Can anyone show me in the bible where the word trinity is?
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Nope. For it is NOT in the Bible.
But we can find it in numerous 'other religions' that predate Christianity by THOUSANDS of years.
The Babylonians, The Egyptians, the Persians, even those of Rome and Greece worshiped 'multi-part gods' and even 'triune gods'.
I would venture to say that the apostles that wrote the New Testament had probably NEVER even heard the word 'trinity' themselves. They were Jews and being such, they would have clearly recognized that God is SINGULARLY The ONE true God. A people that had a difficult time with the concept of God having a SON, so you can be assured that they would have found it IMPOSSIBLE to accept the concept that God consisted of THREE PERSONS in ONE God.
And if one does but a cursory study of the philosophy of the Greeks and Romans, it is pretty clear WHERE 'trinity' came from. It was a combination of previous pagan religions combined with the ideas of the philosophers of the time. An attempt to RE-define God in their OWN words that had absolutely NOTHING to do with the words that God had used to DEFINE HIMSELF.
Blessings,
MEC
Can anyone show me in the bible where the word trinity is?
It's just a word used to place a label onto a concept. A more relevant question, imo, is whether the concept is in the Bible. And my answer is 'yes'.Can anyone show me in the bible where the word trinity is?
It's just a word used to place a label onto a concept. A more relevant
they had no word for it same as millennium or homosexual..?So why didn't they use something similar through out the bible?
Please check out the Jewish concept of "two powers in heaven", dating to the second temple period. You'll find that that the Jews accepted that the "Memra (Word) of the Lord" (later incarnated as Jesus) was considered a divine figure. He (yes, a man) was the visible YHWH, working in this world, while the invisible YHWH remained in heaven.Nope. For it is NOT in the Bible.
But we can find it in numerous 'other religions' that predate Christianity by THOUSANDS of years.
The Babylonians, The Egyptians, the Persians, even those of Rome and Greece worshiped 'multi-part gods' and even 'triune gods'.
I would venture to say that the apostles that wrote the New Testament had probably NEVER even heard the word 'trinity' themselves. They were Jews and being such, they would have clearly recognized that God is SINGULARLY The ONE true God. A people that had a difficult time with the concept of God having a SON, so you can be assured that they would have found it IMPOSSIBLE to accept the concept that God consisted of THREE PERSONS in ONE God.
And if one does but a cursory study of the philosophy of the Greeks and Romans, it is pretty clear WHERE 'trinity' came from. It was a combination of previous pagan religions combined with the ideas of the philosophers of the time. An attempt to RE-define God in their OWN words that had absolutely NOTHING to do with the words that God had used to DEFINE HIMSELF.
Blessings,
MEC
Exactly. This thread's premise is lame.they had no word for it same as millennium or homosexual..?
Please check out the Jewish concept of "two powers in heaven", dating to the second temple period. You'll find that that the Jews accepted that the "Memra (Word) of the Lord" (later incarnated as Jesus) was considered a divine figure. He (yes, a man) was the visible YHWH, working in this world, while the invisible YHWH remained in heaven.
The passage in Daniel where the "son of man" walks on the clouds was one of the scriptures used to support the concept. When Jesus, at his trial, identified himself as that figure, the trial was immediately terminated with a conviction for blasphemy.
You don't need to go to pagan religions to find the concept of a dual deity, one part visible and another part not. It was right there in Judaism itself. The rabbis declared it heretical in the 2nd century, after the rise of Christianity.
While I haven't read it myself, one classic study on this is considered to be Two Powers in Heaven: Early Rabbinic Reports about Christianity and Gnosticism by Alan Segal.
Exactly. This thread's premise is lame.
Proof? Here's evidence: Two Powers in Heaven: Early Rabbinic Reports about Christianity and GnosticismThe Hebrews/Jews DID NOT believe in a 'multi-part god'. And I challenge ANYONE that would make a statement indicating otherwise to offer some PROOF instead of merely making a statement.
As I said, the word is just a label to describe a concept. To my knowledge, Karl Marx didn't describe his concepts as "Marxism". Nevertheless, others put that label on his concepts, and that's OK.The reason that the words 'trinity' was NEVER used in the Bible is that it took MEN intent on defining a god of their OWN design to introduce it.
Not true. In the gospels, for example, Thomas called the risen Jesus his God, and was not considered blasphemous.Neither God, His prophets, OWN Son or apostles EVER taught 'trinity'. The concept, so far as Christianity is concerned, didn't even EXIST until well over a hundred years AFTER the death of Christ. And then introduced gradually by philosophers of the Greek and Roman tradition.
As I said, the word is just a label to describe a concept.The Catholic Church itself ADMITS that the FIRST mention of the 'word trinity' in regards to Christianity didn't take place until 180 AD. And that wasn't even the 'doctrine of trinity', it was simply the USE of the word as concerns Christianity.
I'm sorry, but even pagan sources state that Christians were worshiping Jesus long before Nicea.Even after the council at Nicaea it took additional hundreds of years for 'trinity' to be completely defined and introduced as DOCTRINE. For ALL that was determined at the Council at Nicaea was that Christ, the Holy Spirit and God were of the SAME essence. And that was in 325 AD. GET IT? 325 AD.
Says who? The concept of God himself is impossible to understand. Are you claiming to comprehend God? I doubt it.And the Bible CANNOT offer that which is incomprehensible. In other words, the Bible CANNOT offer concepts that are IMPOSSIBLE to understand by those to whom the words were offered.
Jesus also said "I and the Father are one".Nope, Don't need to. The most significant characteristic of the Hebrew/Jewish faith is:
Defining character
Unlike other ancient Near Eastern gods, the Hebrew God is portrayed as unitary and solitary; consequently, the Hebrew God's principal relationships are not with other gods, but with the world, and more specifically, with the people He created.[23] Judaism thus begins with an ethical monotheism: the belief that God is one, and concerned with the actions of humankind.
From Wikipedia.
Blessings,
MEC
Can anyone show us where, in the Bible, "restored Gospel" appears?
Hebrew Henotheism This is interesting read