J
Javl
Guest
Yes, I’ve read and re-read them and there’s always something new. I’ve also been studying for decades ( I’m 84 ) and all my studies have led me to Catholicism ( actually the Holy Spirit has brought me to it ).I am re-reading the 10 volume set now. Of the ones I have mentioned, I have not found one of them in the first volume to discuss the doctrine. Have you read them?
Friend, at my age and after studying religoin for decades, it is certainly possible that I have forgotten things; however, religion is a fundamental building block of my life. It is a constant, daily pursuit. You ask good questions and they are worth much study and thought. What I understand is that the first CF did not discuss it; it was discussed in depth later. I would definitely agree they all taught that Jesus was divine and the Savior of the World, and the Son of God.
If nothing else comes of this discussion, it is a great opportunity for everyone to begin again to read the Ante-Nicene Fathers. They were men of God and have wonderful, inspirational stories to share with all of us.
As far as the written word goes, I agree that there is no record of it being discussed. But this does not mean that it wasn’t. The Trinity and it’s existence had to be known and taught in the early Church. That the Trinity existed and was fact was revealed in the scriptures ( although not the full revelation for we humans can never comprehend it ). Just Jesus’ saying that He and the Father are One and that He will send the Holy Spirit who will teach all things is an indication that the Trinity was known and taught, Also, remember, many of the new Christians were once pagans. This in itself has to guarantee that the Trinity was known and taught.
Many heresies came into play in the early Church, especially Gnosis. All these heresies revolved around the divinity of Jesus, His relationship to the Father, and the existence and purpose of the Holy Spirit. Many of them, if you examine them closely, denied the existence of the Trinity. Remember also that the Book of Acts is also called the Gospel of the Holy Spirit. In it His actions are those only which God can do are emphasized.
Therefore with all this evidence that I have come across it does not seem possible that the Trinity was known and taught only after the Council of Nicea. All the Council actually did was to emphasize and unify its belief and to formulate a common creed of belief.
God’s Blessings.
PAX DOMINI

Shalom Aleichem