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vincent10395
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I know that we can’t fully understand the Trinity, but How could it be possible?
Thanks ahead of time, God Bless!
Thanks ahead of time, God Bless!
I think perhaps a more interesting question, apart from its possibility, would be: does a Triune G-d have its roots in the Hebrew Bible; that is, does it have a biblical foundation? Jews and Muslims say no; Christians say yes. And much ink has been spilled to explain why or why not.I know that we can’t fully understand the Trinity, but How could it be possible?
Thanks ahead of time, God Bless!
Indeed. Each Person of the Trinity is fully God, not 1/3rd God or 1/3rd of God. I realize that 1+1+1=1 sounds illogical to some people, but the fact is that we must remember that we are created in God’s image, not the other way around. Just because we are limited to being one 1 person per being doesn’t mean it’s impossible for the nature of God’s existence to be different. Furthermore we must remember that God isn’t three beings adding up to one, but rather one infinite being eternally existing as three persons.Because the Trinity doesn’t involve parts. There’s no sharing or division of the one divine nature among them. It’s not like God the Father is one third God, God the Son is one third God, and God the Holy Spirit is one third God, and when you put them all together that makes one God. That would involve divisions.
But that’s not how the Trinity works. Each person totally, perfectly possesses the one same divine nature.
Some say that the Trinity is prefigured in the Hebrew bible. I do not know. It seems to me rather that the Trinity was not revealed until the second person of the Trinity became man. Had it not been for that event, I don’t think humanity could have learned of it, except of course through divine revelation. In this case, revelation came in the form of a Person.I think perhaps a more interesting question, apart from its possibility, would be: does a Triune G-d have its roots in the Hebrew Bible; that is, does it have a biblical foundation? Jews and Muslims say no; Christians say yes. And much ink has been spilled to explain why or why not.
When we’ve worked out how the programmed information the spider needs to do it’s job came to be, then I’ll think about figuring out how the Trinity works. Personally I think it’s a waste of time even trying.“Every spider is a versatile genius: it plans it web like an architect, and then carries out this plan like the proficient weaver it is. It is also a chemist who can synthesise silk employing a computer controlled process, and then use the silk for spinning. The spider is so proficient that it seems to have completed courses in structural engineering, chemistry, architecture, and information science. But we know this is not the case. So who instructed it? Where did it obtain the specialised knowledge? Who was its advisor? Most spiders are also active in recycling. They eat their web in the morning, then the material is chemically processed and re-used for a new web.”
St. Thomas Aquinas offers this analogy:I know that we can’t fully understand the Trinity, but How could it be possible?
Thanks ahead of time, God Bless!
Thank you for your help! God Bless!St. Thomas Aquinas offers this analogy:
We, as rational creatures, have 1) general awareness 2) awareness of ourselves as an “I” and 3) a relationship with ourselves based on our knowledge of ourselves (i.e. we love, or sometimes hate, ourselves.)
Our awareness of ourselves proceeds from our general awareness. Our self-love proceeds from our self-awareness.
Similarly, God’s awareness is the base (Father) from which His self-awareness proceeds (Son), and from the relationship between these two proceeds God’s love (the Holy Spirit).
Just as we have these 3 distinct levels of consciousness and are nevertheless one being, so it is with God. The difference, however, is that for God, being absolutely perfect, each of these “processions” is so equally perfect that they are each a complete person. They are, nevertheless, one indivisible being.
This is, of course, a rough paraphrasing of Aquinas’ treatment on the Trinity, but I hope it’s helpful.
I think that the plurality of God definitely has its roots in the Old Testament - maybe not 3-in-one as is believed in the Trinity.I think perhaps a more interesting question, apart from its possibility, would be: does a Triune G-d have its roots in the Hebrew Bible; that is, does it have a biblical foundation? Jews and Muslims say no; Christians say yes. And much ink has been spilled to explain why or why not.
No, that is wrong.The Triune God is one substance with three essences, if I were to speak like an Aristotelian. You just discovered the 800 year old puzzle in medieval philosophy. Take a look at some medieval philosophy.