QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ABOUT THE
TRINITY
QUESTION #298 -- From Hebrews
1:4, 5 arose the question, "Did
the Trinity always exist in the
Godhead?" (Although John 1:1-14
seems to answer the question.)
ANSWER #298 -- Yes, I think John
1:1-14 does answer the
question-in the affirmative. The
adorable Godhead is one in
essence, but is manifested in
three persons, Father, Son and
Holy Ghost, and we do not know
any way there could be a change
in either the essence or the
manifestation in either the past
or the future. But remember that
the Trinity is simply a fact of
the Scripture -- the Scriptures
holding both that there is one
God and also that the Father is
God, the Son is God, and the
Spirit is God -- and that we are
not to look for analogies in
nature or for differentiations
in consciousness.
* * *
QUESTION #299 -- Is the Father,
Son and Holy Ghost one being in
three personalities? What is the
teaching of the Church of the
Nazarene concerning the trinity?
ANSWER #299 -- The Church of the
Nazarene holds to the historic
orthodox tenets regarding this
difficult thesis. The basis of
the matter in the Bible is this:
the Bible teaches there is only
one God. It also teaches that
the Father is God, that the Son
is God, and that the Holy Spirit
is God. And the only way two
such lines of teaching can be
worked out is the way it has
been done by Trinitarians down
through the centuries. Those who
hold to the idea that Jesus was
but a man and the Holy Spirit is
just an influence of course have
no difficulty in believing and
teaching the unity of God. But
they do find it positively
necessary to reject some of the
very plainest statements of the
Bible and ignore the clearest
implications of Christian
consciousness. But statements on
this subject have to be made
with great care lest they say
either too much or too little.
The most approved wording of the
tenet is that God is one in
essence and three in personal
manifestation. He cannot be one
and three in the same sense. The
relation of the three persons in
the Godhead is described as
generation and procession. Jesus
Christ is the only begotten Son
of God. Angels are created sons,
men may be redeemed sons, but
Jesus is the only one with the
relation of begotten. The Holy
Spirit proceeds from the Father
and from the Son, but in
precisely what manner we cannot
tell. Trinity is a doctrine of
the Scriptures and has no
analogies in nature. Some have
said man is a trinity: spirit,
soul and body. But here we have
three essences in one person,
while the trinity is three
persons in one essence and that
is no analogy. And it is like
that with every illustration
that has yet been proposed. So
the whole subject stands just as
first stated: God is one, but
the Father is God, the Son is
God and the Spirit is God-three
in one, hence trinity. This is
our faith as founded upon the
holy Bible, and we are not
polytheists, even though we
worship three persons as God,
for these three persons are one
in essence.
|