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Nontrinitarianism

Nontrinitarianism is a form of Christianity that rejects the mainstream Christian theology of the Trinity—the belief that God is three distinct hypostases or persons who are coeternal, coequal, and indivisibly united in one being, or essence (from the Ancient Greek ousia). Certain religious groups that emerged during the Protestant Reformation have historically been known as antitrinitarian.

According to churches that consider the decisions of ecumenical councils final, trinitarianism was definitively declared to be Christian doctrine at the 4th-century ecumenical councils,[1][2][3] that of the First Council of Nicaea (325), which declared the full divinity of the Son,[4] and the First Council of Constantinople (381), which declared the divinity of the Holy Spirit.[5]

In terms of number of adherents, nontrinitarian denominations comprise a small minority of modern Christians. After the denominations in the Oneness Pentecostal movement, the largest nontrinitarian Christian denominations are the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Jehovah's Witnesses, La Luz del Mundo, and Iglesia ni Cristo. There are a number of other smaller groups, including Christadelphians, Church of the Blessed Hope, Christian Scientists, Dawn Bible Students, Living Church of God, Assemblies of Yahweh, Members Church of God International, Unitarian Christians, Unitarian Universalist Christians, The Way International, The Church of God International, the United Church of God, Church of God General Conference, Restored Church of God, Christian Disciples Church, and Church of God of the Faith of Abraham.[6]

Nontrinitarian views differ widely on the nature of God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit. Various nontrinitarian philosophies, such as adoptionism and monarchianism existed prior to the codification of the Trinity doctrine in AD 325, 381, and 431, at the Councils of Nicaea, Constantinople, and Ephesus.[7] Nontrinitarianism was later renewed by Cathars in the 11th through 13th centuries, in the Unitarian movement during the Protestant Reformation, in the Age of Enlightenment of the 18th century, and in some groups arising during the Second Great Awakening of the 19th century.

The doctrine of the Trinity, as held in mainstream Christianity, is not present in the other major monotheistic Abrahamic religions.

Beliefs

Christian apologists and other Church Fathers of the 2nd and 3rd centuries, having adopted and formulated the Logos Christology, considered the Son of God as the instrument used by the supreme God, the Father, to bring the creation into existence. Justin Martyr, Theophilus of Antioch, Hippolytus of Rome and Tertullian in particular state that the internal Logos of God (Gr. Logos endiathetos, Lat. ratio)—his impersonal divine reason—was begotten as Logos uttered (Gr. Logos prophorikos, Lat. sermo, verbum), the Word personified, becoming an actual person to be used for the purpose of creation.[8]

The Encyclopædia Britannica (11th edition) states: "to some Christians the doctrine of the Trinity appeared inconsistent with the unity of God. ... they therefore denied it, and accepted Jesus Christ, not as incarnate God, but as God's highest creature by whom all else was created. ... [this] view in the early Church long contended with the orthodox doctrine."[9] Although the Trinitarian view became the orthodox doctrine in mainstream Christianity, variations of the nontrinitarian view are still held by a relatively small number of Christian groups and denominations.

Various views exist regarding the relationships between the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

  • Those who believe that Jesus is not Almighty God, nor absolutely equal to God, and not the co-eternal or co-equal with Father in everything, but was either God's subordinate Son and Servant, the highest Angel and Son of God that eventually became a perfect Man, God's true firstborn before ages, a perfect messenger sent from God, the greatest prophet of Israel, and the Jewish Messiah, or the perfect created human:
    • Adoptionism (2nd century AD) holds that Jesus became divine at his baptism (sometimes associated with the Gospel of Mark) or at his resurrection (sometimes associated with Saint Paul and Shepherd of Hermas);
    • ArianismArius (AD c. 250 or 256–336) believed that the pre-existent Son of God was directly created by the Father, before all ages, and that he was subordinate to God the Father. Arius' position was that the Son was brought forth as the very first of God's creations, and that the Father later created all things through the Son. Arius taught that in the creation of the universe, the Father was the ultimate creator, supplying all the materials and directing the design, while the Son worked the materials, making all things at the bidding and in the service of God, by which "through [Christ] all things came into existence". Arianism became the dominant view in some regions in the time of the Roman Empire, notably the Visigoths until 589.[10] The Third Council of Sirmium in 357 was the high point of Arianism. The Seventh Arian Confession (Second Sirmium Confession) held that both homoousios (of one substance) and homoiousios (of similar substance) were unbiblical and that the Father is greater than the Son in all things, and that the Father alone is infinite and eternal, and that the Logos is God's true firstborn and subservient Son who was made perfect flesh for our sakes and for the glory of the Father (this confession was later known as the Blasphemy of Sirmium): "But since many persons are disturbed by questions concerning what is called in Latin substantia, but in Greek ousia, that is, to make it understood more exactly, as to 'coessential,' or what is called, 'like-in-essence,' there ought to be no mention of any of these at all, nor exposition of them in the Church, for this reason and for this consideration, that in divine Scripture nothing is written about them, and that they are above men's knowledge and above men's understanding";[11]
    • PsilanthropismEbionites (1st to 4th centuries AD) observed Jewish law, denied the literal virgin birth and regarded Jesus as the Jewish Messiah and the greatest prophet of God only;[12]
    • SocinianismPhotinus taught that Jesus was the sinless Messiah and redeemer, and the only perfect human son of God, but that he had no pre-human existence. They interpret verses such as John 1:1 to refer to God's "plan" existing in God's mind before Christ's birth, and that it was God's plan that "became flesh", as the perfect man Jesus;
    • Unitarianism views Jesus as the son of God, subordinate and distinct from his Father;[13]
    • Many Gnostic traditions held that the Christ is a heavenly Aeon but not one with the Father.
  • Those who believe that the Father, the resurrected Son and the Holy Spirit are different aspects of one God, as perceived by the believer, rather than three distinct persons:
    • ModalismSabellius (fl. c. 215) stated that God took numerous forms in both the Hebrew and the Christian Greek Scriptures, and that God has manifested himself in three primary modes regarding the salvation of mankind. He contended that "Father, Son, and Spirit" were different roles played by the same divine person in various circumstances in history;[14] thus God is Father in creation (God created a Son through the virgin birth), Son in redemption (God manifested himself as Jesus for the purpose of his death upon the cross), and Holy Spirit in regeneration (God's Spirit within the Son and within the souls of Christian believers). In this view, God is not three distinct persons, but rather one person manifesting himself in multiple ways.[14] Trinitarians condemn this view as a heresy. The chief critic of Sabellianism was Tertullian, who labeled the movement "Patripassianism", from the Latin words pater for "father", and passus from the verb "to suffer", because it implied that the Father suffered on the cross. It was coined by Tertullian in his work Adversus Praxeas, Chapter I: "By this Praxeas did a twofold service for the devil at Rome: he drove away prophecy, and he brought in heresy; he put to flight the Paraclete, and he crucified the Father." The term homoousion (ὁμοούσιον, literally same being) later adopted by the Trinitarian Nicene Council for its anti-Arian creed had previously been used by Sabellians.[15]
  • Those who believe that Jesus Christ is Almighty God, but that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are actually three distinct almighty "Gods" with distinct natures, acting as one divine group, united in purpose:
    • Tri-theismJohn Philoponus, an Aristotelian and monophysite in Alexandria, in the middle of the 6th century, saw in the Trinity three separate natures, substances, and deities, according to the number of divine persons.[16] He sought to justify this view by the Aristotelian categories of genus, species and individuum. In the Middle Ages, Roscellin of Compiegne, the founder of Nominalism, argued for three distinct almighty Gods, with three distinct natures, who were one in mind and purpose, existing together eternally, interacting together from times past, in perfect cooperation, acting together as one divine group or godhead over the universe, in creation and redemption. And that the Logos took on a subservient role, but was equal in power and eternity with the One called Father. Roscellin said, though, like Philoponus, that unless the three persons are tres res (three things with distinct natures), the whole Trinity must have been incarnate. And therefore, since only the Logos was made flesh, the other two persons must have had distinct "natures", separate from the Logos, and so had to be separate and distinct Gods, though all three were one in divine work and plan and operation. In this view, they would be considered "three Gods in one Godhead". This notion was condemned by St. Anselm.[17]
  • Those who believe that the Holy Spirit is not a person:
    • Binitarianism – Adherents include those people through history who believed that God is only two co-equal and co-eternal persons, the Father and the Word, not three. They taught that the Holy Spirit is not a distinct person, but is the power or divine influence of the Father and Son, emanating out to the universe, in creation, and to believers;
    • Dualism;
    • MarcionismMarcion (AD c. 110–160) believed there were two deities, one of creation and judgment (in the Hebrew Bible) and one of redemption and mercy (in the New Testament).

Modern Christian groups

  • Christadelphians hold the unitarian belief that although Jesus is the Son of God, this is only a relational title toward the Father who alone is truly God. Christ's personhood, therefore, is human not divine,[18] (believing this to be necessary in order to save humans from their sins[19]). The "Holy Spirit" terminology in the Bible is interpreted as referring to God's impersonal power,[20] or God's character/mind[21] (depending on the context).
  • Church of God General Conference (Abrahamic Faith).[22]
  • The Cooneyites is a Christian sect that split from the Two by Twos in 1928 following Edward Cooney's excommunication from the main group; they deny the Living Witness Doctrine.[clarification needed]
  • Iglesia ni Cristo (Tagalog for Church of Christ) views Jesus as human but endowed by God with attributes not found in ordinary humans, though lacking attributes found in God. They contend that it is God's will to worship Jesus.[23] INC rejects the Trinity as heresy, adopting a version of unitarianism.
  • Jehovah's Witnesses (and other Bible Student movement groups such as the Associated Bible Students[24][25][26]) teach that God the Father is uniquely Almighty God. They consider Jesus to be "the First-begotten Son", God's only direct creation, and the very first creation by God. They give relative "worship" or "obeisance" (in the sense of homage, as to a king) to Christ,[27] pray through him as God's only high priest, consider him to be their Messiah, but only a Mediator for 144,000 anointed Christians. Very few Jehovah's Witnesses are viewed as anointed. w15 1/15 p. 16 par. 14 They believe that only the Father is without beginning, that the Father is greater than the Son in all things, and that only the Father is worthy of "sacred service" (latria). They believe that the Son had a beginning, and was brought forth at a certain point, as "the firstborn of all creation" and "the only-begotten", as the pre-existent Michael and the "Angel of the LORD" of Exodus, that he left heaven to be born as a perfect human, as the Jewish Messiah and Redeemer, and that after his ascension to heaven he resumed his pre-human identity, but exalted to God's right hand until the last days.[28][29] They do not believe that the Holy Spirit is an actual person, but consider it to be God's divine active force.[30] w15 1/15 p. 16 par. 14
  • The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) teaches that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are distinct beings that are not united in substance, a view sometimes called social trinitarianism. They believe the three individual deities are "one" in will or purpose, as Jesus was "one" with his disciples, and that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit constitute a single godhead united in purpose.[31] Latter-day Saints believe that Christ is the Firstborn of the Father,[32] that he is subordinate to God the Father (Matthew 26:39),[33] and that Christ created the universe.[33][34] Latter-day Saints do not subscribe to the ideas that Christ was unlike the Father in substance[35] and that the Father could not appear on earth,[36] or that Christ was adopted by the Father,[32] as presented in Arianism.[34][37] Latter-day Saints assert that both God and the resurrected Christ have perfected glorified, physical bodies,[38] but do not otherwise classify deity in terms of substance. While Latter-day Saints regard God the Father as the supreme being and literal father of the spirits of all humankind, they also teach that Christ and the Holy Spirit are equally divine and that they share in the Father's "comprehension of all things".[39]
  • The Members Church of God International believes in the divinity of Christ but rejects the doctrine of Trinity.
  • Oneness Pentecostalism is a subset of Pentecostalism that believes God is only one person, and that he manifests himself in different ways, faces, or "modes": "Father, Son, and Holy Spirit (or Holy Ghost) are different designations for the one God. God is the Father. God is the Holy Spirit. The Son is God manifest in flesh. The term Son always refers to the Incarnation, and never to deity apart from humanity."[40] Oneness Pentecostals believe that Jesus was "Son" only when he became flesh on earth, but was the Father prior to being made human. They refer to the Father as the "Spirit" and the Son as the "Flesh". Oneness Pentecostals reject the Trinity doctrine, viewing it as pagan and unscriptural, and hold to the Jesus' Name doctrine with respect to baptisms. Oneness Pentecostals are often referred to as "Modalists" or "Sabellians" or "Jesus Only".[41]
  • Denominations within the Sabbatarian tradition (Armstrongism) believe that Christ the Son and God the Father are co-eternal, but do not teach that the Holy Spirit is a being or person. Armstrong theology holds that God is a "Family" that expands eventually, that "God reproduces Himself", but that originally there was a co-eternal "Duality", God and the Word, rather than a "Trinity".
  • Swedenborgianism holds that the Trinity exists in one person, the Lord God Jesus Christ. The Father, the being or soul of God, was born into the world and put on a body from Mary. Throughout his life, Jesus put away all human desires and tendencies until he was completely divine. After his resurrection, he influences the world through the Holy Spirit, which is his activity. In this view, Jesus Christ is the one God; the Father as to his soul, the Son as to his body, and the Holy Spirit as to his activity in the world. This view is very similar in many ways to Sabellianism, Modalism, Oneness, or Jesus Only beliefs.
  • Numerous Unitarian Christian organizations exist around the world, the oldest of which is the Unitarian Church of Transylvania. An umbrella organization for these groups is the International Council of Unitarians and Universalists, though only some members and affiliates of that body consider themselves exclusively or predominantly Christian. In the United States, "Unitarian" often refers to members and congregations within the Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA), a non-Christian group formed in 1961 from the merger of the American Unitarian Association with the Universalist Church of America.[42][43] Though both of these predecessor groups were originally Christian, the UUA does not have a shared creed and does not identify as a Christian Unitarian organization.[44][45]

History

Early Christianity

 
The First Council of Nicaea depicted with Arius beneath the feet of Emperor Constantine and the bishops

Although nontrinitarian beliefs continued and were dominant among some peoples—for example, the Lombards, Ostrogoths, Visigoths and Vandals—for hundreds of years, the Trinity doctrine eventually gained prominence in the Roman Empire. Nontrinitarians typically argue that early nontrinitarian beliefs, such as Arianism, were systematically suppressed (often to the point of death).[46] After the First Council of Nicaea, Roman Emperor Constantine I issued an edict against Arius' writings, which included systematic book burning.[47] In spite of the decree, Constantine ordered the readmission of Arius to the church, removed the bishops (including Athanasius) who upheld the teaching of Nicaea,[48] allowed Arianism to grow within the Empire and to spread to Germanic tribes on the frontier,[49] and was himself baptized by an Arian bishop, Eusebius of Nicomedia.[50] His successors as Christian emperors promoted Arianism, until Theodosius I came to the throne in 379 and supported Nicene Christianity.

The Easter letter that Athanasius issued in 367, when the Eastern Empire was ruled by the Arian Emperor Valens, specified the books that belong to the Old Testament and the New Testament, together with seven other books to be read "for instruction in the word of godliness"; it also excluded what Athanasius called apocryphal writings, falsely presented as ancient.[51] Elaine Pagels writes: "In AD 367, Athanasius, the zealous bishop of Alexandria... issued an Easter letter in which he demanded that Egyptian monks destroy all such unacceptable writings, except for those he specifically listed as 'acceptable' even 'canonical'—a list that constitutes the present 'New Testament'".[52][53]

Nontrinitarians see the Nicene Creed and the results of the Council of Chalcedon as essentially political documents, resulting from the subordination of true doctrine to state interests by leaders of the Catholic Church, so that the church became, in their view, an extension of the Roman Empire. Nontrinitarians (both Modalists and Unitarians) assert that Athanasius and others at Nicaea adopted Greek Platonic philosophy and concepts, and incorporated them in their views of God and Christ.[54]

The author H. G. Wells, later famous for his contribution to science-fiction, wrote in The Outline of History: "We shall see presently how later on all Christendom was torn by disputes about the Trinity. There is no evidence that the apostles of Jesus ever heard of the Trinity, at any rate from him."[55]

The question of why such a central doctrine to the Christian faith would never have been explicitly stated in scripture or taught in detail by Jesus himself was sufficiently important to 16th century historical figures such as Michael Servetus to lead them to argue the question. The Geneva City Council, in accord with the judgment of the cantons of Zürich, Bern, Basel, and Schaffhausen, condemned Servetus to be burned at the stake for this and his opposition to infant baptism.

The Encyclopædia of Religion and Ethics describes the five stages that led to the formulation of the doctrine of the Trinity:[56]

  1. The acceptance of the pre-human existence of Jesus as the (middle-platonic) Logos, namely, as the medium between the transcendent sovereign God and the created cosmos. The doctrine of Logos was accepted by the Apologists and by other Fathers of the 2nd and 3rd centuries, such as Justin the Martyr, Hippolytus, Tertullian, Ireneus, Clement of Alexandria, Origen, Lactantius, and in the 4th century by Arius;
  2. The doctrine of the timeless generation of the Son from the Father as it was articulated by Origen in his effort to support the ontological immutability of God, that he is ever-being a father and a creator. The doctrine of the timeless generation was adopted by Athanasius of Alexandria;
  3. The acceptance of the idea that the son of God is of the same transcendent nature (homoousios) as his father. This position was declared in the Nicene Creed, which specifically states the son of God is as immutable as his father;
  4. The acceptance that the Holy Spirit also has ontological equality as a third person in a divine Trinity and the final Trinitarian terminology by the teachings of the Cappadocian Fathers;
  5. The addition of the Filioque to the Nicene Creed, as accepted by the Roman Catholic Church.

Following the Reformation

By 1530, following the Protestant Reformation, and the German Peasants' War of 1524–1525, large areas of Northern Europe were Protestant, and forms of nontrinitarianism began to surface among some "Radical Reformation" groups, particularly Anabaptists. The first recorded English antitrinitarian was John Assheton (1548), an Anglican priest. The Italian Anabaptist "Council of Venice" (1550) and the trial of Michael Servetus (1553) marked the clear emergence of markedly antitrinitarian Protestants. Though the only organised nontrinitarian churches were the Polish Brethren who split from the Calvinists (1565, expelled from Poland 1658), and the Unitarian Church of Transylvania (founded 1568). Nonconformists, Dissenters and Latitudinarians in Britain were often Arians or Unitarians, and the Doctrine of the Trinity Act 1813 allowed nontrinitarian worship in Britain. In America, Arian and Unitarian views were also found among some Millennialist and Adventist groups, though the Unitarian Church itself began to decline in numbers and influence after the 1870s.[57][58]

Points of dissent

Nontrinitarian Christians with Arian or Semi-Arian views contend that the weight of scriptural evidence supports Subordinationism, the Son's total submission to the Father, and God's paternal supremacy over the Son in every aspect. They acknowledge the Son's high rank at God's right hand, but teach that the Father is still greater than the Son in all things.

While acknowledging that the Father, Son, and Spirit are essential in creation and salvation, they argue that that in itself does not confirm that the three are each co-equal or co-eternal. They also affirm that God is only explicitly identified as "one" in the Bible, and that the doctrine of the Trinity, which word literally meaning a set of three, ascribes a co-equal threeness to the being of the infinite God that is not explicitly scriptural.

Scriptural support

Critics of the Trinity doctrine argue that, for a teaching described as fundamental, it lacks direct scriptural support. Proponents of the doctrine assert that although the doctrine is not stated directly in the New Testament, it is instead an interpretation of elements contained therein that imply the doctrine that was later formulated in the 4th century.

William Barclay, a Church of Scotland minister, says:

"It is important and helpful to remember that the word Trinity is not itself a New Testament word. It is even true in at least one sense to say that the doctrine of the Trinity is not directly New Testament doctrine. It is rather a deduction from and an interpretation of the thought and the language of the New Testament."[59]

The New Catholic Encyclopedia states:

"The doctrine of the Holy Trinity is not taught [explicitly] in the [Old Testament]", "The formulation 'one God in three Persons' was not solidly established [by a council] ... prior to the end of the 4th century."[60]

Similarly, Encyclopedia Encarta states:

"The doctrine is not taught explicitly in the New Testament, where the word God almost invariably refers to the Father. ... The term trinitas was first used in the 2nd century, by the Latin theologian Tertullian, but the concept was developed in the course of the debates on the nature of Christ ... In the 4th century, the doctrine was finally formulated".[61]

Encyclopædia Britannica says:

"Neither the word Trinity nor the explicit doctrine appears in the New Testament, nor did Jesus and his followers intend to contradict the Shema in the Old Testament: "Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God is one Lord" (Deuteronomy 6:4). ... The doctrine developed gradually over several centuries and through many controversies. ... by the end of the 4th century, under the leadership of Basil of Caesarea, Gregory of Nyssa, and Gregory of Nazianzus (the Cappadocian Fathers), the doctrine of the Trinity took substantially the form it has maintained ever since."[62]

The Anchor Bible Dictionary states:

"One does not find in the NT the trinitarian paradox of the coexistence of the Father, Son, and Spirit within a divine unity."[63]

Catholic historian Joseph F. Kelly, speaking of legitimate theological development, writes:

"The Bible may not use the word 'Trinity', but it refers to God the Father frequently; the Gospel of John emphasized the divinity of the Son; several New Testament books treat the Holy Spirit as divine. The ancient theologians did not violate biblical teaching but sought to develop its implications. ... [Arius'] potent arguments forced other Christians to refine their thinking about the Trinity."
"At two ecumenical councils, Nicea I in 325 and Constantinople I in 381, the church at large defined the Trinity in the way now so familiar to us from the Nicene Creed. This exemplifies development of doctrine at its best. The Bible may not use the word 'Trinity', but trinitarian theology does not go against the Bible. On the contrary, Catholics believe that trinitarianism has carefully developed a biblical teaching for later generations."[2]

Questions about co-equal deity of Jesus

American Catholic priest and Trinitarian, R.E. Brown (1928–1988), wrote a journal article[64] that sorted relevant biblical verses into three classes. He described the following block as "texts that seem to imply that the title 'God' was not used for Jesus" and are "negative evidence which is often somewhat neglected in Catholic treatments of the subject":[64]

  • Mark 10:18, Matthew 27:46, John 20:17, Ephesians 1:17, 2 Corinthians 1:3, 1 Peter 1:3, John 17:3, 1 Corinthians 8:6, Ephesians 4:4-6, 1 Corinthians 12:4-6, 2 Corinthians 13:14, 1 Timothy 2:5, John 14:28, Mark 13:32, Philippians 2:5-10, and 1 Corinthians 15:24-28;

he lists these as "texts where, by reason of textual variants or syntax, the use of 'God' for Jesus is dubious":[64]

  • Gal 2:20, Acts 20:28, John 1:18, Colossians 2:2, 2 Thessalonians 1:12, 1John 5:20, Romans 9:5, and 2 Peter 1:1;

and only finds the following three as "texts where clearly Jesus is called God":[64]

The Septuagint translate אלוהים‎ (Elohim) as θεος (Theos).[65] At Deuteronomy 6:4 (the Shema Yisrael, quoted by Jesus at Mark 12:29), the plural form of the Hebrew word "God" (Elohim) is used, generally understood to denote majesty, excellence, and the superlative.[66] It has been stated that in the original Greek in Mark 12:29, there are no "plural modifiers" in that Greek word there for "one" (heis), but that in Mark 12 it is simply a masculine singular "one". And that because of that, there is no valid reason to believe that the Hebrew word for "one" in Deuteronomy 6 (echad) was necessarily a "plural one", rather than just simply numerical "one".[67] At Deuteronomy 6:4, the Tetragrammaton appears twice in this verse, leading Jehovah's Witnesses and certain Jewish scholars to conclude that belief in a singular (and therefore indivisible) supremely powerful God is essential to the Shema.[68][69]

Matthew 26:39

In Matthew 26:39 Jesus prays with a distinction between God and himself, "O my Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me: nevertheless not as I will, but as thou wilt.".

John 1:1

In John 1:1 there is a distinction between God and the Logos. Non-trinitarians claim a mistranslation of the second part of John 1:1 which, when literally translated word-for-word reads "and the word [logos] was with the God [ho theos]." Trinitarians contend that the third part of the verse (John 1:1c) translates as "and the Word was God", pointing to a distinction as subjects between God and the Logos but an equivalence in nature.[70][71][72][73] Some nontrinitarians assert that the Koine Greek (kai theos ên ho logos) should be translated as "and a God was the Word" (or "and the Word was a god"). Based on their contention that the article of theos is anarthrous, lacking a definite article, they believe the verse refers to Jesus' pre-human existence as "a god" or a divine one as distinct from "the God". Nontrinitarians also contend that the author of John's gospel could have written kai ho theos ên ho logos ("and the Word was the God") if that were his intended meaning.[74][self-published source][75][76] Others argue that the Greek should be translated as "and the Logos was divine" (with theos as an adjective), wherein the Logos is interpreted as God's "plan" or "reasoning" for salvation. According to Modalists, the Logos 'becoming flesh' refers to the "plan" or "eternal mind" of God being manifested in the birth of the man Jesus rather than the incarnation of a pre-existent Jesus.[citation needed]

John 10:30

John 10:30 — Nontrinitarians such as Arians believe that when Jesus said, "I and the Father are one," he did not mean that they were actually "one substance", or "one God", or co-equal and co-eternal, but rather that he and the Father have a "unity of purpose", and that the context indicates that Jesus was saying that they were "one" in pastoral work. The point being that the Father and the Son were united in the divine work of saving the 'sheep'. Nontrinitarian Christians also cite John 17:21,[77] wherein Jesus prayed regarding his disciples: "That they may all be one, as you, Father, are in me, and I in you, that they may be in us," adding "that they may be one even as we are one". They argue that the same Greek word (hen) for "one" throughout John 17 indicates that Jesus did not expect for his followers to literally become a single Being, or "one in substance", with each other, or with God, and therefore that Jesus also did not expect his hearers to think that he and God the Father were one entity either.[77]

John 20:28–29

John 20:28–29 — "And Thomas answered and said to Him, "My Lord and my God!" Jesus said to him, "Thomas, because you have seen Me, you have believed. Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed"". Since Thomas called Jesus God, Jesus's statement appears to endorse Thomas's assertion. Nontrinitarians sometimes respond that it is plausible that Thomas is addressing the Lord Jesus and then the Father.[citation needed] Another possible answer is that Jesus himself said, "Is it not written in your law, I said, Ye are gods?" (John 10:34) referring to Psalm 82:6–8.[citation needed] The word "gods" in verse 6 and "God" in verse 8 is the same Hebrew word "'elohim",[78] which means, "gods in the ordinary sense; but specifically used (in the plural thus, especially with the article) of the supreme God; occasionally applied by way of deference to magistrates; and sometimes as a superlative",[79] and can also refer to powers and potentates, in general, or as "God, god, gods, rulers, judges or angels",[78] and as "divine ones, goddess, godlike one".[80] Therefore, the point being that Jesus was a power or mighty one to the Apostles, as the resurrected Messiah, and as the reflection of God the Father.

2 Corinthians 13:14

2 Corinthians 13:14 — "The Grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the sharing in the Holy Spirit be with all of you." It is argued by Trinitarians that the appearance of "Father, Son, and Spirit" together in Paul's prayer for Grace on all believers, and are considered essential for salvation, that the verse is consistent with a triune godhead. Nontrinitarians such as Arians reply[citation needed] that they do not disagree that all three are necessary for salvation and grace, but argue that the passage does not explicitly say that all three are co-equal or co-eternal.[81][unreliable source?]

Philippians 2:5–6

Philippians 2:5–6 — "Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, [or "which was also in Christ Jesus",] who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped" (ESV). The word translated in the English Standard Version as "a thing to be grasped" is ἁρπαγμόν. Other translations of the word are indicated in the Holman Christian Standard Bible: "Make your own attitude that of Christ Jesus, who, existing in the form of God, did not consider equality with God as something to be used for His own advantage" [or "to be grasped", or "to be held on to"].[82] The King James Version has: "Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus: Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God."[83] Nontrinitarians make the argument that the passage is simply saying that Christ did not consider equality with God something graspable, and that better English translations make it clearer.[84] Another point is that the original Greek had no definite article for "form of God", which would mean "a form of divinity", and also that the term "morphe" for "form" in Koine Greek would simply mean a general external quality or station, but not necessarily the absolute thing itself, and therefore they argue that the passage does not explicitly teach either co-equality, co-eternity, or consubstantiality.[85][86]

Hebrews 9:14

Hebrews 9:14 — "How much more will the Blood of Christ, who through an eternal Spirit, offered himself without blemish to God, cleanse our consciences from dead works, that we may render sacred service to the living God?" Most nontrinitarians agree[citation needed] that the Holy Spirit had no beginning, but believe it is not an actual person. Nontrinitarians contend that it is obvious that God the Father in the passage is the One who is ultimately reached, and therefore is greater than the other two entities, and that a "co-equal trinity" is not explicitly taught in the passage, but only inferred.[87]

Terminology

"The term 'Trinity' is not in the Bible",[88] and some nontrinitarians use this as an argument to state[citation needed] that the doctrine of the Trinity relies on non-biblical terminology, and that the number three is never clearly associated with God necessarily, other than within the Comma Johanneum which is of spurious or disputed authenticity. They argue[citation needed] that the only number clearly unambiguously ascribed to God in the Bible is one, and that the Trinity, literally meaning three-in-one, ascribes a co-equal threeness to God that is not explicitly biblical.

Nontrinitarians cite other examples[citation needed] of terms or phrases not found in the Bible; multiple "persons" in relation to God, the terms "God the Son", "God-Man", "God the Holy Spirit", "eternal Son", and "eternally begotten". While the Trinitarian term hypostasis is found in the Bible, it is used only once in reference to God [Heb 1:3] where it states that Jesus is the express image of God's person. The Bible does not explicitly use the term in relation to the Holy Spirit nor explicitly mentions the Son having a distinct hypostasis from the Father.[citation needed]

The First Council of Nicaea included in its Creed the major term homoousios (of the same essence), which was used also by the Council of Chalcedon to speak of a double consubstantiality of Christ, "consubstantial with the Father as touching his Godhead, and consubstantial with us as touching his manhood".[89] Nontrinitarians accept what Pier Franco Beatrice wrote: "The main thesis of this paper is that homoousios came straight from Constantine's Hermetic background. ... The Plato recalled by Constantine is just a name used to cover precisely the Egyptian and Hermetic theology of the "consubstantiality" of the Logos-Son with the Nous-Father, having recourse to a traditional apologetic argument. In the years of the outbreak of the Arian controversy, Lactantius might have played a decisive role in influencing Constantine's Hermetic interpretation of Plato's theology and consequently the emperor's decision to insert homoousios in the Creed of Nicaea."[90]

Trinitarians see the absence of the actual word "Trinity" and other Trinity-related terms in the Bible as no more significant than the absence in the Bible of the words "monotheism", "omnipotence", "oneness", "Pentecostal", "apostolic", "incarnation" and even "Bible" itself.[91][92] They maintain that, 'while the word Trinity is not in the Bible, the substance or drift of the doctrine is definitely biblical, if not explicitly than at least implicitly.'[2][59][93]

Holy Spirit

Nontrinitarian views about the Holy Spirit differ from mainstream Christian doctrine and generally fall into several distinct categories. Most scriptures traditionally used in support of the Trinity refer to the Father and the Son, but not to the Holy Spirit.

Unitarian

Groups with Unitarian theology such as Polish Socinians, the 18th–19th-century Unitarian Church and Christadelphians consider the Holy Spirit to be an aspect of God's power rather than a person.[94] Christadelphians believe that the phrase Holy Spirit refers to God's power or character, depending on the context.[21] Similarly, Jehovah's Witnesses believe that the Holy Spirit is not an actual person but is God's "active force" that he uses to accomplish his will.[95]

Binitarianism

Groups with Binitarian theology, such as Armstrongites, believe that the Logos and God the Father are co-equal and co-eternal, but they do not believe that the Holy Spirit is an actual person, like the Father and the Son. They believe the Holy Spirit is the Power, Mind, or Character of God, depending on the context. They teach, "The Holy Spirit is the very essence, the mind, life and power of God. It is not a Being. The Spirit is inherent in the Father and the Son, and emanates from Them throughout the entire universe."[96]

Modalist groups

Oneness Pentecostalism, as with other modalist groups, teach that the Holy Spirit is a mode of God, rather than a distinct or separate person in the godhead, and that the Holy Spirit is another name for God the Father. According to Oneness theology, the Holy Spirit is the Father operating in a certain capacity or manifestation. The United Pentecostal Church teaches that there is no personal distinction between God the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.[97][98][99] The two titles "Father" and "Holy Spirit" (as well as others) are said to not reflect separate "persons" within the Godhead, but rather two different ways in which the one God reveals himself to his creatures. The Oneness view of Bible verses that mention God and his Spirit (e.g. Isaiah 48:16) is that they do not imply two "persons" any more than various scriptural references to a man and his spirit or soul (such as in Luke 12:19) imply two "persons" existing within one body.[100][unreliable source?][dead link]

Latter-day Saint movement

In the LDS Church, the Holy Ghost (usually synonymous with Holy Spirit)[101] is considered to be the third distinct member of the Godhead (Father, Son and Holy Ghost),[102] and to have a body of "spirit",[103] which makes him unlike the Father and the Son who are said to have bodies "as tangible as man's".[104] According to LDS doctrine, the Holy Spirit is believed to be a person,[104][105] with a body of spirit, able to pervade all worlds.[106]

Latter-day Saints believe that the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost are part of the Godhead, but that the Father is greater than the Son, and that the Son is greater than the Holy Spirit in position and authority, but not in nature (i.e., they equally share the "God" nature).[106] They teach that the Father, Son, and Spirit are three ontologically separate, self-aware entities who share a common "God" nature distinct from our "human" nature, who are "One God" in the sense of being united (in the same sense that a husband and wife are said to be "one"), similar to Social trinitarianism.

A number of Latter Day Saint sects, most notably the Community of Christ (the second largest Latter Day Saint denomination), the Church of Christ (Temple Lot),[107] and derived groups, follow a traditional Protestant trinitarian theology.

Other groups

The Unity Church interprets the religious terms Father, Son, and Holy Spirit metaphysically, as three aspects of mind action: mind, idea, and expression. They believe this is the process through which all manifestation takes place.[108]

Groups in the Rastafari movement generally state that it is Haile Selassie who embodies both God the Father and God the Son, while the Holy (or "Hola") Spirit is to be found within every human being. Rastas also say that the true church is the human body, and that it is this church (or "structure") that contains the Holy Spirit.

Inter-religious dialogue

The Trinity doctrine is integral in inter-religious disagreements with the other two main Abrahamic religions, Judaism and Islam; the former rejects Jesus' divine mission entirely, and the latter accepts Jesus as a human prophet and the Messiah but not as the son of God, although accepting virgin birth. The rejection of the Trinity doctrine has led to comparisons between nontrinitarian theology and Judaism and Islam.

In an 1897 article in the Jewish Quarterly Review, Montefiore describes Unitarianism as a bridge between Judaism and mainstream Christianity, calling it both a "phase of Judaism" and a "phase of Christianity".[109]

In Islam, the concept of a co-equal trinity is totally rejected, with Quranic verses calling the doctrine of the Trinity blasphemous.[110] Early Islam was originally seen as a variant of Arianism, a heresy in Orthodox and Catholic Christianity, by the Byzantine emperor in the 600s. In the 700s, many Arians in Spain considered Muhammed a prophet. In the mid-1500s, many Socinian unitarians were suspected of having Islamic leanings. Socinians praised Islam, though considering the Qur'an to contain errors, for its belief in the unity of God. Bilal Cleland claimed that "an anonymous writer" in A Letter of Resolution concerning the Doctrine of the Trinity and Incarnation (1693) states that Islam's greater number of adherents and military supremacy resulted from more closely maintaining correct doctrine than mainstream Christianity.[111]

Purported pagan origins of the Trinity

 
Horus, Osiris, and Isis
 
Altar depicting a tricephalic god identified as Lugus

Some nontrinitarians also say that a link between the doctrine of the Trinity and the Egyptian Christian theologians of Alexandria suggests that Alexandrian theology, with its strong emphasis on the deity of Jesus, served to infuse Egypt's pagan religious heritage into Christianity. They accuse the Church of adopting these Egyptian tenets after adapting them to Christian thinking by means of Greek philosophy.[112]

They say the development of the idea of a co-equal triune godhead was based on pagan Greek and Platonic influence, including many basic concepts from Aristotelian philosophy incorporated into the biblical God. As an example, they mention that Aristotle stated: "All things are three, and thrice is all: and let us use this number in the worship of the gods; for, as Pythagoreans say, everything and all things are bound by threes, for the end, the middle, and the beginning have this number in everything, and these compose the number of the Trinity."[113][114] However, Trinitarians have argued that the words attributed to Aristotle differ in a number of ways from what has been published as the philosopher's original text in Greek,[115][116][117] which omits "let us use this number in the worship of the gods", and are not supported by translations of the works of Aristotle by scholars such as Stuart Leggatt, W. K. C. Guthrie, J. L. Stocks, Thomas Taylor and Jules Barthélemy-Saint-Hilaire.[118]

Some anti-trinitarians note also that the Greek philosopher Plato believed in a special "threeness" in life and in the universe. In Plato's work Phaedo, he introduces the word "triad" (in Greek τριάς),[119] which is rendered in English as "trinity". This was adopted by 3rd and 4th century professed Christians as roughly corresponding to "Father, Word, and Spirit (Soul)".[120] Nontrinitarian Christians contend that such notions and adoptions make the Trinity doctrine extra-biblical.[citation needed] They[who?] say there is a widely acknowledged synthesis of Christianity with Platonic philosophy evident in trinitarian formulas appearing by the end of the 3rd century. They allege that beginning with the Constantinian period, these pagan ideas were forcibly imposed on the churches as Catholic doctrine. Most groups subscribing to the theory of a Great Apostasy generally concur in this thesis.[citation needed]

The early apologists, including Justin Martyr, Tertullian and Irenaeus, frequently discussed the parallels and contrasts between Christianity, Paganism and other syncretic religions, and answered charges of borrowing from paganism in their apologetical writings.[citation needed]

Hellenic influences

Stuart G Hall (formerly Professor of Ecclesiastical History at King's College, London) describes the subsequent process of philosophical/theological amalgamation in Doctrine and Practice in the Early Church (1991), where he writes:

The apologists began to claim that Greek culture pointed to and was consummated in the Christian message, just as the Old Testament was. This process was done most thoroughly in the synthesis of Clement of Alexandria. It can be done in several ways. You can rake through Greek literature, and find (especially in the oldest seers and poets) references to 'God' which are more compatible with monotheism than with polytheism (so at length Athenagoras.) You can work out a common chronology between the legends of prehistoric (Homer) Greece and the biblical record (so Theophilus.) You can adapt a piece of pre-Christian Jewish apologetic, which claimed that Plato and other Greek philosophers got their best ideas indirectly from the teachings of Moses in the Bible, which was much earlier. This theory combines the advantage of making out the Greeks to be plagiarists (and therefore second-rate or criminal), while claiming that they support Christianity by their arguments at least some of the time. Especially this applied to the question of God.[121]

The neo-Platonic trinities, such as that of the One, the Nous and the Soul, are not considered a trinity necessarily of consubstantial equals as in mainstream Christianity. However, the neo-Platonic trinity has the doctrine of emanation, or "eternal derivation", a timeless procedure of generation having as a source the One and claimed to be paralleled with the generation of the light from the Sun. This was adopted by Origen and later on by Athanasius, and applied to the generation of the Son from the Father, because they believed that this analogy could be used to support the notion that the Father, as immutable, always had been a Father, and that the generation of the Son is therefore eternal and timeless.[122]

The synthesis of Christianity with Platonic philosophy was further incorporated in the trinitarian formulas that appeared by the end of the 3rd century. "The Greek philosophical theology" was "developed during the Trinitarian controversies over the relationships among the persons of the Godhead".[123] The allegation of borrowing was raised by some disputants when the Nicene doctrine was being formalized and adopted by the bishops. For example, in the 4th century, Marcellus of Ancyra, who taught the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit were one person (hypostasis), said in his On the Holy Church, 9:

Now with the heresy of the Ariomaniacs, which has corrupted the Church of God ... These then teach three hypostases, just as Valentinus the heresiarch first invented in the book entitled by him 'On the Three Natures'. For he was the first to invent three hypostases and three persons of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, and he is discovered to have filched this from Hermes and Plato."[124]

In his Introduction to the 1964 book Meditations, the Anglican priest Maxwell Staniforth discussed the profound influence of Stoic philosophy on Christianity. In particular:

Again in the doctrine of the Trinity, the ecclesiastical conception of Father, Word, and Spirit finds its germ in the different Stoic names of the Divine Unity. Thus Seneca, writing of the supreme Power which shapes the universe, states, 'This Power we sometimes call the All-ruling God, sometimes the incorporeal Wisdom, sometimes the holy Spirit, sometimes Destiny.' The Church had only to reject the last of these terms to arrive at its own acceptable definition of the Divine Nature; while the further assertion 'these three are One', which the modern mind finds paradoxical, was no more than commonplace to those familiar with Stoic notions.[125]

Christian groups with nontrinitarian positions

Early Christian

Unitarian and Universalism

Latter Day Saints

Bible Students and splinter groups

Sacred Name movement

Oneness Protestant groups

World Wide Church of God splinter groups

New religious movements

Other Nontrinitarians

Country-specific

People

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Whether Origen taught a doctrine of God that was or was not reconcilable with later Nicene Christianity is a matter of debate (Cf. ANF Vol 4), although many of his other views, such as on metempsychosis, were rejected. Origen was an economic subordinationist according to the editors of ANF, believing in the co-eternal aspect of God the Son but asserting that God the Son never commanded the Father, and only obeyed. This view is compatible with Nicene theology (as it is not held by Nicene Christians that the Son or Holy Spirit can command the Father), notwithstanding any other doctrines Origen held.

Citations

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  6. ^ Halsey, A. (13 October 1988). British Social Trends since 1900: A Guide to the Changing Social Structure of Britain. Palgrave Macmillan UK. p. 518. ISBN 9781349194667. his so called 'non-Trinitarian' group includes the Jehovah's Witnesses, Mormons, Christadelphians, Apostolics, Christian Scientists, Theosophists, Church of Scientology, Unification Church (Moonies), the Worldwide Church of God and so on.
  7. ^ von Harnack, Adolf (1894-03-01). "History of Dogma". Retrieved 2007-06-15. [In the 2nd century,] Jesus was either regarded as the man whom God hath chosen, in whom the Deity or the Spirit of God dwelt, and who, after being tested, was adopted by God and invested with dominion, (Adoptionist Christology); or Jesus was regarded as a heavenly spiritual being (the highest after God) who took flesh, and again returned to heaven after the completion of his work on earth (pneumatic Christology)
  8. ^ Justo L. González, The Story of Christianity: The Early Church to the Present Day, Prince Press, 1984, Vol. 1, pp. 159-161• Jaroslav Pelikan, The Christian Tradition: A History of the Development of Doctrine, The University of Chicago Press, 1971, Vol. 1, pp. 181-199
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  94. ^ The Unitarian: a monthly magazine of liberal Christianity ed. Jabez Thomas Sunderland, Brooke Herford, Frederick B. Mott – 1893 "We believe in the Holy Spirit, man's sole reliance for guidance, safety, or salvation, not as a separate person, entity, reality, or consciousness, existent apart from man or God, but as the recognizing sympathetic inter-communication in love between God and the human soul, the direct converse or communion of man's consciousness with Deity."
  95. ^ "Is the Holy Spirit a Person?". Awake!: 14–15. July 2006. In the Bible, God's Holy Spirit is identified as God's power in action. Hence, an accurate translation of the Bible's Hebrew text refers to God's spirit as "God's active force".
  96. ^ Who and What Is God? - Mystery of the Ages - Herbert W. Armstrong. Retrieved 19 May 2012.
  97. ^ Peter Althouse Spirit of the last days: Pentecostal eschatology in conversation p12 2003 "The Oneness Pentecostal stream follows in the steps of the Reformed stream, but has a modalistic view of the Godhead"
  98. ^ See under heading "The Father is the Holy Ghost" in David Bernard, The Oneness of God, Chapter 6.
  99. ^ See also David Bernard, A Handbook of Basic Doctrines, Word Aflame Press, 1988.
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  101. ^ Wilson, Jerry A. (1992). "Holy Spirit". In Ludlow, Daniel H (ed.). Encyclopedia of Mormonism. New York: Macmillan Publishing. p. 651. ISBN 978-0-02-879602-4. OCLC 24502140. The Holy Spirit is a term often used to refer to the Holy Ghost. In such cases the Holy Spirit is a personage."
  102. ^ McConkie, Joseph Fielding (1992). "Holy Ghost". In Ludlow, Daniel H (ed.). Encyclopedia of Mormonism. New York: Macmillan Publishing. pp. 649–651. ISBN 978-0-02-879602-4. OCLC 24502140.
  103. ^ D&C 131:7-8 ("There is no such thing as immaterial matter. All spirit is matter, but it is more fine or pure, and can only be discerned by purer eyes; We cannot see it; but when our bodies are purified we shall see that it is all matter.")
  104. ^ a b D&C 130:22.
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Further reading

nontrinitarianism, this, article, about, doctrinal, position, within, christian, theology, doctrine, unity, religions, generally, monotheism, form, christianity, that, rejects, mainstream, christian, theology, trinity, belief, that, three, distinct, hypostases. This article is about a doctrinal position within Christian theology For the doctrine of God s unity in religions generally see Monotheism Nontrinitarianism is a form of Christianity that rejects the mainstream Christian theology of the Trinity the belief that God is three distinct hypostases or persons who are coeternal coequal and indivisibly united in one being or essence from the Ancient Greek ousia Certain religious groups that emerged during the Protestant Reformation have historically been known as antitrinitarian According to churches that consider the decisions of ecumenical councils final trinitarianism was definitively declared to be Christian doctrine at the 4th century ecumenical councils 1 2 3 that of the First Council of Nicaea 325 which declared the full divinity of the Son 4 and the First Council of Constantinople 381 which declared the divinity of the Holy Spirit 5 In terms of number of adherents nontrinitarian denominations comprise a small minority of modern Christians After the denominations in the Oneness Pentecostal movement the largest nontrinitarian Christian denominations are the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Jehovah s Witnesses La Luz del Mundo and Iglesia ni Cristo There are a number of other smaller groups including Christadelphians Church of the Blessed Hope Christian Scientists Dawn Bible Students Living Church of God Assemblies of Yahweh Members Church of God International Unitarian Christians Unitarian Universalist Christians The Way International The Church of God International the United Church of God Church of God General Conference Restored Church of God Christian Disciples Church and Church of God of the Faith of Abraham 6 Nontrinitarian views differ widely on the nature of God Jesus and the Holy Spirit Various nontrinitarian philosophies such as adoptionism and monarchianism existed prior to the codification of the Trinity doctrine in AD 325 381 and 431 at the Councils of Nicaea Constantinople and Ephesus 7 Nontrinitarianism was later renewed by Cathars in the 11th through 13th centuries in the Unitarian movement during the Protestant Reformation in the Age of Enlightenment of the 18th century and in some groups arising during the Second Great Awakening of the 19th century The doctrine of the Trinity as held in mainstream Christianity is not present in the other major monotheistic Abrahamic religions Contents 1 Beliefs 1 1 Modern Christian groups 2 History 2 1 Early Christianity 2 2 Following the Reformation 3 Points of dissent 3 1 Scriptural support 3 2 Questions about co equal deity of Jesus 3 2 1 Matthew 26 39 3 2 2 John 1 1 3 2 3 John 10 30 3 2 4 John 20 28 29 3 2 5 2 Corinthians 13 14 3 2 6 Philippians 2 5 6 3 2 7 Hebrews 9 14 3 3 Terminology 3 4 Holy Spirit 3 4 1 Unitarian 3 4 2 Binitarianism 3 4 3 Modalist groups 3 4 4 Latter day Saint movement 3 4 5 Other groups 4 Inter religious dialogue 5 Purported pagan origins of the Trinity 5 1 Hellenic influences 6 Christian groups with nontrinitarian positions 6 1 Early Christian 6 2 Unitarian and Universalism 6 3 Latter Day Saints 6 4 Bible Students and splinter groups 6 5 Sacred Name movement 6 6 Oneness Protestant groups 6 7 World Wide Church of God splinter groups 6 8 New religious movements 6 9 Other Nontrinitarians 6 10 Country specific 7 People 8 See also 9 Notes 10 Citations 11 Further readingBeliefs EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Christian apologists and other Church Fathers of the 2nd and 3rd centuries having adopted and formulated the Logos Christology considered the Son of God as the instrument used by the supreme God the Father to bring the creation into existence Justin Martyr Theophilus of Antioch Hippolytus of Rome and Tertullian in particular state that the internal Logos of God Gr Logos endiathetos Lat ratio his impersonal divine reason was begotten as Logos uttered Gr Logos prophorikos Lat sermo verbum the Word personified becoming an actual person to be used for the purpose of creation 8 The Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th edition states to some Christians the doctrine of the Trinity appeared inconsistent with the unity of God they therefore denied it and accepted Jesus Christ not as incarnate God but as God s highest creature by whom all else was created this view in the early Church long contended with the orthodox doctrine 9 Although the Trinitarian view became the orthodox doctrine in mainstream Christianity variations of the nontrinitarian view are still held by a relatively small number of Christian groups and denominations Various views exist regarding the relationships between the Father Son and Holy Spirit Those who believe that Jesus is not Almighty God nor absolutely equal to God and not the co eternal or co equal with Father in everything but was either God s subordinate Son and Servant the highest Angel and Son of God that eventually became a perfect Man God s true firstborn before ages a perfect messenger sent from God the greatest prophet of Israel and the Jewish Messiah or the perfect created human Adoptionism 2nd century AD holds that Jesus became divine at his baptism sometimes associated with the Gospel of Mark or at his resurrection sometimes associated with Saint Paul and Shepherd of Hermas Arianism Arius AD c 250 or 256 336 believed that the pre existent Son of God was directly created by the Father before all ages and that he was subordinate to God the Father Arius position was that the Son was brought forth as the very first of God s creations and that the Father later created all things through the Son Arius taught that in the creation of the universe the Father was the ultimate creator supplying all the materials and directing the design while the Son worked the materials making all things at the bidding and in the service of God by which through Christ all things came into existence Arianism became the dominant view in some regions in the time of the Roman Empire notably the Visigoths until 589 10 The Third Council of Sirmium in 357 was the high point of Arianism The Seventh Arian Confession Second Sirmium Confession held that both homoousios of one substance and homoiousios of similar substance were unbiblical and that the Father is greater than the Son in all things and that the Father alone is infinite and eternal and that the Logos is God s true firstborn and subservient Son who was made perfect flesh for our sakes and for the glory of the Father this confession was later known as the Blasphemy of Sirmium But since many persons are disturbed by questions concerning what is called in Latin substantia but in Greek ousia that is to make it understood more exactly as to coessential or what is called like in essence there ought to be no mention of any of these at all nor exposition of them in the Church for this reason and for this consideration that in divine Scripture nothing is written about them and that they are above men s knowledge and above men s understanding 11 Psilanthropism Ebionites 1st to 4th centuries AD observed Jewish law denied the literal virgin birth and regarded Jesus as the Jewish Messiah and the greatest prophet of God only 12 Socinianism Photinus taught that Jesus was the sinless Messiah and redeemer and the only perfect human son of God but that he had no pre human existence They interpret verses such as John 1 1 to refer to God s plan existing in God s mind before Christ s birth and that it was God s plan that became flesh as the perfect man Jesus Unitarianism views Jesus as the son of God subordinate and distinct from his Father 13 Many Gnostic traditions held that the Christ is a heavenly Aeon but not one with the Father Those who believe that the Father the resurrected Son and the Holy Spirit are different aspects of one God as perceived by the believer rather than three distinct persons Modalism Sabellius fl c 215 stated that God took numerous forms in both the Hebrew and the Christian Greek Scriptures and that God has manifested himself in three primary modes regarding the salvation of mankind He contended that Father Son and Spirit were different roles played by the same divine person in various circumstances in history 14 thus God is Father in creation God created a Son through the virgin birth Son in redemption God manifested himself as Jesus for the purpose of his death upon the cross and Holy Spirit in regeneration God s Spirit within the Son and within the souls of Christian believers In this view God is not three distinct persons but rather one person manifesting himself in multiple ways 14 Trinitarians condemn this view as a heresy The chief critic of Sabellianism was Tertullian who labeled the movement Patripassianism from the Latin words pater for father and passus from the verb to suffer because it implied that the Father suffered on the cross It was coined by Tertullian in his work Adversus Praxeas Chapter I By this Praxeas did a twofold service for the devil at Rome he drove away prophecy and he brought in heresy he put to flight the Paraclete and he crucified the Father The term homoousion ὁmooysion literally same being later adopted by the Trinitarian Nicene Council for its anti Arian creed had previously been used by Sabellians 15 Those who believe that Jesus Christ is Almighty God but that the Father Son and Holy Spirit are actually three distinct almighty Gods with distinct natures acting as one divine group united in purpose Tri theism John Philoponus an Aristotelian and monophysite in Alexandria in the middle of the 6th century saw in the Trinity three separate natures substances and deities according to the number of divine persons 16 He sought to justify this view by the Aristotelian categories of genus species and individuum In the Middle Ages Roscellin of Compiegne the founder of Nominalism argued for three distinct almighty Gods with three distinct natures who were one in mind and purpose existing together eternally interacting together from times past in perfect cooperation acting together as one divine group or godhead over the universe in creation and redemption And that the Logos took on a subservient role but was equal in power and eternity with the One called Father Roscellin said though like Philoponus that unless the three persons are tres res three things with distinct natures the whole Trinity must have been incarnate And therefore since only the Logos was made flesh the other two persons must have had distinct natures separate from the Logos and so had to be separate and distinct Gods though all three were one in divine work and plan and operation In this view they would be considered three Gods in one Godhead This notion was condemned by St Anselm 17 Those who believe that the Holy Spirit is not a person Binitarianism Adherents include those people through history who believed that God is only two co equal and co eternal persons the Father and the Word not three They taught that the Holy Spirit is not a distinct person but is the power or divine influence of the Father and Son emanating out to the universe in creation and to believers Dualism Marcionism Marcion AD c 110 160 believed there were two deities one of creation and judgment in the Hebrew Bible and one of redemption and mercy in the New Testament Modern Christian groups Edit Christadelphians hold the unitarian belief that although Jesus is the Son of God this is only a relational title toward the Father who alone is truly God Christ s personhood therefore is human not divine 18 believing this to be necessary in order to save humans from their sins 19 The Holy Spirit terminology in the Bible is interpreted as referring to God s impersonal power 20 or God s character mind 21 depending on the context Church of God General Conference Abrahamic Faith 22 The Cooneyites is a Christian sect that split from the Two by Twos in 1928 following Edward Cooney s excommunication from the main group they deny the Living Witness Doctrine clarification needed Iglesia ni Cristo Tagalog for Church of Christ views Jesus as human but endowed by God with attributes not found in ordinary humans though lacking attributes found in God They contend that it is God s will to worship Jesus 23 INC rejects the Trinity as heresy adopting a version of unitarianism Jehovah s Witnesses and other Bible Student movement groups such as the Associated Bible Students 24 25 26 teach that God the Father is uniquely Almighty God They consider Jesus to be the First begotten Son God s only direct creation and the very first creation by God They give relative worship or obeisance in the sense of homage as to a king to Christ 27 pray through him as God s only high priest consider him to be their Messiah but only a Mediator for 144 000 anointed Christians Very few Jehovah s Witnesses are viewed as anointed w15 1 15 p 16 par 14 They believe that only the Father is without beginning that the Father is greater than the Son in all things and that only the Father is worthy of sacred service latria They believe that the Son had a beginning and was brought forth at a certain point as the firstborn of all creation and the only begotten as the pre existent Michael and the Angel of the LORD of Exodus that he left heaven to be born as a perfect human as the Jewish Messiah and Redeemer and that after his ascension to heaven he resumed his pre human identity but exalted to God s right hand until the last days 28 29 They do not believe that the Holy Spirit is an actual person but consider it to be God s divine active force 30 w15 1 15 p 16 par 14 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints LDS Church teaches that the Father Son and Holy Spirit are distinct beings that are not united in substance a view sometimes called social trinitarianism They believe the three individual deities are one in will or purpose as Jesus was one with his disciples and that the Father Son and Holy Spirit constitute a single godhead united in purpose 31 Latter day Saints believe that Christ is the Firstborn of the Father 32 that he is subordinate to God the Father Matthew 26 39 33 and that Christ created the universe 33 34 Latter day Saints do not subscribe to the ideas that Christ was unlike the Father in substance 35 and that the Father could not appear on earth 36 or that Christ was adopted by the Father 32 as presented in Arianism 34 37 Latter day Saints assert that both God and the resurrected Christ have perfected glorified physical bodies 38 but do not otherwise classify deity in terms of substance While Latter day Saints regard God the Father as the supreme being and literal father of the spirits of all humankind they also teach that Christ and the Holy Spirit are equally divine and that they share in the Father s comprehension of all things 39 The Members Church of God International believes in the divinity of Christ but rejects the doctrine of Trinity Oneness Pentecostalism is a subset of Pentecostalism that believes God is only one person and that he manifests himself in different ways faces or modes Father Son and Holy Spirit or Holy Ghost are different designations for the one God God is the Father God is the Holy Spirit The Son is God manifest in flesh The term Son always refers to the Incarnation and never to deity apart from humanity 40 Oneness Pentecostals believe that Jesus was Son only when he became flesh on earth but was the Father prior to being made human They refer to the Father as the Spirit and the Son as the Flesh Oneness Pentecostals reject the Trinity doctrine viewing it as pagan and unscriptural and hold to the Jesus Name doctrine with respect to baptisms Oneness Pentecostals are often referred to as Modalists or Sabellians or Jesus Only 41 Denominations within the Sabbatarian tradition Armstrongism believe that Christ the Son and God the Father are co eternal but do not teach that the Holy Spirit is a being or person Armstrong theology holds that God is a Family that expands eventually that God reproduces Himself but that originally there was a co eternal Duality God and the Word rather than a Trinity Swedenborgianism holds that the Trinity exists in one person the Lord God Jesus Christ The Father the being or soul of God was born into the world and put on a body from Mary Throughout his life Jesus put away all human desires and tendencies until he was completely divine After his resurrection he influences the world through the Holy Spirit which is his activity In this view Jesus Christ is the one God the Father as to his soul the Son as to his body and the Holy Spirit as to his activity in the world This view is very similar in many ways to Sabellianism Modalism Oneness or Jesus Only beliefs Numerous Unitarian Christian organizations exist around the world the oldest of which is the Unitarian Church of Transylvania An umbrella organization for these groups is the International Council of Unitarians and Universalists though only some members and affiliates of that body consider themselves exclusively or predominantly Christian In the United States Unitarian often refers to members and congregations within the Unitarian Universalist Association UUA a non Christian group formed in 1961 from the merger of the American Unitarian Association with the Universalist Church of America 42 43 Though both of these predecessor groups were originally Christian the UUA does not have a shared creed and does not identify as a Christian Unitarian organization 44 45 History EditMain articles History of Unitarianism and List of schisms in Christianity Early Christianity Edit Main article Apostolic Age See also Caesaropapism The First Council of Nicaea depicted with Arius beneath the feet of Emperor Constantine and the bishops Although nontrinitarian beliefs continued and were dominant among some peoples for example the Lombards Ostrogoths Visigoths and Vandals for hundreds of years the Trinity doctrine eventually gained prominence in the Roman Empire Nontrinitarians typically argue that early nontrinitarian beliefs such as Arianism were systematically suppressed often to the point of death 46 After the First Council of Nicaea Roman Emperor Constantine I issued an edict against Arius writings which included systematic book burning 47 In spite of the decree Constantine ordered the readmission of Arius to the church removed the bishops including Athanasius who upheld the teaching of Nicaea 48 allowed Arianism to grow within the Empire and to spread to Germanic tribes on the frontier 49 and was himself baptized by an Arian bishop Eusebius of Nicomedia 50 His successors as Christian emperors promoted Arianism until Theodosius I came to the throne in 379 and supported Nicene Christianity The Easter letter that Athanasius issued in 367 when the Eastern Empire was ruled by the Arian Emperor Valens specified the books that belong to the Old Testament and the New Testament together with seven other books to be read for instruction in the word of godliness it also excluded what Athanasius called apocryphal writings falsely presented as ancient 51 Elaine Pagels writes In AD 367 Athanasius the zealous bishop of Alexandria issued an Easter letter in which he demanded that Egyptian monks destroy all such unacceptable writings except for those he specifically listed as acceptable even canonical a list that constitutes the present New Testament 52 53 Nontrinitarians see the Nicene Creed and the results of the Council of Chalcedon as essentially political documents resulting from the subordination of true doctrine to state interests by leaders of the Catholic Church so that the church became in their view an extension of the Roman Empire Nontrinitarians both Modalists and Unitarians assert that Athanasius and others at Nicaea adopted Greek Platonic philosophy and concepts and incorporated them in their views of God and Christ 54 The author H G Wells later famous for his contribution to science fiction wrote in The Outline of History We shall see presently how later on all Christendom was torn by disputes about the Trinity There is no evidence that the apostles of Jesus ever heard of the Trinity at any rate from him 55 The question of why such a central doctrine to the Christian faith would never have been explicitly stated in scripture or taught in detail by Jesus himself was sufficiently important to 16th century historical figures such as Michael Servetus to lead them to argue the question The Geneva City Council in accord with the judgment of the cantons of Zurich Bern Basel and Schaffhausen condemned Servetus to be burned at the stake for this and his opposition to infant baptism The Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics describes the five stages that led to the formulation of the doctrine of the Trinity 56 The acceptance of the pre human existence of Jesus as the middle platonic Logos namely as the medium between the transcendent sovereign God and the created cosmos The doctrine of Logos was accepted by the Apologists and by other Fathers of the 2nd and 3rd centuries such as Justin the Martyr Hippolytus Tertullian Ireneus Clement of Alexandria Origen Lactantius and in the 4th century by Arius The doctrine of the timeless generation of the Son from the Father as it was articulated by Origen in his effort to support the ontological immutability of God that he is ever being a father and a creator The doctrine of the timeless generation was adopted by Athanasius of Alexandria The acceptance of the idea that the son of God is of the same transcendent nature homoousios as his father This position was declared in the Nicene Creed which specifically states the son of God is as immutable as his father The acceptance that the Holy Spirit also has ontological equality as a third person in a divine Trinity and the final Trinitarian terminology by the teachings of the Cappadocian Fathers The addition of the Filioque to the Nicene Creed as accepted by the Roman Catholic Church Following the Reformation Edit This section needs expansion with information on other sects such as Mormonism and Jehovah s Witnesses You can help by adding to it August 2016 By 1530 following the Protestant Reformation and the German Peasants War of 1524 1525 large areas of Northern Europe were Protestant and forms of nontrinitarianism began to surface among some Radical Reformation groups particularly Anabaptists The first recorded English antitrinitarian was John Assheton 1548 an Anglican priest The Italian Anabaptist Council of Venice 1550 and the trial of Michael Servetus 1553 marked the clear emergence of markedly antitrinitarian Protestants Though the only organised nontrinitarian churches were the Polish Brethren who split from the Calvinists 1565 expelled from Poland 1658 and the Unitarian Church of Transylvania founded 1568 Nonconformists Dissenters and Latitudinarians in Britain were often Arians or Unitarians and the Doctrine of the Trinity Act 1813 allowed nontrinitarian worship in Britain In America Arian and Unitarian views were also found among some Millennialist and Adventist groups though the Unitarian Church itself began to decline in numbers and influence after the 1870s 57 58 Points of dissent EditNontrinitarian Christians with Arian or Semi Arian views contend that the weight of scriptural evidence supports Subordinationism the Son s total submission to the Father and God s paternal supremacy over the Son in every aspect They acknowledge the Son s high rank at God s right hand but teach that the Father is still greater than the Son in all things While acknowledging that the Father Son and Spirit are essential in creation and salvation they argue that that in itself does not confirm that the three are each co equal or co eternal They also affirm that God is only explicitly identified as one in the Bible and that the doctrine of the Trinity which word literally meaning a set of three ascribes a co equal threeness to the being of the infinite God that is not explicitly scriptural Scriptural support Edit Critics of the Trinity doctrine argue that for a teaching described as fundamental it lacks direct scriptural support Proponents of the doctrine assert that although the doctrine is not stated directly in the New Testament it is instead an interpretation of elements contained therein that imply the doctrine that was later formulated in the 4th century William Barclay a Church of Scotland minister says It is important and helpful to remember that the word Trinity is not itself a New Testament word It is even true in at least one sense to say that the doctrine of the Trinity is not directly New Testament doctrine It is rather a deduction from and an interpretation of the thought and the language of the New Testament 59 The New Catholic Encyclopedia states The doctrine of the Holy Trinity is not taught explicitly in the Old Testament The formulation one God in three Persons was not solidly established by a council prior to the end of the 4th century 60 Similarly Encyclopedia Encarta states The doctrine is not taught explicitly in the New Testament where the word God almost invariably refers to the Father The term trinitas was first used in the 2nd century by the Latin theologian Tertullian but the concept was developed in the course of the debates on the nature of Christ In the 4th century the doctrine was finally formulated 61 Encyclopaedia Britannica says Neither the word Trinity nor the explicit doctrine appears in the New Testament nor did Jesus and his followers intend to contradict the Shema in the Old Testament Hear O Israel The Lord our God is one Lord Deuteronomy 6 4 The doctrine developed gradually over several centuries and through many controversies by the end of the 4th century under the leadership of Basil of Caesarea Gregory of Nyssa and Gregory of Nazianzus the Cappadocian Fathers the doctrine of the Trinity took substantially the form it has maintained ever since 62 The Anchor Bible Dictionary states One does not find in the NT the trinitarian paradox of the coexistence of the Father Son and Spirit within a divine unity 63 Catholic historian Joseph F Kelly speaking of legitimate theological development writes The Bible may not use the word Trinity but it refers to God the Father frequently the Gospel of John emphasized the divinity of the Son several New Testament books treat the Holy Spirit as divine The ancient theologians did not violate biblical teaching but sought to develop its implications Arius potent arguments forced other Christians to refine their thinking about the Trinity At two ecumenical councils Nicea I in 325 and Constantinople I in 381 the church at large defined the Trinity in the way now so familiar to us from the Nicene Creed This exemplifies development of doctrine at its best The Bible may not use the word Trinity but trinitarian theology does not go against the Bible On the contrary Catholics believe that trinitarianism has carefully developed a biblical teaching for later generations 2 Questions about co equal deity of Jesus Edit American Catholic priest and Trinitarian R E Brown 1928 1988 wrote a journal article 64 that sorted relevant biblical verses into three classes He described the following block as texts that seem to imply that the title God was not used for Jesus and are negative evidence which is often somewhat neglected in Catholic treatments of the subject 64 Mark 10 18 Matthew 27 46 John 20 17 Ephesians 1 17 2 Corinthians 1 3 1 Peter 1 3 John 17 3 1 Corinthians 8 6 Ephesians 4 4 6 1 Corinthians 12 4 6 2 Corinthians 13 14 1 Timothy 2 5 John 14 28 Mark 13 32 Philippians 2 5 10 and 1 Corinthians 15 24 28 he lists these as texts where by reason of textual variants or syntax the use of God for Jesus is dubious 64 Gal 2 20 Acts 20 28 John 1 18 Colossians 2 2 2 Thessalonians 1 12 1John 5 20 Romans 9 5 and 2 Peter 1 1 and only finds the following three as texts where clearly Jesus is called God 64 Hebrews 1 8 9 John 1 1 and John 20 28 The Septuagint translate אלוהים Elohim as 8eos Theos 65 At Deuteronomy 6 4 the Shema Yisrael quoted by Jesus at Mark 12 29 the plural form of the Hebrew word God Elohim is used generally understood to denote majesty excellence and the superlative 66 It has been stated that in the original Greek in Mark 12 29 there are no plural modifiers in that Greek word there for one heis but that in Mark 12 it is simply a masculine singular one And that because of that there is no valid reason to believe that the Hebrew word for one in Deuteronomy 6 echad was necessarily a plural one rather than just simply numerical one 67 At Deuteronomy 6 4 the Tetragrammaton appears twice in this verse leading Jehovah s Witnesses and certain Jewish scholars to conclude that belief in a singular and therefore indivisible supremely powerful God is essential to the Shema 68 69 Matthew 26 39 Edit In Matthew 26 39 Jesus prays with a distinction between God and himself O my Father if it be possible let this cup pass from me nevertheless not as I will but as thou wilt John 1 1 Edit In John 1 1 there is a distinction between God and the Logos Non trinitarians claim a mistranslation of the second part of John 1 1 which when literally translated word for word reads and the word logos was with the God ho theos Trinitarians contend that the third part of the verse John 1 1c translates as and the Word was God pointing to a distinction as subjects between God and the Logos but an equivalence in nature 70 71 72 73 Some nontrinitarians assert that the Koine Greek kai theos en ho logos should be translated as and a God was the Word or and the Word was a god Based on their contention that the article of theos is anarthrous lacking a definite article they believe the verse refers to Jesus pre human existence as a god or a divine one as distinct from the God Nontrinitarians also contend that the author of John s gospel could have written kai ho theos en ho logos and the Word was the God if that were his intended meaning 74 self published source 75 76 Others argue that the Greek should be translated as and the Logos was divine with theos as an adjective wherein the Logos is interpreted as God s plan or reasoning for salvation According to Modalists the Logos becoming flesh refers to the plan or eternal mind of God being manifested in the birth of the man Jesus rather than the incarnation of a pre existent Jesus citation needed John 10 30 Edit John 10 30 Nontrinitarians such as Arians believe that when Jesus said I and the Father are one he did not mean that they were actually one substance or one God or co equal and co eternal but rather that he and the Father have a unity of purpose and that the context indicates that Jesus was saying that they were one in pastoral work The point being that the Father and the Son were united in the divine work of saving the sheep Nontrinitarian Christians also cite John 17 21 77 wherein Jesus prayed regarding his disciples That they may all be one as you Father are in me and I in you that they may be in us adding that they may be one even as we are one They argue that the same Greek word hen for one throughout John 17 indicates that Jesus did not expect for his followers to literally become a single Being or one in substance with each other or with God and therefore that Jesus also did not expect his hearers to think that he and God the Father were one entity either 77 John 20 28 29 Edit John 20 28 29 And Thomas answered and said to Him My Lord and my God Jesus said to him Thomas because you have seen Me you have believed Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed Since Thomas called Jesus God Jesus s statement appears to endorse Thomas s assertion Nontrinitarians sometimes respond that it is plausible that Thomas is addressing the Lord Jesus and then the Father citation needed Another possible answer is that Jesus himself said Is it not written in your law I said Ye are gods John 10 34 referring to Psalm 82 6 8 citation needed The word gods in verse 6 and God in verse 8 is the same Hebrew word elohim 78 which means gods in the ordinary sense but specifically used in the plural thus especially with the article of the supreme God occasionally applied by way of deference to magistrates and sometimes as a superlative 79 and can also refer to powers and potentates in general or as God god gods rulers judges or angels 78 and as divine ones goddess godlike one 80 Therefore the point being that Jesus was a power or mighty one to the Apostles as the resurrected Messiah and as the reflection of God the Father 2 Corinthians 13 14 Edit 2 Corinthians 13 14 The Grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the sharing in the Holy Spirit be with all of you It is argued by Trinitarians that the appearance of Father Son and Spirit together in Paul s prayer for Grace on all believers and are considered essential for salvation that the verse is consistent with a triune godhead Nontrinitarians such as Arians reply citation needed that they do not disagree that all three are necessary for salvation and grace but argue that the passage does not explicitly say that all three are co equal or co eternal 81 unreliable source Philippians 2 5 6 Edit Philippians 2 5 6 Have this mind among yourselves which is yours in Christ Jesus or which was also in Christ Jesus who though he was in the form of God did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped ESV The word translated in the English Standard Version as a thing to be grasped is ἁrpagmon Other translations of the word are indicated in the Holman Christian Standard Bible Make your own attitude that of Christ Jesus who existing in the form of God did not consider equality with God as something to be used for His own advantage or to be grasped or to be held on to 82 The King James Version has Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus Who being in the form of God thought it not robbery to be equal with God 83 Nontrinitarians make the argument that the passage is simply saying that Christ did not consider equality with God something graspable and that better English translations make it clearer 84 Another point is that the original Greek had no definite article for form of God which would mean a form of divinity and also that the term morphe for form in Koine Greek would simply mean a general external quality or station but not necessarily the absolute thing itself and therefore they argue that the passage does not explicitly teach either co equality co eternity or consubstantiality 85 86 Hebrews 9 14 Edit Hebrews 9 14 How much more will the Blood of Christ who through an eternal Spirit offered himself without blemish to God cleanse our consciences from dead works that we may render sacred service to the living God Most nontrinitarians agree citation needed that the Holy Spirit had no beginning but believe it is not an actual person Nontrinitarians contend that it is obvious that God the Father in the passage is the One who is ultimately reached and therefore is greater than the other two entities and that a co equal trinity is not explicitly taught in the passage but only inferred 87 Terminology Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message The term Trinity is not in the Bible 88 and some nontrinitarians use this as an argument to state citation needed that the doctrine of the Trinity relies on non biblical terminology and that the number three is never clearly associated with God necessarily other than within the Comma Johanneum which is of spurious or disputed authenticity They argue citation needed that the only number clearly unambiguously ascribed to God in the Bible is one and that the Trinity literally meaning three in one ascribes a co equal threeness to God that is not explicitly biblical Nontrinitarians cite other examples citation needed of terms or phrases not found in the Bible multiple persons in relation to God the terms God the Son God Man God the Holy Spirit eternal Son and eternally begotten While the Trinitarian term hypostasis is found in the Bible it is used only once in reference to God Heb 1 3 where it states that Jesus is the express image of God s person The Bible does not explicitly use the term in relation to the Holy Spirit nor explicitly mentions the Son having a distinct hypostasis from the Father citation needed The First Council of Nicaea included in its Creed the major term homoousios of the same essence which was used also by the Council of Chalcedon to speak of a double consubstantiality of Christ consubstantial with the Father as touching his Godhead and consubstantial with us as touching his manhood 89 Nontrinitarians accept what Pier Franco Beatrice wrote The main thesis of this paper is that homoousios came straight from Constantine s Hermetic background The Plato recalled by Constantine is just a name used to cover precisely the Egyptian and Hermetic theology of the consubstantiality of the Logos Son with the Nous Father having recourse to a traditional apologetic argument In the years of the outbreak of the Arian controversy Lactantius might have played a decisive role in influencing Constantine s Hermetic interpretation of Plato s theology and consequently the emperor s decision to insert homoousios in the Creed of Nicaea 90 Trinitarians see the absence of the actual word Trinity and other Trinity related terms in the Bible as no more significant than the absence in the Bible of the words monotheism omnipotence oneness Pentecostal apostolic incarnation and even Bible itself 91 92 They maintain that while the word Trinity is not in the Bible the substance or drift of the doctrine is definitely biblical if not explicitly than at least implicitly 2 59 93 Holy Spirit Edit For uses of this term in other religions see Holy Spirit See also Holy Spirit Christian denominational variations Nontrinitarian views about the Holy Spirit differ from mainstream Christian doctrine and generally fall into several distinct categories Most scriptures traditionally used in support of the Trinity refer to the Father and the Son but not to the Holy Spirit Unitarian Edit Groups with Unitarian theology such as Polish Socinians the 18th 19th century Unitarian Church and Christadelphians consider the Holy Spirit to be an aspect of God s power rather than a person 94 Christadelphians believe that the phrase Holy Spirit refers to God s power or character depending on the context 21 Similarly Jehovah s Witnesses believe that the Holy Spirit is not an actual person but is God s active force that he uses to accomplish his will 95 Binitarianism Edit Groups with Binitarian theology such as Armstrongites believe that the Logos and God the Father are co equal and co eternal but they do not believe that the Holy Spirit is an actual person like the Father and the Son They believe the Holy Spirit is the Power Mind or Character of God depending on the context They teach The Holy Spirit is the very essence the mind life and power of God It is not a Being The Spirit is inherent in the Father and the Son and emanates from Them throughout the entire universe 96 Modalist groups Edit Oneness Pentecostalism as with other modalist groups teach that the Holy Spirit is a mode of God rather than a distinct or separate person in the godhead and that the Holy Spirit is another name for God the Father According to Oneness theology the Holy Spirit is the Father operating in a certain capacity or manifestation The United Pentecostal Church teaches that there is no personal distinction between God the Father the Son and the Holy Spirit 97 98 99 The two titles Father and Holy Spirit as well as others are said to not reflect separate persons within the Godhead but rather two different ways in which the one God reveals himself to his creatures The Oneness view of Bible verses that mention God and his Spirit e g Isaiah 48 16 is that they do not imply two persons any more than various scriptural references to a man and his spirit or soul such as in Luke 12 19 imply two persons existing within one body 100 unreliable source dead link Latter day Saint movement Edit See also Holy Spirit in Mormonism and God in Mormonism In the LDS Church the Holy Ghost usually synonymous with Holy Spirit 101 is considered to be the third distinct member of the Godhead Father Son and Holy Ghost 102 and to have a body of spirit 103 which makes him unlike the Father and the Son who are said to have bodies as tangible as man s 104 According to LDS doctrine the Holy Spirit is believed to be a person 104 105 with a body of spirit able to pervade all worlds 106 Latter day Saints believe that the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost are part of the Godhead but that the Father is greater than the Son and that the Son is greater than the Holy Spirit in position and authority but not in nature i e they equally share the God nature 106 They teach that the Father Son and Spirit are three ontologically separate self aware entities who share a common God nature distinct from our human nature who are One God in the sense of being united in the same sense that a husband and wife are said to be one similar to Social trinitarianism A number of Latter Day Saint sects most notably the Community of Christ the second largest Latter Day Saint denomination the Church of Christ Temple Lot 107 and derived groups follow a traditional Protestant trinitarian theology Other groups Edit The Unity Church interprets the religious terms Father Son and Holy Spirit metaphysically as three aspects of mind action mind idea and expression They believe this is the process through which all manifestation takes place 108 Groups in the Rastafari movement generally state that it is Haile Selassie who embodies both God the Father and God the Son while the Holy or Hola Spirit is to be found within every human being Rastas also say that the true church is the human body and that it is this church or structure that contains the Holy Spirit Inter religious dialogue EditSee also Islamic view of the Trinity and Shituf The Trinity doctrine is integral in inter religious disagreements with the other two main Abrahamic religions Judaism and Islam the former rejects Jesus divine mission entirely and the latter accepts Jesus as a human prophet and the Messiah but not as the son of God although accepting virgin birth The rejection of the Trinity doctrine has led to comparisons between nontrinitarian theology and Judaism and Islam In an 1897 article in the Jewish Quarterly Review Montefiore describes Unitarianism as a bridge between Judaism and mainstream Christianity calling it both a phase of Judaism and a phase of Christianity 109 In Islam the concept of a co equal trinity is totally rejected with Quranic verses calling the doctrine of the Trinity blasphemous 110 Early Islam was originally seen as a variant of Arianism a heresy in Orthodox and Catholic Christianity by the Byzantine emperor in the 600s In the 700s many Arians in Spain considered Muhammed a prophet In the mid 1500s many Socinian unitarians were suspected of having Islamic leanings Socinians praised Islam though considering the Qur an to contain errors for its belief in the unity of God Bilal Cleland claimed that an anonymous writer in A Letter of Resolution concerning the Doctrine of the Trinity and Incarnation 1693 states that Islam s greater number of adherents and military supremacy resulted from more closely maintaining correct doctrine than mainstream Christianity 111 Purported pagan origins of the Trinity EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Horus Osiris and Isis Altar depicting a tricephalic god identified as Lugus Some nontrinitarians also say that a link between the doctrine of the Trinity and the Egyptian Christian theologians of Alexandria suggests that Alexandrian theology with its strong emphasis on the deity of Jesus served to infuse Egypt s pagan religious heritage into Christianity They accuse the Church of adopting these Egyptian tenets after adapting them to Christian thinking by means of Greek philosophy 112 They say the development of the idea of a co equal triune godhead was based on pagan Greek and Platonic influence including many basic concepts from Aristotelian philosophy incorporated into the biblical God As an example they mention that Aristotle stated All things are three and thrice is all and let us use this number in the worship of the gods for as Pythagoreans say everything and all things are bound by threes for the end the middle and the beginning have this number in everything and these compose the number of the Trinity 113 114 However Trinitarians have argued that the words attributed to Aristotle differ in a number of ways from what has been published as the philosopher s original text in Greek 115 116 117 which omits let us use this number in the worship of the gods and are not supported by translations of the works of Aristotle by scholars such as Stuart Leggatt W K C Guthrie J L Stocks Thomas Taylor and Jules Barthelemy Saint Hilaire 118 Some anti trinitarians note also that the Greek philosopher Plato believed in a special threeness in life and in the universe In Plato s work Phaedo he introduces the word triad in Greek trias 119 which is rendered in English as trinity This was adopted by 3rd and 4th century professed Christians as roughly corresponding to Father Word and Spirit Soul 120 Nontrinitarian Christians contend that such notions and adoptions make the Trinity doctrine extra biblical citation needed They who say there is a widely acknowledged synthesis of Christianity with Platonic philosophy evident in trinitarian formulas appearing by the end of the 3rd century They allege that beginning with the Constantinian period these pagan ideas were forcibly imposed on the churches as Catholic doctrine Most groups subscribing to the theory of a Great Apostasy generally concur in this thesis citation needed The early apologists including Justin Martyr Tertullian and Irenaeus frequently discussed the parallels and contrasts between Christianity Paganism and other syncretic religions and answered charges of borrowing from paganism in their apologetical writings citation needed Hellenic influences Edit See also Hellenization Stuart G Hall formerly Professor of Ecclesiastical History at King s College London describes the subsequent process of philosophical theological amalgamation in Doctrine and Practice in the Early Church 1991 where he writes The apologists began to claim that Greek culture pointed to and was consummated in the Christian message just as the Old Testament was This process was done most thoroughly in the synthesis of Clement of Alexandria It can be done in several ways You can rake through Greek literature and find especially in the oldest seers and poets references to God which are more compatible with monotheism than with polytheism so at length Athenagoras You can work out a common chronology between the legends of prehistoric Homer Greece and the biblical record so Theophilus You can adapt a piece of pre Christian Jewish apologetic which claimed that Plato and other Greek philosophers got their best ideas indirectly from the teachings of Moses in the Bible which was much earlier This theory combines the advantage of making out the Greeks to be plagiarists and therefore second rate or criminal while claiming that they support Christianity by their arguments at least some of the time Especially this applied to the question of God 121 The neo Platonic trinities such as that of the One the Nous and the Soul are not considered a trinity necessarily of consubstantial equals as in mainstream Christianity However the neo Platonic trinity has the doctrine of emanation or eternal derivation a timeless procedure of generation having as a source the One and claimed to be paralleled with the generation of the light from the Sun This was adopted by Origen and later on by Athanasius and applied to the generation of the Son from the Father because they believed that this analogy could be used to support the notion that the Father as immutable always had been a Father and that the generation of the Son is therefore eternal and timeless 122 The synthesis of Christianity with Platonic philosophy was further incorporated in the trinitarian formulas that appeared by the end of the 3rd century The Greek philosophical theology was developed during the Trinitarian controversies over the relationships among the persons of the Godhead 123 The allegation of borrowing was raised by some disputants when the Nicene doctrine was being formalized and adopted by the bishops For example in the 4th century Marcellus of Ancyra who taught the Father Son and Holy Spirit were one person hypostasis said in his On the Holy Church 9 Now with the heresy of the Ariomaniacs which has corrupted the Church of God These then teach three hypostases just as Valentinus the heresiarch first invented in the book entitled by him On the Three Natures For he was the first to invent three hypostases and three persons of the Father Son and Holy Spirit and he is discovered to have filched this from Hermes and Plato 124 In his Introduction to the 1964 book Meditations the Anglican priest Maxwell Staniforth discussed the profound influence of Stoic philosophy on Christianity In particular Again in the doctrine of the Trinity the ecclesiastical conception of Father Word and Spirit finds its germ in the different Stoic names of the Divine Unity Thus Seneca writing of the supreme Power which shapes the universe states This Power we sometimes call the All ruling God sometimes the incorporeal Wisdom sometimes the holy Spirit sometimes Destiny The Church had only to reject the last of these terms to arrive at its own acceptable definition of the Divine Nature while the further assertion these three are One which the modern mind finds paradoxical was no more than commonplace to those familiar with Stoic notions 125 Christian groups with nontrinitarian positions EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Early Christian Edit Arianism Esoteric Gnosticism SubordinationismUnitarian and Universalism Edit American Unitarian Conference Unitarianism Unitarian UniversalismLatter Day Saints Edit Latter Day Saint movement The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints LDS Church Remnant Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day SaintsBible Students and splinter groups Edit Bible Students Friends of Man Jehovah s Witnesses 126 Sacred Name movement Edit Assemblies of Yahweh Bethel Ministerial Association Yahweh s Assembly in MessiahOneness Protestant groups Edit Creation Seventh Day Adventist Church Elias Hicks Hicksite Quakers Shakers Oneness Pentecostals Many members of the Non subscribing Presbyterian Church of IrelandWorld Wide Church of God splinter groups Edit Church of the Blessed Hope sometimes called Church of God of the Abrahamic Faith Grace Communion International Living Church of God United Church of GodNew religious movements Edit Church of Christ Scientist Christian Scientists 127 128 Unity Church New Church Swedenborgian Unification Church Family Federation for World Peace and Unification Two by Twos sometimes called The Truth or Cooneyites 129 Other Nontrinitarians Edit Christadelphians Church of God General Conference La Luz del Mundo Monarchianism Muggletonianism Polish Brethren Socinianism The Way InternationalCountry specific Edit Filipino Iglesia ni Cristo Church of Christ Members Church of God International Independent Russian Doukhobors Molokan Chinese Diaspora Christian Disciples ChurchPeople EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Justin Martyr c 165 Christian apologist and philosopher Sabellius c 220 Modalist the eponymous heresiarch of Sabellianism or monarchic modalism rejected the idea of co eternal co equal distinct persons in the Godhead but taught that God is a singular Person who manifests himself in multiple and various ways faces modes and operations in history and specific circumstances Origen c 230 Ante Nicene Father subordinationist considered the Son co eternal with God subject to the Father s will less than the Father in power but not inferior in essence a Theodotus of Byzantium Artemon Paul of Samosata 269 Bishop of Antioch believed in monarchianism the doctrine that says that the Father alone is supreme and that God is not co equal persons but one unequal almighty person Bishop Paul also held to adoptionism which teaches that Jesus was adopted as the Son of God at his baptism resurrection or ascension Arius 336 presbyter of Alexandria major theologian of the doctrine of Arianism in 4th century He opposed the Homoousian declarations of the Alexandrian Bishop Alexander of Alexandria making him a primary topic of the First Council of Nicea in AD 325 Eusebius of Nicomedia 341 Arian Eusebius of Caesarea Christian historian Constantius II Byzantine Emperor 361 Antipope Felix II 365 Aetius of Antioch 367 Ulfilas Apostle to the Goths 383 Priscillian 385 considered first Christian to be executed for heresy Francesco della Sega 1528 1565 Ludwig Haetzer 1529 Michael Servetus 1553 burned at the stake in Geneva under John Calvin Sebastian Castellio 1563 Ferenc David 1579 Justus Velsius c 1581 Fausto Paolo Sozzini 1604 Edward Wightman 1612 burned at the stake John Biddle 1662 Thomas Aikenhead 1697 last person to be hanged for blasphemy in Britain John Locke 1704 130 John Milton 1608 1674 disputed Isaac Newton 1642 1727 did not believe in trinitarianism as documented in a letter to a friend now preserved in The New College Library in Oxford UK Manuscript 361 4 Two Notable Corruptions of Scripture part 1 ff 1 41 130 He listed worshipping Christ as God in a list of Idolatria in his theological notebook 131 However he never made a public declaration of his antitrinitarian beliefs for fear of losing his position 132 Elias Hicks 1742 Quaker William Whiston 1752 expelled from University of Cambridge in 1710 for Arianism famous for translating Josephus Jonathan Mayhew 1766 Emanuel Swedenborg 1772 provided the theology for Swedenborgianism Joseph Priestley 1804 John Adams Thomas Jefferson John Quincy Adams Millard Fillmore William Howard Taft Joseph Smith 1805 monolatrist founder of the Latter day Saint movement Mormonism Mary Baker Eddy 1821 founder of Christian Science William Ellery Channing 1842 Robert Hibbert 1849 John Thomas Christadelphian 1871 Ralph Waldo Emerson 1882 Robert Roberts Christadelphian 1898 Benjamin Wilson 1900 James Martineau 1900 Felix Manalo 1914 Charles Taze Russell 1916 founder of the Bible Student movement and Jehovah s Witnesses author of Millennial Dawn Joseph Franklin Rutherford 2nd president of the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society Alan Hayward Christadelphian 1923 Johannes Greber Catholic priest Eliseo Soriano 1947 William Branham 1965 Herbert W Armstrong 1986 founder of the Worldwide Church of God a Sabbatarian Christian Church and was an advocate of the doctrine of Binitarianism See also Edit Christianity portalBibliotheca antitrinitariorum Baha i Faith Christomonism Christians of Saint John Manichaeism ServetismNotes Edit Whether Origen taught a doctrine of God that was or was not reconcilable with later Nicene Christianity is a matter of debate Cf ANF Vol 4 although many of his other views such as on metempsychosis were rejected Origen was an economic subordinationist according to the editors of ANF believing in the co eternal aspect of God the Son but asserting that God the Son never commanded the Father and only obeyed This view is compatible with Nicene theology as it is not held by Nicene Christians that the Son or Holy Spirit can command the Father notwithstanding any other doctrines Origen held Citations Edit Olson Roger E Hall Christopher Alan 2002 The Trinity ISBN 9780802848277 Retrieved 5 March 2015 a b c Kelly Joseph F 2006 An Introduction to the New Testament for Catholics p 5 ISBN 9780814652169 Retrieved 5 March 2015 Olson Roger E April 1999 The Story of Christian Theology InterVarsity Press p 173 ISBN 9780830815050 Retrieved 5 March 2015 Lohse Bernhard 1966 A Short History of Christian Doctrine ISBN 9781451404234 Retrieved 5 March 2015 Geanakoplos Deno John 1989 Constantinople and the West ISBN 9780299118846 Retrieved 5 March 2015 Halsey A 13 October 1988 British Social Trends since 1900 A Guide to the Changing Social Structure of Britain Palgrave Macmillan UK p 518 ISBN 9781349194667 his so called non Trinitarian group includes the Jehovah s Witnesses Mormons Christadelphians Apostolics Christian Scientists Theosophists Church of Scientology Unification Church Moonies the Worldwide Church of God and so on von Harnack Adolf 1894 03 01 History of Dogma Retrieved 2007 06 15 In the 2nd century Jesus was either regarded as the man whom God hath chosen in whom the Deity or the Spirit of God dwelt and who after being tested was adopted by God and invested with dominion Adoptionist Christology or Jesus was regarded as a heavenly spiritual being the highest after God who took flesh and again returned to heaven after the completion of his work on earth pneumatic Christology Justo L Gonzalez The Story of Christianity The Early Church to the Present Day Prince Press 1984 Vol 1 pp 159 161 Jaroslav Pelikan The Christian Tradition A History of the Development of Doctrine The University of Chicago Press 1971 Vol 1 pp 181 199 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Christianity Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 285 HISTORY OF ARIANISM Retrieved 5 March 2015 Second Creed of Sirmium or The Blasphemy of Sirmium www fourthcentury com Retrieved 2017 03 09 Stephen Goranson Ebionites ed David Noel Freedman The Anchor Yale Bible Dictionary New York Doubleday 1992 261 American Unitarian Conference Archived from the original on 2019 05 21 Retrieved 2015 06 30 a b David K Bernard Oneness and Trinity A D 100 300 The Doctrine of God and Ancient Christian Writings Word Aflame Press Hazelwood Montana 1991 p 156 St Athanasius 1911 In Controversy With the Arians Select Treatises Newman John Henry Cardinal trans Longmans Green amp Co p 124 footn John Philoponus Tritheism Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 10 July 2019 Chapman John 1912 Tritheists Archived 2012 06 15 at the Wayback Machine The Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company public domain Retrieved October 16 2019 Flint James Deb Flint One God or a Trinity Hyderabad Printland Publishers ISBN 978 81 87409 61 8 Pearce Fred Jesus God the Son or Son of God Does the Bible Teach the Trinity Birmingham UK The Christadelphian Magazine and Publishing Association Ltd UK p 8 Tennant Harry The Holy Spirit Bible Understanding of God s Power Birmingham UK The Christadelphian Magazine and Publishing Association Ltd UK a b Broughton James H Peter J Southgate The Trinity True or False UK The Dawn Book Supply Archived from the original on 2011 11 18 Nelson s guide to denominations J Gordon Melton 2007 Later in the century various leaders also began to express doubts about the Trinity and a spectrum of opinion emerged Still others such as the Church of God General Conference Abrahamic Faith specifically denied the Trinity Manalo Erano G Fundamental Beliefs of the Iglesia ni Cristo Church of Christ Iglesia ni Cristo Manila 1989 Encyclopedia of Protestantism page 474 J Gordon Melton 2005 for his many departures from traditional Christian and Protestant affirmations including the Trinity and the deity of Christ 1 1886 reprint Rutherford NJ Dawn Bible Students Association nd Watch Tower October 1881 Watch Tower Reprints page 290 As Retrieved 2009 09 23 page 4 He gave his only begotten Son This phraseology brings us into conflict with an old Babylonian theory viz Trinitarianism If that doctrine is true how could there be any Son to give A begotten Son too Impossible If these three are one did God send himself And how could Jesus say My Father is greater than I John 14 28 emphasis retained from original Z1882 July The Watchtower January 15 1992 23 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Insight on the Scriptures Vol 2 Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania 1988 pp 393 394 Chapter 138 Christ at God s Right Hand JW org Retrieved October 18 2019 Should You Believe in the Trinity Watch Tower Society p 20 Holland Jeffrey R The Only True God and Jesus Christ Whom He Hath Sent Retrieved 29 November 2013 a b Giles Jerry C 1992 Jesus Christ Firstborn in the Spirit In Ludlow Daniel H ed Encyclopedia of Mormonism New York Macmillan Publishing p 728 ISBN 978 0 02 879602 4 OCLC 24502140 a b Millet Robert L 1992 Jesus Christ Overview In Ludlow Daniel H ed Encyclopedia of Mormonism New York Macmillan Publishing pp 724 726 ISBN 978 0 02 879602 4 OCLC 24502140 a b Arianism Christian Apologetics and Research Ministry 2008 12 13 Retrieved 29 November 2013 Robinson Stephen E 1992 God the Father Overview In Ludlow Daniel H ed Encyclopedia of Mormonism New York Macmillan Publishing pp 548 550 ISBN 978 0 02 879602 4 OCLC 24502140 Backman Milton V 1992 First Vision In Ludlow Daniel H ed Encyclopedia of Mormonism New York Macmillan Publishing pp 515 516 ISBN 978 0 02 879602 4 OCLC 24502140 What is Arianism The Arian Catholic Church Archived from the original on 9 April 2006 Retrieved 29 November 2013 Gospel Principles chapter 1 Our Father in Heaven The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Retrieved 4 June 2017 The Nature of God The Glory of God Is Intelligence Lesson 37 Section 93 Doctrine and Covenants Instructor s Guide Religion 324 325 PDF Institutes of Religion Church Educational System 1981 pp 73 74 The Oneness of God Archived from the original on 16 February 2008 Retrieved 5 March 2015 Patterson Eric Rybarczyk Edmund 2007 The Future of Pentecostalism in the United States New York Lexington Books pp 123 4 ISBN 978 0 7391 2102 3 McCardle Elaine and Kenny Wiley 2017 06 28 Bryan Stevenson weaves story policy in 2017 Ware Lecture UU World Retrieved 2019 09 17 Stevenson referred to the UU faith s members repeatedly as Universalists which caught the attention of several social media users Unitarian Universalists are more commonly referred to colloquially as Unitarians Buursma Bruce 1986 03 30 UNITARIANS MAKING PEACE WITH EASTER Chicago Tribune Retrieved 2019 09 17 Unitarian Universalist Association 9 February 2015 Beliefs amp Principles uua org Retrieved 2019 09 17 Unitarian Universalist Association 25 November 2014 Christian Unitarian Universalists uua org Retrieved 2019 09 17 Some of our UU congregations are Christian in orientation worshipping regularly with the New Testament offering Communion and celebrating Christian holidays throughout the year All of our congregations welcome people with Christian backgrounds and beliefs Edict by Emperor Constantine against the Arians In addition if any writing composed by Arius should be found it should be handed over to the flames so that not only will the wickedness of his teaching be obliterated but nothing will be left even to remind anyone of him And I hereby make a public order that if someone should be discovered to have hidden a writing composed by Arius and not to have immediately brought it forward and destroyed it by fire his penalty shall be death As soon as he is discovered in this offense he shall be submitted for capital punishment Edict by Emperor Constantine against the Arians Athanasius 23 January 2010 Edict by Emperor Constantine against the Arians Fourth Century Christianity Wisconsin Lutheran College Retrieved 2 May 2012 Litfin Bryan M 2007 10 01 Getting to Know the Church Fathers ISBN 9781441200747 Retrieved 5 March 2015 Frassetto Michael 2003 Encyclopedia of Barbarian Europe ISBN 9781576072639 Retrieved 5 March 2015 Kaatz Kevin 2012 Early Controversies and the Growth of Christianity ABC CLIO p 113 ISBN 9780313383595 Retrieved 5 March 2015 into the Arian version NPNF2 04 Athanasius Select Works and Letters Retrieved 5 March 2015 Elaine Pagels Beyond Belief The Secret Gospel of Thomas Random House 2003 n p NPNF2 04 Athanasius Select Works and Letters Ccel org 13 July 2005 Retrieved 21 January 2012 David Bernard s The Oneness of God Word Aflame Press 1983 ISBN 0 912315 12 1 pgs 264 274 Wells H G n d The Outline of History being a plain history of life and mankind Forgotten Books Vol 2 London UK The Waverley Book Company p 284 ISBN 9781440082269 W Fulton Trinity Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics T amp T Clark 1921 Vol 12 p 459 Unitarians face a new age the report of the Commission of Appraisal American Unitarian Association ed Frederick May Eliot Harlan Paul Douglass 1936 Chapter III CHURCH GROWTH AND DECLINE DURING THE LAST DECADE Year Book data permit the calculation of growth or decline in membership for 297 Unitarian churches which existed throughout the last decade and Charles Lippy 2006 Faith in America Changes Challenges New Directions p 2 Quote However when the national interest in novel religious forms waned by the mid nineteenth century Unitarianism and Universalism began to decline For the vast majority of religious bodies in America growth continued unabated a b Barclay William 1998 11 01 The Apostles Creed ISBN 9780664258269 Retrieved 5 March 2015 title not cited New Catholic Encyclopedia Vol XIV 1967 p 299 MacQuarrie John 2005 Trinity Encyclopedia Encarta Microsoft Encarta Reference Library Microsoft Corporation Trinity Encyclopaedia Britannica Ultimate Reference Suite DVD 2004 Bassler J M 1992 God in the NT The Anchor Bible Dictionary Vol 2 New York NY Doubleday p 1055 a b c d Brown Raymond E 1 December 1965 Does the New Testament Call Jesus God Theological Studies 26 4 545 573 doi 10 1177 004056396502600401 S2CID 53007327 Loewen Jacob A 1 April 1984 The Names of God in the New Testament The Bible Translator 35 2 208 211 doi 10 1177 026009438403500202 S2CID 172043076 Confraternity of Christian Doctrine Roman Catholic 2011 Bible Dictionary New American Bible St Joseph ed Catholic Book Publishing ISBN 978 0899426174 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Against Dalcour II Apostolic Academics Oneness Pentecostal Apologetics February 2017 Retrieved 10 July 2019 Reasoning from the Scriptures Philadelphia PA Watchtower Bible and Tract Society 2015 1986 pp 405 415 416 Hertz J H Rabbi 1960 The Pentateuch and the Haftorahs Vol 1 Soncino Press p 215 ISBN 978 0900689215 Kruse Colin G 2004 The Gospel According to John ISBN 9780802827715 Retrieved 5 March 2015 via Google Books Ramsey Michaels J 2011 08 01 John Understanding the Bible Commentary ISBN 9781441236593 Retrieved 5 March 2015 via Google Books Radmacher Earl 1999 Nelson s New Illustrated Bible Commentary Thomas Nelson ISBN 978 1 4185 8734 5 via Google Books Gundry Robert H 1 November 2011 Commentary on John Commentary on the New Testament Vol 4 ISBN 9781441237613 Retrieved 5 March 2015 via Google Books Navas Patrick 2011 2007 Divine Truth or Human Tradition A reconsideration of the Orthodox doctrine of the Trinity in light of the Hebrew and Christian scriptures AuthorHouse p 267 ISBN 9781463415204 via Google Books John 1 1c God divine or a god onlytrugod org Retrieved 24 November 2014 Kaiser Christopher B 1982 The Doctrine of God A historical survey Foundations for Faith Westchester Crossway Books p 31 a b Should you believe in the trinity Jehovah s Witness wol jw org Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania 2006 p 24 a b Kemp Steve c 2009 22 May 2000 Myers Jim ed Elohiym Biblical Heritage Center Archived from the original on 2009 10 29 Retrieved 2009 04 02 א ל ה ים elohim God god Strong s Hebrew 430 Retrieved 5 March 2015 Old Testament Hebrew Lexicon Bible Study Tools 2 Corinthians 13 14 Trinity The Son of Jehovah blog 2010 10 09 Retrieved 5 March 2015 via wordpress com Philippians 2 5 6 Philippians 2 5 6 Philippians 2 6 8 biblicalunitarian com Retrieved 8 July 2019 The trinity delusion Philippians 2 6 Retrieved 8 July 2019 via angelfire com Moen Skip October 2014 The assumed trinity A look at Philippians 2 6 skipmoen com Hebrew Word Study Retrieved 8 July 2019 Kemball Cook David 3 August 2007 Is God a Trinity self published ISBN 9780954221119 Retrieved 5 March 2015 via Google Books Stephen T Davis Daniel Kendall Gerald O Collins eds 2002 The Trinity An Interdisciplinary Symposium on the Trinity Oxford University Press p 357 ISBN 9780199246120 The Chalcedonian Definition Retrieved 5 March 2015 The Word Homoousios from Hellenism to Christianity by P F Beatrice Church History Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Society of Church History Vol 71 No 2 Jun 2002 pp 243 272 retrieved noemon net Archived July 23 2011 at the Wayback Machine The word Trinity is not found in the Bible CARM The Christian Apologetics amp Research Ministry 2008 11 24 Retrieved 5 March 2015 McQuick Oneil 2005 09 22 The Voice ISBN 9781419617300 Retrieved 5 March 2015 Institute for Religious Research The Biblical Basis of the Doctrine of the Trinity Introduction Institute for Religious Research Retrieved 5 March 2015 The Unitarian a monthly magazine of liberal Christianity ed Jabez Thomas Sunderland Brooke Herford Frederick B Mott 1893 We believe in the Holy Spirit man s sole reliance for guidance safety or salvation not as a separate person entity reality or consciousness existent apart from man or God but as the recognizing sympathetic inter communication in love between God and the human soul the direct converse or communion of man s consciousness with Deity Is the Holy Spirit a Person Awake 14 15 July 2006 In the Bible God s Holy Spirit is identified as God s power in action Hence an accurate translation of the Bible s Hebrew text refers to God s spirit as God s active force Who and What Is God Mystery of the Ages Herbert W Armstrong Retrieved 19 May 2012 Peter Althouse Spirit of the last days Pentecostal eschatology in conversation p12 2003 The Oneness Pentecostal stream follows in the steps of the Reformed stream but has a modalistic view of the Godhead See under heading The Father is the Holy Ghost in David Bernard The Oneness of God Chapter 6 See also David Bernard A Handbook of Basic Doctrines Word Aflame Press 1988 See under The Lord God and His Spirit in Chapter 7 of David Bernard The Oneness of God Archived 2008 02 16 at the Wayback Machine Wilson Jerry A 1992 Holy Spirit In Ludlow Daniel H ed Encyclopedia of Mormonism New York Macmillan Publishing p 651 ISBN 978 0 02 879602 4 OCLC 24502140 The Holy Spirit is a term often used to refer to the Holy Ghost In such cases the Holy Spirit is a personage McConkie Joseph Fielding 1992 Holy Ghost In Ludlow Daniel H ed Encyclopedia of Mormonism New York Macmillan Publishing pp 649 651 ISBN 978 0 02 879602 4 OCLC 24502140 D amp C 131 7 8 There is no such thing as immaterial matter All spirit is matter but it is more fine or pure and can only be discerned by purer eyes We cannot see it but when our bodies are purified we shall see that it is all matter a b D amp C 130 22 Romney Marion G May 1974 The Holy Ghost Ensign a b Millennial Star Vol XII October 15 1850 pp 305 309 Retrieved March 30 2011 Basic Beliefs Articles of Faith and Practice Church of Christ Archived from the original on 21 January 2015 Retrieved 21 January 2015 Unity Palo Alto Community Church Beliefs Twenty Questions and Answers www unitypaloalto org Archived from the original on October 7 2007 Montefiore C G 2016 06 18 January 1897 Unitarianism and Judaism in Their Relations to Each Other The Jewish Quarterly Review 9 2 240 253 doi 10 2307 1450588 JSTOR 1450588 You Unitarian Christians have relations and points of connexion with Judaism on the one side and with orthodox Christianity on the other You are in a position of vantage to absorb the permanent elements of truth and value lying at your right hand and at your left For looked at from one point of view though you might yourselves deny it you constitute a phase of Judaism looked at from another though many Christians deny it you are a phase of Christianity The paradox of the one assertion to some of yourselves is no greater than the paradox of the other to many beyond your pale The Holy Qur an 4 171 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Cleland Bilal Islam and Unitarians Tell me about Islam Retrieved 16 June 2016 At times he forms one of a trinity in unity with Ra and Osiris as in Fig 87 a god with the two sceptres of Osiris the hawk s head of Horus and the sun of Ra This is the god described to Eusebius who tells us that when the oracle was consulted about the divine nature by those who wished to understand this complicated mythology it had answered I am Apollo and Lord and Bacchus or to use the Egyptian names I am Ra and Horus and Osiris Another god in the form of a porcelain idol to be worn as a charm shows us Horus as one of a trinity in unity in name at least agreeing with that afterwards adopted by the Christians namely the Great God the Son God and the Spirit God Samuel Sharpe Egyptian Mythology and Egyptian Christianity 1863 pp 89 90 How Ancient Trinitarian Gods Influenced Adoption of the Trinity United Church of God 2011 07 22 Retrieved 5 March 2015 Michael Barber Should Christianity Abandon the Doctrine of the Trinity Universal Publishers Nov 1 2006 Part Three Page 78 Peri Oyranoy 1 Retrieved 5 March 2015 ARISTOTE Traite du Ciel livre I texte grec Retrieved 5 March 2015 Bekker edition of Aristotle s works volume II p 211 Archived from the original on 2014 08 27 Retrieved 2017 09 10 McKirahan Richard D 1999 Review The Philosophical Review 108 2 285 287 doi 10 2307 2998305 JSTOR 2998305 Phaedo 104e Course of Ideas pp 387 8 Stuart George Hall 1992 Doctrine and Practice in the Early Church Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 50 ISBN 0802806295 Select Treatises of St Athanasius In Controversy With the Arians Freely Translated by John Henry Cardinal Newmann Longmans Green and Co 1911 A Hilary Armstrong Henry J Blumenthal Platonism Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved May 13 2008 from Encyclopaedia Britannica 2006 Ultimate Reference Suite DVD Logan A Marcellus of Ancyra Pseudo Anthimus On the Holy Church Text Translation and Commentary Verses 8 9 Journal of Theological Studies NS Volume 51 Pt 1 April 2000 p 95 Aurelius Marcus 1964 Meditations London Penguin Books p 25 ISBN 978 0 14044140 6 Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania Should You Believe in the Trinity 2006 Neusner Jacob ed 2009 World Religions in America An Introduction Fourth Ed Louisville Kentucky Westminster John Knox Press p 257 ISBN 978 0 664 23320 4 Beit Hallahmi Benjamin 1998 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Active New Religions Sects and Cults Revised Ed New York New York Rosen Publishing Group p 73 ISBN 0 8239 2586 2 Walker James K 2007 The Concise Guide to Today s Religions and Spirituality Eugene Oregon Harvest House Publishers pp 117 118 ISBN 978 0 7369 2011 7 a b Avery Cardinal Dulles The Deist Minimum 2005 Pfizenmaier T C Was Isaac Newton an Arian Journal of the History of Ideas 68 1 57 80 1997 Snobelen Stephen D 1999 Isaac Newton heretic the strategies of a Nicodemite PDF British Journal for the History of Science 32 4 381 419 doi 10 1017 S0007087499003751 S2CID 145208136 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 10 07 Further reading EditMorgan Caesar An investigation of the trinity of Plato and of Philo Judaeus and of the effects which an attachment to their writings had upon the principles and reasonings of the father of the Christian church Cambridge University Press 1853 Tuggy Dale 2016 History of Trinitarian Doctrines Trinity Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Tuggy Dale March 18 2016 Trinity Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Wallace Robert Antitrinitarian Biography or Sketches of the lives and writings of distinguished antitrinitarians exhibiting a view of the state of the Unitarian doctrine and worship in the principal nations of Europe from the reformation to the close of the seventeenth century to which is prefixed a history of Unitarianism in England during the same period 1850 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nontrinitarianism amp oldid 1150735517, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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