B
Beautiful Ignorance
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I fail to understand how the Trinity is not polytheism. As far as I can tell, Christians worship three gods, not one.
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Please see my response to a similar question: http://www.christianforums.com/t7605243-2/#post58970054
Basically the Trinity says that God experiences existence in three ways, but he's not three separate things. I think talking about 3 persons tends to mislead people. We think of a person as a separate thing, with its own body, its own memory, it's own will, etc. The Greek work behind the English "person" was a bit different. They meant that God could experience a relationship in himself, so he had three centers of relationship. But otherwise he is closer to a single human. In particular, God has only one will, so there's really only one decision-maker.
This is why Christians will talk about 3 Persons, but won't say as we would in normal English 3 people.
I fail to understand how the Trinity is not polytheism. As far as I can tell, Christians worship three gods, not one.
I fail to understand how the Trinity is not polytheism. As far as I can tell, Christians worship three gods, not one.
In light of this please explain the following passage. How does this passage illustrate that God has but one will?
New International Version (©1984)
"Father, if you are willing, take this cup from me; yet not my will, but yours be done."
The Trinity teaches one God existent in three persons. Monotheism is the belief in one God so a belief in the Trinity is monotheistic. Polytheism is the belief in multiple gods not three persons.I fail to understand how the Trinity is not polytheism. As far as I can tell, Christians worship three gods, not one.
This is dealt with in the Incarnation, not the Trinity.
In the incarnation we have two natures, human and God, each with its own will. Thus this is the human will obeying God's.
That's why I caution people that most questions people have about the Trinity are actually questions about the Incarnation.
You're stuck in your experience that you are one being which is one person.I fail to understand how the Trinity is not polytheism. As far as I can tell, Christians worship three gods, not one.
You're stuck in your experience that you are one being which is one person.
But there are all kinds of beings that are not one person. Rocks, for example. Or horseshoe crabs.
So you see that not all beings are also one person.
Which opens up the possibility that there can be a being which is more than one person. That being is God.
This discussion by Frank Sheed is one of the best I've ever read:
The Trinity: Three Persons in One Nature | Frank Sheed | From "Theology and Sanity" | Ignatius Insight