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I Explain the Doctrine of the Trinity

Books Mentioned

  • The Trinity: How Not to Be a Heretic by Stephen Bullivant

I used to think that when I was puzzled by some theological mystery that if I could just find the right book or ask the right person that the mystery would be solved. It turns out that there are many theological questions that no one knows the answer to, and these questions puzzle and have puzzled theologians as much as they do you or me. The doctrine of the Trinity is one of those questions.

Ok, I lied; I can’t explain the doctrine of the Trinity. But don’t run off just yet. I want to tell you about a nifty little book that helps you understand why the doctrine of the Trinity is so hard to explain, but helps you talk about the Trinity without saying heretical things. The book is short, very easy to read and understand, and packed with really revelational insights. And any book about the Trinity that uses Krusty the Klown, Sacha Baron Cohen, and Pinocchio to explain things is one you better check out.

The Best Book on the Trinity You Will Ever Understand

 The book is Trinity, The: How Not to Be a Heretic. The first thing Bullivant does is set out three statements that sum up the doctrine of the Trinity. They are:
  1. There is only one God.
  2. The Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit is each God.
  3. The Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit are not the same.

So that’s really simple, right? Except that when you take all the statements together, you start to realize they are hard to reconcile. The reason it is so hard to talk about the Trinity is because there is only one Trinity that has ever been and will ever be. The Trinity is sui generis—its own thing—one of a kind. (Bullivant never uses this Latin phrase, but it is one of my favorites, so I throw it in whenever I can. And if this phrase ever fit anything, it fits the Trinity. )

The Trinity is not like anything else, so we really have no words that can accurately describe what it is. The only words we have available to us are being used to describe something that is not the Trinity. So, we try the best we can to craft a vocabulary that can approximate what we are trying to say.

Who Thought Up the Trinity, Anyway?

Bullivant tells us that the doctrine of the Trinity arose solely because that is what Christians found revealed to them in Scripture. The Trinity is something about God that God has to reveal to us. While you might understand that God exists by looking at creation, creation wouldn’t reveal that God is three in one. Early (or later) Christians did not make the doctrine up (because if they had, they would probably have made up something they could have explained better). Rather, they just affirmed the three statements as all being true (and Bullivant goes through the Scriptures that led them and us to those conclusions). How they can all be true at the same time—how three can be one—is the difficulty.

How to Be a Heretic

Bullivant says that heresies arise in trying to “explain” the Trinity, and this is because explanations usually end up denying one of the three statements. It is fairly easy to craft an explanation that encompasses only two of the statements, but when you do that, you have a heresy on your hands.

The first heresy denies the third statement. It says, rather, that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are the same but are found in three different roles or modes. And so the heresy is called “modalism.” The analogy that the Trinity is like water, ice, and steam illustrates the view of modalism (and that means that is not a good analogy to use in your Sunday School class).

The second heresy denies the second statement. Those who promote this heresy do so with the best of intentions: they want to preserve our bedrock belief of monotheism—there is only one God.  So they say that Jesus is sort of God but not truly God—rather he is an exalted and unique creation of God.  But the Trinity doctrine requires that statement two be true. Jesus must be truly God. This heresy is called Arianism (after Arius, its founder). The controversy Arius provoked resulted in the councils of Nicaea and Constantinople. These councils borrowed  a new vocabulary to describe the Trinity, and they constructed what we now call the Nicene Creed. This is where we get such phrases and words as “begotten not made,” “substance,” and “consubstantial,” all used to try to explain what we believe without contradicting any of the three statements.

The final heresy is not usually one that pops up with actual proponents, but it does engender a question: How are the three persons of the Trinity not three Gods? Bullivant talks about how difficult it is to disprove something Christians don’t even believe. He talks about how the writers of Scripture used the terms “God” and “God the Father” interchangeably at times and how this led to confusion and imprecision at times. His discussion of how early church fathers tried to explain statement one is very enlightening.

So take up Bullivant’s book and learn a lot about the Trinity in a very short time. You probably will realize you knew a lot but just didn’t know how to say it without saying the wrong (heretical) thing. Bullivant will help you speak confidently about the Trinity, and as an added bonus, you will avoid being burned at the stake.

Note: If you order Bullivant’s book by clicking the link I provide, I get a little teeny tiny commission, but I could buy the children some porridge if you choose to be so kind.
Note 2: I updated the above link. Before I had linked to the hardback I think. This price at this link is much better.

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Filed Under: Books Tagged With: Christianity, doctrine, Trinity January 26, 2017 By Poor Potsherd 3 Comments

Comments

  1. Brenda says

    January 26, 2017 at 7:58 pm

    I know this must be heresy because I’ve never heard anyone say it, but I’m going to throw it out there and let you take it apart. Why can’t we describe the Trinity as being like a corporation with 3 members? Any one of them can be considered “The Corporation” but that doesn’t make the corporation 3 entities.

    Reply
    • Poor Potsherd says

      January 30, 2017 at 9:00 am

      I don’t know. That actually sounds pretty good to me. I’m sure it violates one of the statements, but I can’t decide how it might. Maybe it’s never been proposed because theology majors never take business classes?

      Reply
  2. Brenda says

    February 9, 2017 at 2:32 pm

    Thanks.

    Reply

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