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SteveVH
Guest
As long as one understands that the Church held this as a doctrine before we had a Bible, yes, the Trinity is confirmed in the Bible.I assume you are speaking of what we can read in the Bible.
This is a perfect example of the Mormon ability to hold two contradictory statements simultaneously as true. Nowhere does the Bible say that they are “separate”. If it does, please provide the verse. You are replacing the words of Sacred Scripture with your own. The word separate is never used to describe the relationship between the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. How can anything be one and at the same time be separate? If they are separate then they are different gods. We know there is only one God.How can you say they are not separate when it has been revealed that they are separate? The Bible says they are one, but it also says they are separate! Just one example is when Jesus on earth prays to His Father who is in heaven:
You must open your mind to the possibility that God really is an entirely different Being than are we; one that is beyond our capability to grasp. He is not just a glorified human being. He is one Being consisting of three persons. This is why we must understand the philosophical meaning of these words, “being” and “person”. When we think of them in terms of our modern, everyday usage of language, we will fail in understanding what is meant. The bottom line is that God is a mystery, unlike anything we experience in the physical world. It why we can find nothing that is analogous to God in the world around us.
Where does this say that they are separate? Jesus said that he and the Father are one. “When you see me you have seen the Father”. The only distinction between the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit is one of relationship, not being. Yes, this is difficult for us to grasp, but that is because it is a divine truth which is beyond our understanding.“These words spake Jesus, and lifted up his eyes to heaven, and said, Father, the hour is come; glorify thy Son, that thy Son also may glorify thee.” (John 17:1) Other examples can be found in the Bible.
You will find no Catholic, not even the Pope, who will pretend to understand the nature of God. But this truth has been revealed and therefore we must believe it even if we cannot fully grasp it.