P
Portofino
Guest
Our Unitarian friends can correct me if I’m wrong, but there are a couple of reasons why they rejected the Trinity, including:OP where have you gone? It is true that some people heaped abuse on you, but I thought you handled it better than anyone I have seen handling abuse on a forum. Please come back.
In the mean time, a question for other Unitarians: what was the original problem with viewing God as a Trinity? If you are open to most beliefs, a Trinitarian God should not have been such a big issue, correct?
----the belief that Jesus never claimed to be God (“why do you call me good? Only God is good”–Mark 10:18); this may be the most difficult aspect of the Unitarian creed for a Catholic to accept, and I offer excuses for highlighting it, but the Unitarian church (since at least the 18th century) has had a “rationalist” perspective whereby Jesus Christ was an exemplary human being, a “prophet” and a teacher, but only metaphorically the son of God
–they held to a strict interpretation of monotheism (as do the Jews and the Muslims); “God is spirit, and his worshipers must worship in the Spirit and in truth” (John 4:24)
In an important sense, the doctrine of the Trinity was much more congenial to the Greek pagan mind, than it was to the monotheistic Jewish mind. It was difficult for the Jewish mind to wrap itself around the idea that God incarnated as a human being; but for the Greeks, who had anthropomorphic gods, even gods born of a divine father and a human mother, it was much more palatable as a concept. Likewise, the Greeks believed that the gods could undergo transformations, metamorphoses – Zeus could become a lightning bolt; or a ray of sunshine; or a swan. He could constantly change form, and imbue anything in nature. Thus, the concept of “one God in three Persons” was more readily understandable by the Greek mind. Finally, iconography itself – pictorial images of the gods – were also more palatable to the Greek mind, than to the Jewish mind. So, in an ironic sense, you could say that Unitarians went back to a more “Jewish” conception of what monotheism entails.
Not to mince words, though, I believe – returning to the first point – that the Unitarians of the 18th and 19th centuries primarily rejected the Trinity because, in their rationalist understanding of the Bible, they did not believe that the nature of Christ was divine (thus, they suspended judgment on such supernatural occurrences as miracles, virgin birth, even resurrection from the dead). Unitarianism was, in an important respect, the result of a fundamental encounter between traditional Christianity and the rationalism of the Enlightenment. Thomas Jefferson considered himself a Unitarian and I think his views on Jesus pretty accurately reflect the Unitarian view, in the 18th and 19th centuries, when he wrote, “[in the teachings of Jesus] we have the outlines of the most sublime morality ever to fall from the lips of man.” Nonetheless, Jefferson did not believe that Jesus was God.