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Topic
#8
Concerning the Trinity
by
Eugene Clingman
Executive Administrator
Copyright 2006, International Church Council Project
www.ChurchCouncil.org
(This
article may be freely distributed so long as it is not altered
and
this comment and the above information remain intact.)
The Trinity
is the eighth topic of the International Church Council Project topics. The
historic doctrine of the Trinity and the attributes of God form the essential
foundation stones of Christianity on which rest many other doctrines and basic
truths of Christian theology. They also provide answers to basic philosophic
questions such as "the one and the many" and "the connection between the visible
and the invisible worlds." It took the careful scholars of the Church several
hundred years to clarify the accurate picture of God from the Bible and we are
indebted to them for working it out for posterity. For nearly 2000 years this
doctrine of the Trinity and of God's attributes has been believed by the Body of
Christ in every country and is still considered to be necessary if one is to be
truly saved and to be worshipping the one true God.
Religious liberals who have rejected the Bible as their source for truth have
long since given up on believing in the Trinity or the deity of Christ. But
within the last century, many Bible-believing people and some conservative
denominations have adopted a modern version of the "modalism" heresy from the
3rd century AD, and as that false doctrine taught, they believe wrongly that God
is not a trinity of three distinct Persons, but rather is only one divine Person
who manifests Himself in any of three different modes at different times, like
one actor playing three different roles. This serious error has penetrated many
evangelical circles and is a deadly, unbiblical cancer which needs to be exposed
and corrected. Because of this confusion among evangelicals, we have included
the Trinity as one of the issues which must be addressed by this Church Council
Project. We commend to the Church at large this statement on The Trinity to help
her stay true to the historical and biblical position held by the Church for
2000 years and to offer her theological clarification which may help her correct
her wayward children.
Such confusion and lack of theological clarity abounds in evangelical circles
these days that a number of pastors and Christian leaders believe in the heresy
of "modalism" while thinking all along they truly believe in the Trinity; many
others simply do not have enough theological interest or knowledge to even care
what anyone believes about the Trinity. Thus we offer this one question as a
simple test to let pastors and church members be able to tell if a pastor or
layman friend of theirs holds an errant/heretical view and needs to be exhorted
and re-trained. The correct answer is "yes," and a "no" answer or an "I don't
know" answer is a signal that that person holds a mistaken view of God, and may
be a "modalist."
The question is, "Does the one true God, the God of the Bible exist as a Trinity
of three Persons wherein all three Persons are fully God and possess all the
attributes of God, but the Father is not the Son or the Spirit, the Son is not
the Father or the Spirit, and the Spirit is neither the Father nor the Son?" A
true biblical and historical Trinitarian will answer "yes" enthusiastically.
This article is adapted from the
Preamble of the International Church Council Project document titled, "The
Trinity."
You may go directly to our website to
read, download, or print all of the ICCP theological statements –
www.ChurchCouncil.org.
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