Right! The evidence is
there, but it’s still not *explicit *(it never says that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are three distinct persons in one divine nature, comprising three Godheads while maintaining
only one God). With all of the OT references, keep in mind that the Jews (then *and *now) don’t believe in the Trinity - they only believe in God the Father (Deu 6:4). So the OT is vague, as God had not revealed Himself fully yet. With the NT references you listed, it’s still a little vague. This “vagueness” led Arius into heresy in the 4th century (
catholic.com/library/great_heresies.asp ), and resulted in the Nicene Creed (
mit.edu/~tb/anglican/intro/lr-nicene-creed.html ). This particularly dastardly heresy threatened to tear the early Church apart (thankfully, the promise of Christ wouldn’t let the “gates of Hell” overcome it!). Arius ammassed a number of followers, however, and did it using scripture. As for the result, you’ve probably said the Nicene Creed at your church (most christian churches have) and Arianism has been pretty thoroughly put down.
If you
still don’t believe it’s vague, talk to a Jehova’s Witness. This “bible alone” church also believes that Christ was not God, and they use the bible to prove their point (…well…they use
their translation, but you get the picture).
If you would like to discuss specifics of a given topic and how biblical it really is (and again, I assure you our dogmas and doctrines are
allbiblical) start a thread in the apologetics forum. I’d be more than happy to walk you through any of our beliefs!
RyanL