselves: for when we give out some
word, we beget the word; yet not by abscission, so as to lessen the word [which remains]
in us, when we give it out: and just as we see also happening in the case of a fire, which is
not lessened when it has kindled [another], but remains the same; and that which has been
kindled by it likewise appears to exist by itself, not diminishing that from which it was
kindled” (Ante-Nicene Fathers, 1:227).
12
Kelly, 98–108.
13
Quoted in Kelly, 107.
14
See Stephen R. Holmes, The Quest for the Trinity: The Doctrine of God in Scripture, History
and Modernity (Downers Grove, IL: Intervarsity Press, 2012), 62–67.
15
The economic level refers to the roles or functions performed by each Person of the
Trinity in creation and redemption.
6
two divergent theological positions, both embracing a monarchical
idea. First, dynamic monarchianism, with Paul of Samosata (Bishop
of Antioch, ca. 260) as its chief proponent, suggested that although
God’s wisdom dwelt with the man Jesus, “it did not form an indepen-
dent person within Him.”16 Other dynamic monarchianists (e.g., The-
odotus of Byzantium, 2nd century) suggested that Jesus lived as other
men until the time of His baptism when Christ came over Him as a
power and became active within Him from that point onwards. The
second monarchial development was “modalism,” with Sabellius (ca.
215) as its chief proponent. Modalism was keen to emphasize God’s
oneness. They likened the relationship between the three Persons
with the way the sun and its warmth and light are. Sabellius is noted
to have remarked that “God, with respect to hypostasis [underlying
substance], is only one, but he has been personified in Scripture in
various ways according to the current need.”17 Both forms of monar-
chianism were condemned as heretical18 and the Logos formulation
continued to be by and large embraced.
But, when the apologists employed the Logos concept, they
unwittingly imported the implications of the concept. Even if the
Logos was of the same divine essence, as they insisted, its begetting
(generation) had to be at the beginning of time (Creation). The con-
cept would also imply that the Logos was somewhat subordinate to
the Father, notwithstanding the apologists’ strong defense of the Lo-
gos’ preexistence. In no one was this idea perhaps more evident than
in Origen of Alexandria. Concerned to establish the uniqueness of
God, Origen (ca. 200), perhaps more than others, affirmed the abso-
lutely simple, intellectual nature of God along Greek philosophical
lines. Thus he maintained that only the Trinity is truly incorporeal
(having no physical body or form).19 Furthermore, bolstered by the
Greek philosophical concept of immutability, even the Father’s be-
getting of the Son could not be what constitutes Him as Father since
He does not change—meaning “the Father must eternally be Father,
and so the Son must eternally be.”20 The same strong philosophical
concept of immutability, however, forced Origen, addressing God’s
redemptive activity in the world through His Son, to slip into sub-
16
Hägglund, 71.
17
Ibid, 72.
18
The bases of the early church’s rejection of modalism were the following: on the one hand,
dynamic monarchianism denied the church’s standard understanding at the time of the
Son’s consubstantiality with the Father; on the other hand, modalism denied the doctrine
of the three Persons, while both denied the doctrine of the Son’s birth in eternity.
19
See Holmes, The Quest for the Trinity, 74–80.
20
Holmes, 76.
7
ordinationism (the Son and the Holy spirit are suboardinate to the
Father).21
The Logos formulation seemed to have survived until the chal-
lenge of Arius, the radical subordinationist. Before discussing Arius
and Nicea, however, we should briefly mention Tertullian’s (ca. 200)
work in the West. Tertullian’s work against Praxeas was most signifi-
cant for the development of the Trinitarian doctrine, being instru-
mental in the development of nearly all the technical terminology that
would become standard Trinitarian jargon. In Against Praxeas Tertul-
lian was attacking someone who seemed to have modalistic monar-
chian views. Tertullian was particularly horrified by the implication
of patripassianism (the notion that the Father suffered). And, while
exegetically insisting on real differences between the Father and Son,
Tertullian introduced language to help clarify the differentiation. He
used the word persona in speaking about the Father, Son, and Spirit,
and the word substantia (“substance”) as an indication of something
that exists. It is in this sense that the phrase “one substance, three
persons” developed. In this, Tertullian went beyond Irenaeus because
unlike the latter, his formulation refers to the internal life of God.
21
Holmes, 80.
8
is a creature and a work. Neither is He like in essence to the
Father; neither is He the true and natural Word of the Father;
neither is He His true Wisdom; but He is one of the things
made and created, and is called the Word and Wisdom by an
abuse of terms, since He Himself originated by the proper
Word of God, and by the Wisdom that is in God, by which
God has made not only all other things but Him also.22
The truth reveals that the Logos is not one of the created things:
He is, rather, their Creator. For He has taken upon Himself
the created, human body of man, in order that He, likewise
a Creator, could renew this body and deify it in Himself, so
that man, on the strength of his identity with Christ, might
enter the kingdom of heaven. But man, who is a part of
creation, could never become like God if the Son were not
truly God. . . . Likewise, man would not have been freed from
sin and damnation if the Logos had not taken upon Himself
22
“Deposition of Arius,” in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, 11 vols., eds.
Philip Schaff and Henry Wace (reprint of 1890 edition, Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 2004),
4:70.
23
www.creeds.net/ancient/nicene.htm, accessed March, 2014.
24
Hägglund, 80–81.
9
our natural, human flesh. Neither could man have become
Godlike if the Word which became flesh had not come from
the Father—if He had not been His own true Word.”25
The Nicene Creed, however, did not lay the Arian controversy
to rest. By 373, when Athanasius, the staunchest defender of Nicene
theology, died, the controversy was still in progress. His contribution,
however, prepared the way for what is generally taken to be the final
word for the Church on the matter at the Council of Constantinople
in 381. The Cappadocian Fathers continued Athanasius’ work in dif-
ferent forms: Basil the Great (d. 379), Gregory of Nyssa (d. 394), and
Gregory of Nazianzus (d. 390).
These Fathers approached the issue somewhat differently than
Athanasius, beginning with the earlier “Eastern” theology, where the
three persons tended to be considered as different expressions in the
divine being. The Cappadocians’ work was largely in response to the
anti-Trinitarian thoughts of Eunomius (d. 393). Eunomius argued ra-
tionally, and on the basis of a particular understanding of language
(that words refer to entities), that the authentic essence or nature of
God is “ingenerate/unbegotten.”26 On the basis of Eastern Neopla-
tonic philosophical reflections on God, this ingenerate/ungenerated
nature (ousia) has to be simple and indivisible. Furthermore, “names,
properly used, correspond on a one-one mapping to entities.”27 There-
fore, to say God is ungenerated really says everything that can be said
about His nature. It follows, then, that the Son has to be “generated/
begotten,” not of God’s essence or ousia, but of His will and action. It
is, therefore, categorically impossible for the Father to establish a Son
of similar ousia.
The Cappadocians first of all denied the possibility of human lan-
guage to define God’s nature, which they believed is inexpressible. Ac-
cording to Basil the Great, divine names are partial depictions of God.
Thus “Father and Son” language does not describe what God is (the
divine essence being inexpressible), but how God is.28 Gregory of Nys-
sa, on his part showed first of all that the argument that God’s names
really have referents leads to logical contradictions since, if that were
the case, the several names of God must point to a multiplicity of di-
vine beings. Gregory himself, however, avoids the problem of multiple
divine beings when he refers to God as Father, Son, and Spirit, because
these names, for him, are how God is in His simplicity, and not what
25
Athanasius in Orationes contra Arianos, Discourse 2, 70, quoted in Hägglund, 82.
26
See Holmes, The Quest for the Trinity, 97–101, for a discussion on Eunomius’ theology.
27
Ibid., 190.
28
Ibid., 102.
10
God is. In this way, the Cappadocian Fathers redefined classical Greek
ontology such as ousia and hypostasis in personal and relational terms.
Ultimately, Cappadocian Trinitarianism teaches that “the Godhead
is simple and exists thrice over, in hypostases distinguished by rela-
tions of origin, and not otherwise.”29 And Gregory of Nazianzus would
argue that origination does not imply temporal separation any more
than the fact that the sun is not prior to its light. Thus, the Son and the
Spirit are “from” the Father, but not “after” the Father.30
The Cappadocians went beyond Athanasius in the use of the
Greek words ousia (“essence”) and hypostasis (“person”) to clarify
what characterizes the divine nature and the three persons respec-
tively, in and of themselves (the immanent Trinity). As noted in the
West, the Church Father Tertullian had earlier constructed a similar
model of God, using the Latin terms one “substance” (substantia) and
three distinct “persons” (personae). Here in the East, the Cappado-
cians used ousia (“essence” or “substance”) as that which is common
to the three persons, while hypostasis marks the special form of ex-
istence that distinguishes each of them. Thus the commonly known
Trinitarian formula, “one essence, three Persons,” means that while
they share a common essence (ousia), they each have individual exis-
tence, though not as centers of consciousness.
The discussion above provides the background for the Nicene-
Constantinopolitan Creed, which was adopted at the Second Ecu-
menical Council held in Constantinople in 381. From the point of
view of the Trinitarian discussion, this creed was an endorsement of
Nicea, with the addition of an article on the Holy Spirit, describing
Him as “the lordly and life-giving one, proceeding forth from the Fa-
ther, co-worshipped and co-glorified with the Father and the Son, the
one who spoke through the prophets.”31 The first part, similar to the
Nicene Creed, reads:
29
Holmes, 116.
30
Ibid., 112.
31
Norman P. Tanner, ed., Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils, 2 vols. (London: Shed & Ward
Ltd., 1990), 1:24.
32
Ibid.
11
Although the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed was to a great
extent the solution to a Greek-originated theological problem, Trini-
tarian reflection was by no means absent in the West. Here, the tower-
ing figure was Augustine. In spite of some arguments to the contrary,
Augustine stood with the tradition of the East on the core issues of
the Trinitarian question.33 For our purposes, then, we need not get
into the details of Augustine’s Trinitarian theology, except to mention
that he provided unique psychological analogies to the concept of the
Trinity in his De Trinitate.
33
For a brief discussion on this debate, see Holmes, The Quest for the Trinity, 129–132;
144–146.
12
down to us by the Scriptures, is indeed explanatory of our
conceptions of the Divine Nature, but does not include the
signification of that nature itself. . . . But in each of these terms
we find a peculiar sense, fit to be understood or asserted of
the Divine nature, yet not expressing that which that nature
is in its essence.34
34
Gregory of Nyssa, “On ‘Not Three Gods’ to Ablabius,” Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers,
second series, 11 vols., eds. Philip Schaff and Henry Wace (New York, 1885; reprint,
Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994), 5:332–333.
35
Olson and Hall, 36.
36
Ibid., 51
13
psychological model with the social model of Richard of St. Victor.37
37
The Augustinian-Anselmian psychological model of the Trinity assumes that the divine
being is intellectual in nature. Augustine’s view is based on the assumption that the human
mind has vestiges of the Triune God. For this reason, and because Augustine’s views are
rooted in platonic philosophy, it has been criticized as implying a modalistic view of the
Trinity. The social model of the Trinity, however, tries to show that there are three genuinely
distinct persons in the Godhead. Richard of St. Victor argues from a social understanding
of love to assert that God’s perfect love must embrace at least two persons. Then, assuming
that there is always a tinge of selfishness in the mutual love of two persons, he argues further
that God’s love is perfected by a third person.
38
See Olson and Hall, 68. Of Luther it is said that “against the medieval scholastic
theologians and their heirs the German reformer vehemently rejected speculation into
the inner workings of the triune life of the Godhead in eternity. He labeled scholastic
metaphysics a ‘seductress’”
39
Sinclair B. Ferguson, David F. Wright, and J. I. Packer, eds., New Dictionary of Theology
(Downers Grove, IL: Intervarsity Press, 1988), 694; see also Alan Richardson and John
Bowden, eds., The Westminster Dictionary of Christian Theology (Philadelphia, PA: The
Westminster Press, 1983), 588.
14
the first to question the doctrine of the Trinity during the Reforma-
tion era. Faustus Socinus (1539–1604) went further by arguing that
the doctrine of the Trinity was unscriptural. While he agreed that it
was proper to worship Christ, he held the view that the Bible teaches
that Christ, though born of a virgin, was a human being who was used
by God prior to His death, resurrection, ascension, and admission
into divine glory.40 Socinus also believed that the orthodox distinction
between “substance” and “person” was artificial and illogical. What
he saw as absurdities in scholastic speculations about these matters,
he believed, proved his point. John Kent traces the rise of Unitarian-
ism in sixteenth-century England and Hungary as an anti-Trinitarian
form of Christianity to Socinus and the Racovian Catechism.41 In-
deed, the founding of Socinus’ Minor Reformed Church of Poland
“may have been the first organized expression of Unitarianism.”42 Fur-
thermore, Kent suggests that Unitarianism was easily adaptable to the
Enlightenment.43
The Enlightenment
Intellectual developments from the period of the Enlightenment
in Western Europe up to the end of the nineteenth century were nega-
tive towards the doctrine of the Trinity. Particularly damaging was the
rise of deism or so-called “natural religion” during the seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries. With its penchant for a universal religion
based on human religious sensibilities and not revelation, deism saw
the doctrine of the Trinity to be mysterious and even irrational.44 De-
40
See Holmes, The Quest for the Trinity, 171. His teachings, preserved in the Racovian
Catechism of the Polish Brethren (1605), show “that God is unipersonal, and must
necessarily be, since a person is ‘an individual intelligent essence,’ and therefore if God is
one in essence, he must be one in person” (Ibid.).
41
John Kent, “Unitarianism,” in Alan Richardson and John Bowden, 590–591.
42
Olson and Hall,77.
43
See Kent, 591.
44
Voltaire’s mocking of the doctrine is a case in point: “There are heretics who might not be
viewed as Christians. They happen to regard Jesus as savior and mediator, but they dare to
hold that nothing is more unreasonable than what is taught among Christians concerning
the trinity of persons in one single divine essence, the second of which is begotten by
the first, and the third of which proceeds from the two others. That this unintelligible
doctrine is not found in Scripture. That not one passage can be produced to support it,
for which a clearer, more natural meaning, a meaning closer to common sense and basic
and unchanging truth, can be found without departing from the spirit of the text… That
it is a contradiction to say that there is only one God and that nevertheless there are three
persons, each one truly God. That this distinction, one in essence, and three in persons, is
nowhere in Scripture. That it is obviously false, because it is clear that there are no fewer
essences than persons, or persons than essences… That from this it seems that the state of
the question between them and the orthodox turns on whether there are three distinctions
15
ism was a rationalistic response to Christianity in the cultural con-
text of the European Enlightenment, hence its search for a reason-
able Christianity. Among the more influential deists who espoused a
“reasonable Christianity” were John Locke (1632–1704), John Toland
(1670–1772), and Matthew Tindal (1656–1733).
But there was another response to Christianity during the En-
lightenment period that, though not rationalistic in nature, gave the
Trinitarian doctrine a tepid reception. This response was the brand
of Pietism during the European Enlightenment to which Friedrich
Schleiermacher (1786–1834), now considered the father of liberal-
ism, originally belonged. Theologically, Schleiermacher sought to
subject doctrinal correctness to what he described as human univer-
sal “God-consciousness.” While Schleiermacher may not in any way
be classed with anti-Trinitarians such as Severus, Socinus, or the de-
ists, the judgment is true that “Schleiermacher’s revision and recon-
struction of Christian doctrine represented permission to question
classical dogmatic formulations such as the Nicene doctrine of the
Trinity without joining the fringe groups that openly rejected classi-
cal Christianity.”45 The same may be said of Albrecht Ritschl (1822–
1889). Committed to the Kantian epistemological paradigm,46 Ritschl
lost interest in what he saw as metaphysical speculation or dogmas
about God-in-Godself. Turning to the ethical value of Christianity
and its doctrines, he focused, instead, on the moralizing of Christian
dogmas.
The net effect of these developments was that by the end of the
nineteenth century the doctrine of the Trinity was in a state of neglect.
in God of which we have no idea, and between which there are certain relations of which
we have no idea either” (Holmes, The Quest for the Trinity, 178).
45
Olson and Hall, 92.
46
Immanuel Kant, (1724–1804) in his Critique of Pure Reason (New York: St. Martin’s
Press, 1965), had split reality into the realms of phenomena and noumena. The world of
phenomena was the world of sense perception, the world of knowledge. But things-in-
themselves that belonged to the world of noumena were beyond reason and could not be
known. Metaphysics belonged to this realm.
16
ness harks back to this tradition. On the other hand, a component of
nineteenth-century Roman Catholic natural theology gave credence
to the notion of God consciousness in all humanity.
The Swiss theologian Karl Barth (1886–1968) inaugurated this
revival, going against the current of universal religion and empha-
sizing the doctrine of the Trinity as that which is unique about the
Christian doctrine of God. Barth ties the knowledge of God as triune
to revelation: “if God’s Word has the structure of revealer, revelation,
and revealdness, then God must also be triune as Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit.”47 In other words, God is at once the one who reveals
Godself, that which is revealed, and the effect of this self-revelation
on the people to whom God reveals Godself. To Barth, then, revela-
tion has a triune structure since, in his own words, “God reveals God
by means of God.” Significantly, Barth also brought together the eco-
nomic and immanent Trinities. His view was that if revelation is truly
revelation of God, then it must be in some way God Himself.48This
latter contribution was significant in the sense that it introduced an
element of historicity in the being of God that would be taken up by
future theologians.
The German Jesuit priest Karl Rahner, arguably the counterpart to
Karl Barth in Roman Catholic theology, espoused a view of the Trinity
that has come to be dubbed the “Rahner rule.” “The economic Trin-
ity is the immanent Trinity and the immanent Trinity is the econom-
ic Trinity,”49 Rahner observed. He offered this view as a solution to a
problem he perceived since Thomas Aquinas, where the doctrine of the
Trinity has been detached from salvation history. Rahner’s concern was
that an overemphasis on the inner life of God had led to a neglect of the
Trinity and its connection to the doctrine of salvation. Hence the value
of the so-called “Rahner rule” is the dawning of the gesture “towards
the narratives of gospel history as key data—perhaps the only data—to
which the doctrine of the Trinity must be responsible.”50
By insisting on the identity between the economic and immanent
Trinities, Rahner was by no means unmindful of the risk of a trithe-
istic (three gods) interpretation. He himself was concerned about the
danger of reading three conscious entities into the patristic use of the
47
Olson and Hall, 96–97.
48
Ibid., 96.
49
Karl Rahner, The Trinity, trans. Joseph Donceel (New York: Seabury Press, 1974), 22;
quoted in Olson and Hall, 98. The economic Trinity is the doctrine concerning how the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit relate to the world. The immanent Trinity refers to their
relationship with each other. The word economic is used from the Greek oikonomikos,
which means relating to arrangement of activities.
50
Holmes, The Quest for the Trinity, 11.
17
word “persons.” He expressed himself clearly regarding the three per-
sons of the Trinity—that there are not three consciousnesses in God,
but only one consciousness that subsists in a threefold way.51 Still, it
seemed that the move towards a contemporary understanding of the
word “person” in Trinitarian discussions would be inevitable.
The German theologian Jürgen Moltmann is one who took Rahn-
er’s rule seriously and developed a Trinitarian theology aimed at taking
away Trinitarian thought from “‘some heavenly and eternal ménage–a-
trois’ to the world of history, struggle, sin, pain, and death.”52 This his-
torical emphasis by Moltmann leads him to a Trinitarian doctrine that
is not only non-hierarchical but also personalistic in terms of the con-
temporary understanding of “person.”53 Other significant theologians
who have explored the theological value of the Trinity in historical
terms include John Zizoulas, Leonard Hodgson, and Leonardo Boff.54
51
Olson and Hall, 99.
52
Olson and Hall, 101. Following Barth’s identification of God being with His act, Moltmann
closely identified God with the cross that, for Moltmann, is the heart of Christian theology.
53
Thus Moltmann observes, “I myself have tried to think through the theology of the cross
in Trinitarian terms and to understand the doctrine of the Trinity in the light of the theology
of the cross. In order to grasp the death of the Son in its significance for God himself, I
found myself bound to surrender the traditional distinction between the immanent and
the economic Trinity, according to which the cross comes to stand only in the economy
of salvation, but not within the immanent Trinity” (Jürgen Moltmann, The Trinity and the
Kingdom [New York: Harper Collins Publishers, 1991], 160).
54
See Olson and Hall, 103–115, for brief introductions to these theologians’ views on the
Trinity.
18
son with the traditional Christian doctrine, the Adventist statement
is significant because in the polemic context of its formulation the tra-
ditional doctrine sought to address precisely the very issues that the
Adventist statement is silent on. The traditional formula “one essence,
three Persons” is an explicatory concept intended to clarify the nature
of the unity, identity, and relations of the three Persons. Absent from
the Adventist statement is the ontologically pregnant statement of the
Nicene-Constantinople Creed, “Light from light, true God from true
God, begotten not made, consubstantial with the Father.”55
In the third, fourth, and fifth Fundamental Beliefs, where the Fa-
ther, Son, and Spirit are addressed specifically, each of the Persons are
simply introduced with the phrase “God the eternal.” Beyond this
phrase, what we have are the activities of each of the Persons of the
Trinity. The Adventist doctrine, therefore, seems content to state the
eternity of the Trinity without elaboration, and to move on to some de-
tails of the activities of the three Persons. Here again, there is no attempt
to theorize about the relationship between the eternal Trinity and their
activities in the economy of creation and redemption. The Adventist
doctrine, however, appears to remove any hint of subordination when
it affirms in the statement on the Father, “the qualities and powers ex-
hibited in the Son and the Holy Spirit are also revelations of the Father.”
In summary, the Adventist doctrine of the Trinity in the Funda-
mental Beliefs, unlike the orthodox doctrine, is consciously biblical
in its key dogmatic affirmations about the Trinity—God as one is Fa-
ther, Son, and the Holy Spirit, and the three are equally eternal as Per-
sons—and in its lack of speculation. But this fact needs to be shown.56
God is One
The biblical evidence for the oneness of God spans the Old and
New Testaments. In the Old Testament Israel’s shema is well known:
“Hear, O Israel! The Lord is our God, the Lord is one!” (Deut 6:4,
NAS). But equally instructive is the context in which it was given. The
shema comes on the heels of Moses reminding the people that the
miracles that brought about their deliverance from Egypt as well as
the theophany at Sinai were to let the people “know that the Lord is
God; there is no other besides him” (Deut 4:35, ESV). In the book of
55
Tanner, 1:5.
56
No full-blown discussion of the biblical evidence in support of the doctrine of the Trinity
is intended. We only wish to provide some key biblical support for the basic outline of
the Adventists’ affirmation of the Trinity. For a detail discussion, see Fernando Canale,
“Doctrine of God,” in Raoul Dederen, ed., Handbook of Seventh-day Adventist Theology
(Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 2000), 105–159.
19
Isaiah God declares of Himself that before Him no God was formed
and neither shall there be any after Him (Isa 43:10).
The Old Testament’s concept of God’s oneness is carried over
into the New Testament. Mark 12:28–34 records Jesus’ use of the
shema to instruct an inquiring scribe of one’s duty of love towards
God, and John has Jesus referring to the deity as “the only God/the
only true God” (John 5:44; 17:3). Theologically, the oneness of God
for Paul provides the basis for one method of salvation for all (Rom
3:30).
It is of the utmost importance to notice that these texts assert
the oneness of God dogmatically without any hints about the inner
structure or nature of this one God. Thus, the Adventist statement on
the Trinity is biblical, not only in affirming the biblical fact of God’s
oneness, but also in desisting from making statements about the na-
ture of the one God.
God is Three
A truth is not only biblical when the Bible directly states it with
a proof text. Sound theological reasoning from biblical principles of-
ten leads to biblical truth. No text of Scripture specifically says that
God is three Persons: but theological reasoning on the basis of biblical
principles leads to that conclusion. Edward Bickersteth’s theological
reasoning around biblical data on this matter is as good as any in es-
tablishing the triune Godhead. Speaking of God, he writes:
57
Edward Bickersteth, The Trinity (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Publications, 1965), 150.
20
Based on the reasoning above, the following summary of biblical
evidence becomes pertinent in the establishment of the divinity of
the Three:58
1. The Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost are eternal (Rom
16:26; John 8:58; Mic 5:2; Heb 9:14; Deut 33:27).
2. The Father, the Son, and the Spirit created all things (1 Cor 8:6;
Ps 100:3; Col 1:16; Job 33:4).
3. The Three are each omnipresent (Jer 23:24; Matt 28:20; Ps
139:7; Acts 17:28, 29).
4. The Three are each omniscient (Acts 15:18; John 21:17; 1 Cor
2:10; Heb 4:13).
5. The Three are each true and good (John 7:28; 17:17; Ps 34:8;
John 10:11; 14:6; 1 John 5:6).
6. They each have a self-regulating will (Eph 1:11; Matt 11:27; John
17:24; 1 Cor 12:11).
7. They are each the fountain of life (Deut 30:20; Ps 36:9; John 3:8;
5:21; Deut 30:20).
8. They each sanctify us (Phil 4:13; 1 Cor 1:2; Eph 3:16; 1 Thess 5:23;
1 Pet 1:2; Jude 1).
9. Each fills our souls with divine love (1 John 5:1; 2:15; 2 Cor 5:14;
Rom 15:30; Col 1:8; Jude 21).
10. Each gives divine law (Neh 8:8; Ps 19:7; Acts 13:2; Rom 8:2;
Gal 6:2; Col 3:16;).
11. Each dwells in believers’ hearts (Eph 3:17; John 14:17; 2 Cor
6:16; Col 1:27; Isa 57:15).
12. The Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit are, each by Himself,
the supreme Jehovah and God: (a) “I am Jehovah thy God”
(Exod 20:2); (b) “Jehovah our God” (Isa 4:3; cf. Matt 3:3) and
“the Highest” (Luke 1:76; Matt 10:11); (c) “Jehovah God” (Ezek
8:1, 3) and “the Highest” (Luke 1:35). Yet God is one (Deut 6:4).
58
The summary provided is partly adapted from Robert D. Culver, Systematic Theology:
Biblical and Historical (Ross-shire, UK: Christian Focus Publication, 2005), 108.
21
three coequal, coeternal, nonoriginated persons. Moreover, Advent-
ism conceives the idea of persons in its biblical sense, as referring to
three individual centers of intelligence and action.”59 We should add
quickly though that
59
Canale, 150.
60
Ibid.
61
Ibid., 138.
62
Ibid., 150.
63
Seventh-day Adventist Hymnal (Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1985), No. 73.
22
basic affirmation of the triune God, but not to its traditional Christian
interpretation.
64
Holmes, The Quest for the Trinity, 12–13.
23
sons (prosopa, personae).65 In the second concept, the notion of prop-
erties became important for distinguishing the three Persons. The
Three were distinguished by their special characteristics or proper-
ties. Specifically, their characteristics are the following: the Father
has the property of being “ungenerated,” the Son has the character-
istic of being “generated,” and the Holy Spirit has the characteristic
of “proceeding” from the Father. But it is important to make the
point that these characteristics are not differences in the divine es-
sence, but only in their relationships to each other. When the Fourth
Lateran Council (1215) affirmed that “this Holy Trinity, which is
undivided according to its common essence but distinct according
to the properties of its persons,”66 the Council was alluding to the
Cappadocian formulation.
Whether the “relations” solution solves the problem is a subject
of some debate. Colin Gunton, for example, criticizes Augustine on
the issue. He thinks that to view the category of “relation” as a logi-
cal rather than an ontological predicate is erroneous, and on that ac-
count claims that Augustine “is precluded from being able to make
claims about the being of the particular persons, who, because they
lack distinguishable identity tend to disappear into the all-embracing
oneness of God.”67 Be that as it may, in comparison with the Adventist
conception of the Three, one cannot avoid sensing the fuzziness in the
distinctions being made in the traditional doctrine.
65
See Tillich, 77.
66
Tanner, 1:230.
67
Colin Gunton, The Promise of Trinitarian Theology (Edinburgh: T & T Clark, 1991), 38–
39, quoted in Olson and Hall, 45.
68
Augustine, “On the Holy Trinity 5.9,” Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, First Series, 14 vols.
ed. Philip Schaff (reprint of 1886 edition, Peabody, MA: Hendricksen, 1994), 3:92.
24
ideas of eternal generation and procession and uses them to define
the relations. Persons, thus, are reduced to the relations of beget-
ting and proceeding . . . . There are reasons to wonder whether this
view does justice to the biblical revelation about three different and
independent subjects.”69 Besides, the reduction of hypostases (per-
sons) to the relations mentioned above leaves open the question of
monarchianism.
69
Canale, 144.
70
Holmes, The Quest for the Trinity, 108.
71
On these points there is evidence in the writings of Ellen G. White to support this
position. For example, she wrote, “The personality of the Father and the Son, also the unity
that exists between Them, are presented in the seventeenth chapter of John, in the prayer of
Christ for His disciples: ‘Neither pray I for these alone, but for them also which shall believe
on Me through their word; that they all may be one; as Thou, Father, art in Me, and I in
Thee, that they also may be one in Us: that the world may believe that Thou hast sent Me.’
John 17:20, 21. The unity that exists between Christ and His disciples does not destroy the
personality of either. They are one in purpose, in mind, in character, but not in person. It is
thus that God and Christ are one” (Ellen G. White, The Ministry of Healing [Mountain View,
CA: Pacific Press, 1963], 421–422).
25
in the Adventist position is real.72 Fernando Canale observes that the
danger of tritheism becomes real when the oneness of God is reduced
to a mere unity conceived in analogy to a human society or a fellow-
ship of action.73 But it would seem that the mere lack of any relevant
human analogies makes any effort at explaining futile. The tradition
read about the oneness of God in Scripture, defined it as ousia, and
worked out an explanation of the three Persons accordingly. The is-
sue is how one may define the “One” and relate it to the three Persons
without falling into tritheism. It may be that theology needs to ac-
knowledge its impotence in this matter. The answer may be that we
should just establish the biblical facts and go as far as the Bible leads
us. The Bible seems not to go into the issue of how God is One, and
we should not either. Just because the Christian tradition dealt with it
does not mean we have to do the same. We may state the Bible’s view
of God as One and Three without trying to explain it. Referring to
late patristic efforts at explanations with words such as circumcessio
(Latin) and perichoresis (Greek),74 Robert Culver remarks, “In truth,
all the terms perichoresis and circumcessio provide is names for our
ignorance (hardly biblical mystery) in an exalted area of reality too
high for us likely ever to learn anything about.”75 From a similar per-
spective Ellen G. White wrote:
“The secret things belong unto the Lord our God: but those
things which are revealed belong unto us and to our children
forever.” Deuteronomy 29:29. The revelation of Himself that
God has given in His word is for our study. This we may
seek to understand. But beyond this we are not to penetrate.
The highest intellect may tax itself until it is wearied out in
conjectures regarding the nature of God, but the effort will
be fruitless. This problem has not been given us to solve. No
human mind can comprehend God. None are to indulge in
speculation regarding His nature. Here silence is eloquence.
The Omniscient One is above discussion.76
72
See Canale, 150: “Consequently, the indivisibility of God’s works in history is not conceived
by Adventists as being determined by the oneness of essence—as taught by the Augustinian
classical tradition—but rather by the oneness of the historical task of redemption.”
73
Ibid.
74
The Greek and Latin words refer to the co-inherence of the persons of the Trinity in one
another.
75
Culver, 118.
76
White, The Ministry of Healing, 429.
26
Recent Anti-Trinitarianism in the Adventist Church
After assessing a number of the anti-Trinitarian publications
that have appeared in the Adventist Church in recent times, Gerhard
Pfandl takes the view of Lynnford Beachy as expressive of the main
tenor of the publications: “The church as a whole rejected the doc-
trine of the Trinity, and it was not until many years after the death of
Ellen G. White that the Adventist church changed their [sic] position
in regards to the Trinity.”77 Furthermore, “apart from a few biblical
arguments most of the arguments advanced to promote this idea are
historical, with the focus on our pioneers and Ellen White.”78
77
Gerhard Pfandl, “The Doctrine of the Trinity Among Seventh-day Adventists,” Journal of
the Adventist Theological Society 17.1 (2006): 160.
78
Ibid.
79
For a sample, see Merlin Burt, “History of the Seventh-day Adventist Views on the
Trinity,” Journal of the Adventist Theological Society 17.1 (2006): 125–139; Moon, 140–159;
Woodrow Whidden, Jerry Moon, and John Reeve, The Trinity: Understanding God’s love,
His plan of salvation and Christian relationships (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald,
2002), 190–238; Canale, 148–150.
80
Burt, 128: “Early Adventists strove to be true to Scripture. When they read ‘first-born of
every creature,’ they took it at face value. Other Bible phrases, such as ‘only begotten Son of
God,’ also were understood on a literal English level.”
81
See Moon, 143, 153–154. Indeed, in thus reacting to the classical doctrine, the evidence
shows that many of our pioneers misunderstood it, taking it to mean some form of
monarchianism. Furthermore, in their own attempt to defend the deity of Christ, some
ended up postulating a Christ who was not altogether divine. For example, Uriah Smith,
Thoughts Critical and Practical on the Book of Revelation (Battle Creek, MI: Seventh-day
Adventist Publishing Association, 1881), 59, wrote, “Moreover he is ‘the beginning of the
creation of God.’ Not the beginner, but the beginning, of the creation, the first created
being, dating his existence far back before any other created being, next to the self-existent
and eternal God.” For a full discussion of the pioneers misunderstanding of the classical
Trinitarian doctrine, see Erwin Roy Gane, “The Arian and Anti-Trinitarian Views Presented
in Seventh-Day Adventist Literature and the Ellen G. White Answer” (unpublished M. A.
thesis, Andrews University, 1963).
27
it, carries two implications: (1) that the Adventist Church today holds
the classical Christian Trinitarian view that the pioneers rejected, and
(2) that there cannot be a biblical Trinitarian view that is different from
the classical view. Both implications are unwarranted. On the one hand,
we have tried to show in this presentation that on the key themes of the
Trinitarian doctrine, the Adventist belief as expressed in the statement
of Fundamental Beliefs is radically different from the traditional Chris-
tian doctrine. The Adventist statement “There is one God: Father, Son,
and Holy Spirit, a unity of three co-eternal Persons” is not the same as
the Christian tradition’s formulation of God as “one essence, three Per-
sons.” On the other hand, in spite of the lack of specific proof texts on
“God in three Persons,” we have presented evidence on how sound theo-
logical reasoning leads inevitably to the triune God. In the light of this
evaluation, it would seem that to continue to charge the Church with
apostasy on the grounds that it believes in “the Trinity” would evidence
lack of careful theological thinking.
Conclusion
The doctrine of the Trinity arose in the context of defending the
deity of Jesus Christ. The early Christians encountered Jesus of Naza-
reth as a divine persona, and as we have seen, the inspired writers of
the New Testament expressed this sense of Him. Although hints of
divine plurality were already evident in the Old Testament, it was the
incarnation and life of Jesus on earth that brought the question of
divine plurality to a head. The early believers linked Jesus’ divinity to
salvation—namely, His ability to grant eternal life. In the context of
the Gentile mission, however, discussions about Jesus’ divinity were
forced to move away from soteriological considerations to philosoph-
ical formulations about the inner life of God. In the early debates of
the fourth century Athanasius continued to ground his defense of Je-
sus’ divinity on soteriology, although eventually more philosophical
argumentation took over, even well into the modern period. It is this
philosophic form of Trinitarian doctrine that the early Adventists en-
countered. Rethinking of the Trinitarian doctrine has taken a differ-
ent turn only in the past few decades. As we have noted, although the
traditional doctrine is basically biblical in its affirmation of the God-
head, its traditional philosophical cast led most of the early Adventists
to oppose it as unbiblical. History shows, however, that eventually the
opposition to the basic doctrine of God in three Persons was dropped.
Today, Seventh-day Adventists affirm a biblical doctrine of the Trinity
shorn of philosophic trappings. They follow the Bible in its dogmatic
portrayal of three divine Persons without the burden to offer a ra-
tional explanation. The Adventist doctrine of the Trinity resembles
28
the traditional doctrine only on the surface, but it is radically differ-
ent in its interpretation or theological formulation. It is a mistake to
reject a truly biblical doctrine of the Trinity on the basis of histori-
cal philosophical squabbles about the doctrine. That approach would
represent a theological equivalent to throwing the baby out with the
bathwater. But this should not happen because of the immense value
of the doctrine, of which Catherine Mowry LaCugna notes:
82
Catherine Mowry LaCugna, “The Practical Trinity,” Christian Century 109.22 (1992): 681.
83
M. L. Andreasen, The Faith of Jesus (Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1949): 22.
29
Biblical Research Institute
General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists
Website: adventistbiblicalresearch.org
E-mail: biblicalresearch@gc.adventist.org
Phone: 301-680-6790
Fax: 301-680-6788