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EDITOR'S
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There is Only One True God
by Dr John Ankerberg and Dr. John Weldon
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The Bible does not teach any form of
tritheism or polytheism, as in the Mormon faith, but that
there is only one true God from all eternity. As Jesus
taught: "Now this is eternal life: that they may know you,
the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom you have sent"
(John 17:5). The following
scriptures prove there is only one God:
¨
... the only true God... (John 17:3)
¨
there is no God but one (1 Corinthians 8:4)
¨
there is but one God, ... (1 Corinthians
8:6)
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For there is one God... (1 Timothy 2:5)
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This is what the LORD says... "I am the
first and I am the last; apart from me there is no
God" (Isaiah 44:6)
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I am the LORD, and there is no other; apart
from me there is no God (Isaiah 45:5)
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I am the LORD, and there is no other
(Isaiah 45:6)
¨
I am God, and there is no other; I am God,
and there is none like me (Isaiah 46:9)
God Is a Trinity or Triune
Simultaneously, this one true God has
revealed that He is three Persons, or centers of
consciousness, within one Godhead. Because the concept
cannot be fully comprehended does not mean the doctrine is
irrational or cannot be accurately defined. A good
definition of the Trinity is provided by noted church
historian Philip Schaff:
God is one in three persons or hypostases [distinct
persons of the same nature], each person expressing the
whole fullness of the Godhead, with all his attributes.
The term persona is taken neither in the old
sense of a mere personation or form of manifestation
(prosopon, face, mask), nor in the modern sense of
an independent, separate being or individual, but in a
sense which lies between these two conceptions, and thus
avoids Sabellianism on the one hand, and Tritheism on
the other. [Sabellianism taught that God was one person
only who existed in three different forms or
manifestations; tritheism refers to a belief in three
separate gods.] The divine persons are in one another,
and form a perpetual intercommunication and motion
within the divine essence. Each person has all the
divine attributes which are inherent in the divine
essence, but each has also a characteristic
individuality or property, which is peculiar to the
person, and can not be communicated; the Father is
unbegotten, the Son begotten, the Holy Ghost is
proceeding. In this Trinity there is no priority or
posteriority of time, no superiority or inferiority of
rank, but the three persons are co-eternal and coequal.
1
The biblical doctrine of the Trinity is
vital to understand because it concerns who God is,
which is essential for having a proper realization of the
nature of God as Father, Son and Holy Spirit. To
understand the Trinity is to understand God as He has
revealed Himself to be. To misunderstand the Trinity is to
fail to understand who God is.
This is important because if we are to
worship God "in spirit and truth" (John 4:24), as Jesus
commanded, we must know and worship the one true God as He
really is. To fail to do this is to fail to know and
worship God, and this cannot bring Him glory. Thus, those
who reject the Trinity, by definition, deny the nature of
God. Without a biblical theological formulation about God,
heretical views arise. This in turn can lead to rejection
of the one true God and the worship of a false God. And if
the Bible is clear on anything, it is clear that faith in
a false God cannot save people from their sins. Jesus
Himself emphasized the importance of having an accurate
knowledge of God when He said, "This is eternal life: that
they may know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ,
whom you have sent" (John 17:3).
In his Christian Theology,
Christian theologian Millard J. Erickson offers six points
that must be included in a proper understanding of the
doctrine of the Trinity (the following is the authors’
paraphrase of Erickson’s points):
1. There is only one God
2. Each Person in the Godhead is
equally deity.
3. The threeness and oneness of God
constitute a paradox or an antinomy—merely an apparent
contradiction, not a genuine one. This is because God’s
threeness and oneness do not exist in the same respect;
that is, they are not simultaneously affirming and
denying the same thing at the same time and in the same
manner. God’s oneness refers to the divine essence; His
threeness to the plurality of persons.
4. The Trinity is eternal—there have
always been three Persons, each of whom is eternally
divine. One or more of the Persons did not come into
being at a point in time or at some point in time became
divine. There has never been any change in the essential
divine nature of the triune God. God is, and God will be
what God has always been forever.
5. The function of one member in the
Trinity may for a time be subordinate to one or both of
the other members, although this does not mean that that
member is in any way inferior in essence to the others.
Each Person of the Trinity has had, for a period of
time, a particular function unique to Himself. In other
words, the particular function that is sometimes unique
to a given Person in the Trinity is only a temporary
role exercised for a given purpose. It does not
represent a change in His status or essence. When the
second Person of the Trinity incarnated and became Jesus
Christ, He did not become less than the Father in
essence, although He did become subordinate to the
Father functionally. In like manner, the Holy Spirit is
now subordinated to the ministry of the Son (John 14-16)
and to the will of the Father, but He is not less than
they are. Certain examples may illustrate this. A wife
may have a subordinate role to a husband, but she is
also his equal. Equals in some business enterprise may
elect one of their number to serve as head or a
chairperson for a period, without any change in rank.
During World War II, the highest ranking member of an
aircraft, the pilot, would nevertheless carefully
subordinate his decisions to the bombardier, a lower
ranking officer.
6. Finally, the Trinity is
incomprehensible. Even when we are in heaven and fully
redeemed, we will still not totally comprehend God,
because it is impossible that a finite creature could
ever comprehend an infinite being. Thus, "Those aspects
of God which we never fully comprehend should be
regarded as mysteries that go beyond our reason rather
than as paradoxes which conflict with reason."
2
Prior knowledge of the Trinity,
especially in its theological formulation, is not
necessary for a person to be saved. But once saved, it is
vital for Christians to know the true nature of the God
who has so graciously pardoned them. This explains why the
Church has always recognized the importance of a proper
understanding of God and maintained that those who
reject the scriptural view of God, as long as they do
so, cannot be saved. Consider Dr. Schaff’s comments about
the Athanasian Creed:
[It] begins and ends with the solemn declaration that
the catholic [universal] faith in the Trinity and the
Incarnation is the indispensable condition of salvation,
and that those who reject it will be lost forever. This
anathema [divine curse], in its natural historical
sense, is not merely a solemn warning against the great
danger of heresy, nor, on the other hand, does it
demand, as a condition of salvation, a full knowledge,
and assent to, the logical statement of the doctrines
set forth (this would condemn the great mass even of
Christian believers); but it does mean to exclude from
heaven all who reject the divine truth therein taught.
It requires everyone who would be saved to believe in
the only true and living God, Father, Son, and Holy
Ghost, one in essence, three in persons, and in one
Jesus Christ, very God and very man in one person. 3
As Vladimir Lossky once put it boldly, "Between the
Trinity and Hell there lies no other choice." 4 Only
personal bias or ignorance can explain cultic attempts to
deny the biblical Trinity. It is significant that even
some Unitarians who reject the Trinity still confess it is
a biblical teaching based on "its obvious sense, its
natural meaning" as found in Scripture. These words of
George E. Ellis, a nineteenth-century Unitarian leader,
illustrate the biases of anti-trinitarian groups and
liberals who refuse to accept the Trinity on personal, not
biblical, grounds. Ellis confesses, "Only that kind of
ingenious, special, discriminative, and in candor I must
add, forced treatment, which it receives from us liberals
can make the book teach anything but Orthodoxy." 5 No less
an authority than the great Princeton theologian B. B.
Warfield pointed out that the doctrine of the Trinity "is
rather everywhere presupposed" in Scripture. 6
This is, for example,
clearly demonstrated in Edward Bickersteth’s fine work,
The Trinity.
Notes
1. Philip Schaff, ed., rev. by David S. Schaff,
The Creeds of Christendom: With a History and Critical
Notes—Vol. 1: The History of the Creeds (Grand
Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1983). The Greek term was
transliterated by the authors.
2. Millard J. Erickson, Christian Theology
(Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 1986, one vol. edition), pp.
337-338.
3. Schaff, ed., Creed, pp. 39-40.
4. Vladimir Lossky, The Mystical Theology of the
Eastern Church (1957), p. 66.
5. In E. Calvin Beisner, God in Three Persons
(Wheaton, IL: Tyndale, 1984), p. 25.
6. Ibid., p. 26.
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Copyright 2006, Ankerberg Theological Research Institute
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