How to reconcile the Trinity with Utter Simplicity

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I have a question on the Trinity; we believe that God is three persons, and a person is a mind. We also believe that God is utterly simple; He is pure mind. How do we reconcile the two? Wouldn’t the two taken together mean that the Trinity would be three carbon copies of the same God, something which we don’t believe?
 
I have a question on the Trinity; we believe that God is three persons, and a person is a mind. We also believe that God is utterly simple; He is pure mind. How do we reconcile the two? Wouldn’t the two taken together mean that the Trinity would be three carbon copies of the same God, something which we don’t believe?
I may be wrong, but I’m not sure if the statement that “a person is a mind” necessarily is true. This is certainly the case for humans, but human personhood is at best analogous to divine personhood. To answer your question, each of the three persons possess the single divine nature in its fullness. I think it helps if we consider the relationships between the three persons. The Second Person is the result of the First Person perfectly knowing Himself (since the knowing is infinite, the known Person is equal in every way to the Knower). The Third Person is the result of the infinite pouring of the First and Second Person into the love of each other. So it may be more apt to say that the single, metaphysically simple nature of God is expressed by the three persons: the infinite lover, the infinitely beloved, and the infinite spirit of love between lover and beloved. Does that help answer your question?
 
I may be wrong, but I’m not sure if the statement that “a person is a mind” necessarily is true. This is certainly the case for humans, but human personhood is at best analogous to divine personhood. To answer your question, each of the three persons possess the single divine nature in its fullness. I think it helps if we consider the relationships between the three persons. The Second Person is the result of the First Person perfectly knowing Himself (since the knowing is infinite, the known Person is equal in every way to the Knower). The Third Person is the result of the infinite pouring of the First and Second Person into the love of each other. So it may be more apt to say that the single, metaphysically simple nature of God is expressed by the three persons: the infinite lover, the infinitely beloved, and the infinite spirit of love between lover and beloved. Does that help answer your question?
What would be the definition of a person in the Divine sense, then? And how would we define it such that apologetic arguments, like Biblical evidence for the person of the Holy Spirit, could be preserved? Thanks.
 
The aspect of personhood is not a “part” of an entity. I am a human being. I am also a person. I am not thereby two entities. Rather I am one human being whose nature is human and whose person is JimG.

God is one. One nature. He is one entity. The Persons of the Trinity are not “parts” of God any more than God’s intellect and will are “parts” of God. In the case of God, the Persons are necessary aspects by which his nature is expressed. God can never be divided into parts.
 
I may be wrong, but I’m not sure if the statement that “a person is a mind” necessarily is true. This is certainly the case for humans, but human personhood is at best analogous to divine personhood. To answer your question, each of the three persons possess the single divine nature in its fullness. I think it helps if we consider the relationships between the three persons. The Second Person is the result of the First Person perfectly knowing Himself (since the knowing is infinite, the known Person is equal in every way to the Knower). The Third Person is the result of the infinite pouring of the First and Second Person into the love of each other. So it may be more apt to say that the single, metaphysically simple nature of God is expressed by the three persons: the infinite lover, the infinitely beloved, and the infinite spirit of love between lover and beloved. Does that help answer your question?
I sort of agree and sort of have a problem with what you say, but no matter what any human being can say, I/we would probably have a problem. At first I said, balto nailed it, then almost immediately I said, wait a minute, the Father is not the only one who loves, the Son loves the Father, so in that way the Son becomes the knower and the Father becomes the known, and no sooner did I see that then it occurred to me that the Holy Spirit is no laggard or passive part with respect to love, so to speak, he too loves the Father and he too loves the Son, because after all, he is more than a “product” of the Father and the Son’s love, he himself is a Person and wholly God, SO then it occurs to me that it all goes back to the idea of begetting, begotten and proceeding, but who can fathom these seemingly time-related words as an infinite reality. So I said to myself, you are beginning to chase your mind’s tail. For next you will be saying what is the love between the Holy Spirit and the Son called, and likewise between the Holy Spirit and the Father? And if the idea of begetting, begotten and proceeding will not allow it to go that way in terms of producing another Person, we must still recognize that the Holy Spirit really does love both the Father and the Son, since he is in every way God, but for reasons unknown this does not, at least to my knowledge, result is another Person, or the Father or the Son (because of that mysterious concept of begetting, begotten and proceeding, I think). Now I almost have myself confused, so I am sure I lost you, but it seems to me that trying to pursue the idea of reconciling the Trinity would take some time, in fact, and infinite amount of time, which itself is an absurd idea, I think, for infinity resides outside of time. 😃 So, I think for now I’ll just remember the formulae, there is but one God in three Divine Persons, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, each of whom are fully God.

I would like to know why the Catechism says, “He is not the Father who is the Son, nor is the Son he who is the Father, nor is the Holy Spirit he who is the Father or the Son.” Why doesn’t it read, “He is not the Father who is the Son, and he is not the Father who is the Holy Spirit, nor is the Son he who is the Father, nor is the Holy Spirit he who is not the Father?” Is it heresy to say it this way? Why the insistence on always “packaging” the Father and the Son, as if to parallel the begetter and the begotten, even when we’re not speaking in terms of their relationship, but only in terms of their equality? Is it a necessary construct even when not talking of their relationships with each other? Why do we never say the Holy Spirit loves the Father and the Son? He does, of course, but why do we never say it? I’m not meaning to be a troublemaker, only expressing the fact that these things trouble me.

I can’t even understand the simplest things the Church teaches about the Trinity. The furthest my mind can get with it, and I may be wrong, is “begets” is a short form for “infinitely begets”, and “begotten” is a short form for “infinitely begotten” and “proceeds” is a short form for “infinitely proceeds”, so that the modifier serves to strip the verbs of their relationship to time in normal usage. I suppose these things are taken for granted, but I am no theologian.

Just musings. No reply is necessary, but all are welcome.
 
I have a question on the Trinity; we believe that God is three persons, and a person is a mind. We also believe that God is utterly simple; He is pure mind. How do we reconcile the two? Wouldn’t the two taken together mean that the Trinity would be three carbon copies of the same God, something which we don’t believe?
1 A being that only has one nature is simpler than a being who has two.
2 God has three natures
3 God is not ultimately simple.
 
1 A being that only has one nature is simpler than a being who has two.
2 God has three natures
3 God is not ultimately simple.
There’s a small problem with that argument… we don’t believe God has more than one nature.
 
What would be the definition of a person in the Divine sense, then? And how would we define it such that apologetic arguments, like Biblical evidence for the person of the Holy Spirit, could be preserved? Thanks.
I think that a person is defined as one who can know (has intellect) and love (has will). The only ones that fit this description are God, angels, demons, and humans. It may be that humans, angels, and demons have a one-to-one correspondence between natures and persons because our knowing and loving is not infinite as God’s is. If knowing and loving are infinite then they manifest as three persons for one nature as in God’s case. I think that would be correct.
 
At first I said, balto nailed it, then almost immediately I said, wait a minute, the Father is not the only one who loves, the Son loves the Father, so in that way the Son becomes the knower and the Father becomes the known, and no sooner did I see that then it occurred to me that the Holy Spirit is no laggard or passive part with respect to love, so to speak, he too loves the Father and he too loves the Son, because after all, he is more than a “product” of the Father and the Son’s love, he himself is a Person and wholly God, SO then it occurs to me that it all goes back to the idea of begetting, begotten and proceeding, but who can fathom these seemingly time-related words as an infinite reality.
I think you are right and I agree with what you said, I just did a bad job of explaining it :p.
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JamesCaruso:
So I said to myself, you are beginning to chase your mind’s tail. For next you will be saying what is the love between the Holy Spirit and the Son called, and likewise between the Holy Spirit and the Father? And if the idea of begetting, begotten and proceeding will not allow it to go that way in terms of producing another Person, we must still recognize that the Holy Spirit really does love both the Father and the Son, since he is in every way God, but for reasons unknown this does not, at least to my knowledge, result is another Person, or the Father or the Son (because of that mysterious concept of begetting, begotten and proceeding, I think). Now I almost have myself confused, so I am sure I lost you, but it seems to me that trying to pursue the idea of reconciling the Trinity would take some time, in fact, and infinite amount of time, which itself is an absurd idea, I think, for infinity resides outside of time. 😃 So, I think for now I’ll just remember the formulae, there is but one God in three Divine Persons, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, each of whom are fully God.
I think you are on to something here. It may be that there aren’t three discrete persons in the Trinity but when we think about the person of infinite loving, we think of the Father. When we think of the infinitely beloved, we think of the Son, etc. So the three persons exist but we call them by different names because of our limited understanding of what each Person does and how they relate to the other Persons, kind of like how we say that God is omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent even though in reality all of these qualities are interchangeable with infinite being. We, as humans, can only be said to have one person because we have limited knowing and loving.
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JamesCaruso:
I would like to know why the Catechism says, “He is not the Father who is the Son, nor is the Son he who is the Father, nor is the Holy Spirit he who is the Father or the Son.” Why doesn’t it read, “He is not the Father who is the Son, and he is not the Father who is the Holy Spirit, nor is the Son he who is the Father, nor is the Holy Spirit he who is not the Father?” Is it heresy to say it this way? Why the insistence on always “packaging” the Father and the Son, as if to parallel the begetter and the begotten, even when we’re not speaking in terms of their relationship, but only in terms of their equality?
I don’t think there’s anything wrong with this. The Catechism probably is just being as concise as possible. I think the packaging between Father and Son and Father, Son, and Holy Spirit is needed because it highlights these essential relationships in an infinitely knowing and loving essential being. I think you have some interesting insights though.
 
I think you are right and I agree with what you said, I just did a bad job of explaining it :p.

I think you are on to something here. It may be that there aren’t three discrete persons in the Trinity but when we think about the person of infinite loving, we think of the Father. When we think of the infinitely beloved, we think of the Son, etc. So the three persons exist but we call them by different names because of our limited understanding of what each Person does and how they relate to the other Persons, kind of like how we say that God is omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent even though in reality all of these qualities are interchangeable with infinite being. We, as humans, can only be said to have one person because we have limited knowing and loving.

I don’t think there’s anything wrong with this. The Catechism probably is just being as concise as possible. I think the packaging between Father and Son and Father, Son, and Holy Spirit is needed because it highlights these essential relationships in an infinitely knowing and loving essential being. I think you have some interesting insights though.
Thanks for your kind words. I usually draw criticism for the way I tend to phrase my thinking, which is not deliberate, but is just the way I think. If I had some self-proclaimed profound idea on the Trinity and the Church said, “James, you’re way out in left field,” I would yield to the Church’s decision, not that I wouldn’t question how I got to my idea in an effort to understand where I went wrong. I pray I would not get into an argument if I still thought I was right, because that is a very definite weakness of mine. I think I am part Jack Russell terrier, so that when I think I am being treated unfairly, I can become quite stubborn. It’s a wonderful cross to carry, and the occasion for much needed humiliation. :mad:⭕)
 
There’s a small problem with that argument… we don’t believe God has more than one nature.
Easily fixed

1 A being who consist of only one person is simpler than a being who consist of two persons.
2 God consist of three persons
3 God is not ultimately simple.
 
In a theology class once following a discussion of the Trinity, someone asked this question: If the Father’s perfect knowledge of himself generates the Son, and the Father and Son’s perfect love generates the Spirit, why doesn’t the Son’s knowledge of himself generate another Person, and the love between that person and the others generate another, and so on ad infinitum.

But it doesn’t ‘work’ that way. There are three Persons only, and only one Nature. This is revealed truth about the nature of God. We could not have thought of it on our own.

My own thinking is that the infinite and perfect working of God’s intellect and will are perfectly, infinitely, exhaustively and totally expressed in the three Persons. Further speculation is useless. It is like a sparrow trying to figure out the inner workings of the human intellect and will.
 
Thanks for your kind words. I usually draw criticism for the way I tend to phrase my thinking, which is not deliberate, but is just the way I think. If I had some self-proclaimed profound idea on the Trinity and the Church said, “James, you’re way out in left field,” I would yield to the Church’s decision, not that I wouldn’t question how I got to my idea in an effort to understand where I went wrong. I pray I would not get into an argument if I still thought I was right, because that is a very definite weakness of mine. I think I am part Jack Russell terrier, so that when I think I am being treated unfairly, I can become quite stubborn. It’s a wonderful cross to carry, and the occasion for much needed humiliation. :mad:⭕)
You and me both. 🙂 I think part of the problem is that we understand what’s in our mind but it’s difficult to convey the concept to others in a way that is not ambiguous and prone to misunderstanding. I have the same issue. A guess it’s just a limitation of human thinking I guess. Supposedly angels don’t have this problem.
 
Easily fixed

1 A being who consist of only one person is simpler than a being who consist of two persons.
2 God consist of three persons
3 God is not ultimately simple.
I don’t think that simplicity refers to how easy something is to understand. Rather it has to do with limitations. A complex being has more limitations placed on it than a simple being. A being with one nature and one person has limited knowing and loving. God’s knowing and loving is unlimited and hence requires three Persons.
 
Easily fixed

1 A being who consist of only one person is simpler than a being who consist of two persons.
2 God consist of three persons
3 God is not ultimately simple.
You are eqivocating on the word “simple.” Utter simplicity refers to the fact that God isn’t made up of any parts. You use “simple” as “easy to understand.” Richard Dawkins also uses this fallacy:
P1: Some theists say that because the universe/life is complex, there has to be a mind behind their origin.
P2: God is complex.
C1: Therefore, P1 would apply to God.
P3: Theists think that God is eternal, and doesn’t have a cause.
C2: Therefore, theists can’t use P1.

The problem with this argument is P2. When theists use “complex” to refer to life and the universe, they refer to complex in terms of interrealted parts (the standard definition). Dawkins uses somplex referring to God in terms of greatness/complicatedness, which means that the argument is guilty of equivocation. Dawkins takes advantage of people’s equations of complexity with complicatedness, and hopes we don’t notice.
 
You are eqivocating on the word “simple.” Utter simplicity refers to the fact that God isn’t made up of any parts. You use “simple” as “easy to understand.”
No, I use simple as “not made up of parts”, “having no distinctions.”

It’s really easy to see. Either God is simple and then there is no distinction in God, e.g. as in God’s essence is God’s existence, which means that, as opposed to created beings, there is no distinction between god’s essence and god’s existence. If we apply this to the three persons, this means that the Father IS the Son and IS the Holy Spirit and the Son IS the Father etc.
That is, the Son is an a point of view, a way of speaking about God.
Or there is a real distinction to be made between the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, which means God is not ultimately simple.
Richard Dawkins also uses this fallacy:
P1: Some theists say that because the universe/life is complex, there has to be a mind behind their origin.
P2: God is complex.
C1: Therefore, P1 would apply to God.
P3: Theists think that God is eternal, and doesn’t have a cause.
C2: Therefore, theists can’t use P1.
The problem with this argument is P2. When theists use “complex” to refer to life and the universe, they refer to complex in terms of interrealted parts (the standard definition). Dawkins uses somplex referring to God in terms of greatness/complicatedness, which means that the argument is guilty of equivocation. Dawkins takes advantage of people’s equations of complexity with complicatedness, and hopes we don’t notice.
Your interpretation of Dawkin’s argument is wrong here, but even it were correct, my argument is completely different.
 
I don’t think that simplicity refers to how easy something is to understand. Rather it has to do with limitations. A complex being has more limitations placed on it than a simple being. A being with one nature and one person has limited knowing and loving. God’s knowing and loving is unlimited and hence requires three Persons.
If that’s true, then God cannot exist, because appaerntly to have unlimited knowledge requires that God cannot be simple.
Besides, on your logic, a being with one nature and four persons would know more than one with only three.
 
If that’s true, then God cannot exist, because appaerntly to have unlimited knowledge requires that God cannot be simple.
Besides, on your logic, a being with one nature and four persons would know more than one with only three.
There’s no reason there would be four persons in the nature of God. It would involve knowing or loving Himself twice over which would not produce a person that is not already in the Trinity. Besides, how does one’s knowledge of himself become twice infinity?

As to your point about God not being simple if He has ultimate knowledge, I don’t see how it follows that He is not simple. We’re using human concepts of persons and applying them to God to see distinctions. In reality, personhood is analogous to the Trinity in that I can know myself and love myself, but my limited knowledge and loving do not manifest the way that the first person does so I only have one real person (as far as humans are concerned). There are no such limitations in God, hence He is simple.
 
The simplicity of God, if I understand it correctly, has to do with the fact that God has no extension in space or time. He has no parts, thus he cannot “come apart.” His being is not extended in space or time, as are our bodies. Simplicity does not have to do with distinctions, and has nothing to do with the distinction between person and nature. One can speak of God’s intellect and will as faculties of his being without positing that they are distinct “parts,” any more than a human intellect and will are “parts” of us–they are faculties of our soul.
 
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