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THE ORIGIN OF THE TRINITY
I. TRINITY ORIGINSTHE ANTIQUITY OF PAGAN TRINITIES THROUGHOUT THE WORLD
This article will propose to examine the philosophical and pagan origins of the Trinity
and its early development. Pagan pantheons (national families of gods) of the various
ethnic gods will be compared, and triads (sets of three gods) in these pantheons will be
examined for specific trinitarian qualities. The antiquity of the Babylonian pantheon, andits subsequent influence upon the various pantheons, is pointed out.
The idea of the Greek Logos (Word), a secondary, derived messenger god, is seen inthe ancient pantheons of the nations with a clear differentiation observed between the
pagan-philosophical use of the term logos (word), and the Hebrew understanding of the
term in their writings up to the time of Philo, the Jewish priest-philosopher of Alexandria.
The gnostic influence of the Greek and neoplatonic philosophers upon the architects of
the Christian Trinity is emphasized, especially the critical role of Philo in the
development of the Logosdoctrine, which is a keystone doctrine of trinitarian theology.
The Catholic fathers of the Trinity are identified, and comments will be made upon the
comparative, developmental trinitarian theology among them.
Theological concepts developed by early trinitarians will be noted. One such example is
subordinationism, a fatal flaw of trinitarian theology, which forever subordinates Jesus
Christ to the status of a secondary, derived God.
The antiquity of the Trinity is not denied. On the contrary, the Trinity doctrine has taken
many millennia to develope, and is yet in the process of change.
Our study will show that the Trinity is actually of pagan, philosophical ancestry, and was
engrafted onto, and accomodated to, Christian theology.
Many scholars in comparative religion and mythology have found common relationshipsand attributes among the various pantheons.
Alexander Hislop, in his TWO BABYLONS, seems to trace the various mythologies
back to a common heritage. Hislop pointed out the antiquity of the theological concept ofthe Trinity by giving examples of pagan trinities in Siberia, Japan, and India. He noted
that the recognition of the Trinity was universal in all the ancient nations of the world.
He went so far as to say that the supreme divinity in almost all heathen nations wastriune. While Hislop was attempting to prove that mankind has always believed in a
trinity, he also unwittingly shows the pagan origins of the idea of a trinity.
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NO TEACHING OF A TRINITY IN OLD TESTAMENT JUDAISM
Arthur Wainwright can find no doctrine remotely resembling the doctrine of the Trinitytaught in Judaism, the ancestor of Christianity, until the time of Philo in the first century
AD. And we know that Philo, even though he was a Jewish priest, was heavily influenced
by Greek pagan thought.
The idea of a plural God was far from the Hebrew mind. The non-canonical book of
Jubilees (second century BC) alters the plural verb of Genesis 1.26, in conformity with
Genesis 1.27, stating, And after all this he created man, a man and a woman, created hethem (Jubilees 2.14).
Both the Palestinian Targum and the Jerusalem Targum maintain that God was addressing
the angels in Genesis 3.22 and in Genesis 11.7.
The Jews, who, after all, wrote the Old Testament under the inspiration of the Spirit,
themselves refute the presence of any Trinity in Genesis.
VARIOUS ANCIENT PAGAN TRIADS
The pagan idea of a triad is very old. Sumerians, according to Morris Jastrow, paidhomage to a triad of El-lil, god or lord of the storm, Ea, water deity of Eridu on thePersian Gulf, and Anu, sun god of Ur-uk.
El-lil, was called the father of Sumer (Shinar), and chief of gods, creator and
sustainer of life. The universe was apparently up among these three pre-eminentdeities.
Later, Marduk, the firstborn of Ea, and the patron deity of Babylon, is made god of the
earth,and his symbol, oddly enough, is the dragon. He was called Bel or Baal (lord).
Ashur, the god of the Assyrian capital was a sun god, and his consort or wife was
Ishtar, the great mother goddess of Nineveh, a city founded by Ninus or Nimrod.Ishtar, known as Ashtoreth to the Phoenicians, and Astarte to the Greeks, was often
portrayed riding on a lion. She was called the daughter of the moon, and identified inastrology as the Roman Venus (goddess of love). She was also known as Nana or
Madonna (Lady).
Morris Jastrow tells us that the Mother Goddess was quite common throughout theMiddle east. She was brought from Asia minor to Rome with the hope that her statue
(idol) might save the Roman state from the Carthaginians.
Ishtar has a bloody history as a goddess. She was reputedly the murderer of her consortTammuz (variously known as Baal, Adonis, the Egyptian Osiris, the Greek Bacchus, or
simply Nimrod). Queen Semiramis later brought forth an illegitimate son, which sheclaimed was Nimrod resurrected. He was called El-Bar, or God the Son, and theBranch of Cush. Thus was formulated one of the ancient triadic patterns of father,
mother, son
The early triadic pattern is noted in connection with the construction of the Tower ofBabel. Diodorus Siculus, in his Bibliotheca, relates that in the topmost completed story of
the Tower was placed the images of three gods.
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Franz Cumont tells us that triads were very common in the religion of the Chaldeans. The
Babylonian triad became the Syrian triad of Hadad, Atargatis, and Simios. In Rome, this
triad was Jupiter, Venus, and Mercury. Not only did the triadic pattern of deity spreadthroughout the world, but Cumont remarks on the continuing influence of the Babylonian
priesthood after the fall of Babylon from political leadership.
The system of the Babylonian priests affected many other countries worldwide (e.g., theDruids of England and Europe).
SOME PAGAN TRINITIES SIMILAR IN STRUCTURE TO THE CATHOLIC
TRINITY
Trinitarians today may argue that the pagan trinities were completely different from the
model of the Christian Trinity. But some pagan triads have models which are surprisinglyfamiliar. For example, the Hindu Trinity:
The conception most closely linked with Vedism and Brahmanism is that of the Hindu
Trinity, the Trimurti. The Absolute manifests himself in three persons, Brahma theCreator, Vishnu the Preserver, and Shiva the Destroyer. The syllable we write as om, but
which is in reality made up of three words, a, u, and m, (which) is the symbol of thistrinity.
-Asiatic Mythology
And the Egyptian triad of the sun god was one god expressed in three persons. He wasknown as the noonday sun (Ra), the evening sun (Tum), and the dawning sun
(Khepera). The sun god reportedly said, Lo! I am Khepera at dawn, Ra at high noon, and
Tum at eventide. He was one god in three distinct persons. And so it is not correct to say
that the pagan trinities do not resemble the Christian Trinity, insofar as the structure goes.
II TRINITARIAN DEVELOPMENTNEO-PLATONIC SCHOOL INDEBTED TO BABYLONIAN WISDOM
The ancient Greeks were very impressed with the wisdom of the Babylonians. Franz
Cumont said, Philosophy claimed more and more to derive its inspiration from thefabulous wisdom of Chaldea (Babylon) and Egypt.
According to Cumont, the entire neo-platonic school is heavily indebted to the
Chaldeans (Babylonians). It was the neo-platonic school of philosophy which influencedthe Catholic fathers, Justin Martyr, Clement of Alexandria, and Origen.
Porphyry reveals that the neo-platonists had incorporated Babylonian and Persiandemonology into their philosophical system.
PLATO CONVEYED THE IDEA OF A MESSENGER GOD (LOGOS) TO THECATHOLIC FATHERS
Plato, the famed Greek philosopher, greatly influenced the Catholic fathers. He was
acquainted with Babylonian wisdom, and had traveled to Babylonia, Israel, and Egypt.
Plato advocated the idea of a secondary messenger god, representing the unknown
primary god, who remained impassible (unable to suffer or to feel pain) and unknowable.
This being was called the Logos (the Word).
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This messenger god was known in Babylon and Egypt. The Egyptian god Thoth
(Tammuz) was called the Logos:
Father of Light, O Logos that orderest day and night, come show thyself to me. O god of gods, in thy ape-
form enter. -Lewis R. Farnell
Showerman says that the ancient writer Harpocration associated the phrase mysterious
Logos to the god Attis (who would equate to Tammuz, Thoth or Nimrod). He alsoaccords the Greek messenger god Hermes the title of Logos, and Dunlap speaks of a
Chaldean Logos.
The idea of a separate, secondary messenger god is a key element in the Trinity
doctrine. We can see that this idea is pre-Christian and it is pagan.
The Catholic fathers obviously obtained this idea from the Greek philosophers, who in
turn obtained it from Babylonian and oriental religions. It does not come from the Bible.
Ishtar was identified as the Logos of the Babylonian god El-lil. She supposedlyexclaimed, Of the lord (El-lil), his Word (Logos) am I. In other words, she (her priests)
claimed to be the spokesperson for El-lil.
THE APOSTLE JOHN ATTEMPTED TO DESTROY THE CONCEPT OF A
SECONDARY LOGOS MESSENGER GOD
The pagan concept of the Logos can be seen as a bridge for introducing the equally paganidea of a triadic deity.
The apostle John, in penning John 1.1 was actually apparently responding to those early
Christian gnostics who were identifying Jesus with the pagan Logos. He specificallyidentifies the biblical logos (word) as God the Father Himself. He does not advocate
the concept of Christ as a separate, pre-existing divine Person, co-existing with God the
Father.
As Granville Henry has observed:
Did John intend to introduce Greek philosophical, scientific or religious representations for the person of
Christ? A broad concensus of contemporary New Testament scholars maintains that the logos Christology
of John must be understood in its peculiarly Hebrew context. To deviate from this context and emphasize
Greek meanings is to make a major error in interpretation.
The Greek concept of a personal, separate divine Logos, distinct from God, or a second
God, was unknown to the apostles, and entirely foreign to their understanding of a
solitary divine God, who was known to them from the days of Abraham. They recognizedthat sole divinity in Jesus Christ. Thomas had knelt before Him exclaiming My Lord and
my God (John 20.28).
HOW WAS THIS GREEK CONCEPT OF A DERIVED SECONDARY
MESSENGER GOD INTRODUCED INTO CHRISTIANTIY?Philo Judaeus (20 BC-50 AD) of Alexandria was the man who attempted to fuse the strictmonotheistic theology of the Hebrew religion with the transcendental theology and
philosophy of the Greek platonists.
As Alvan Lamson has written:
The authors of the Septuagint version and the Platonists employed the same term (logos) to express totally
different views: the former (Septuagint) intending by it simply a mode of action in the Deity; the latter (the
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Platonists) , a real being, (the Deitys) agent and minister in executing his will. Philo was the first, we
believe, who attributed to the Logos a
permanent subsistence.
There is a vast difference in understanding the word of God as a mode of action (e.g.,God speaking light into existence) and in understanding the word of God as a separate
being from God.But Philo was to have a profound influence upon the Catholic fathers, and therefore uponthe development of the Catholic Trinity.
Through the use of allegorical interpretation (what we also understand as
spiritualization today), which had long been known to the students of Homer, andwhich was systematized by the Stoic philosophers, Philo began his effort to combine the
absolute monotheism of Judaism with the transcendentalist theology of Platonism. He
was actually attempting a synthesis of biblical theology and pagan philosophy.
Plato described the pagan Logos as a Jewish archangel. To Philo, the Logos was the
Idea of ideas, the firstbegotten Son of the uncreated Father, and the second God.
The cosmos, Philo wrote, is held together by the power of the Logos. The SupremeGod is too remote and impassible to have direct contact with this world, and so it is the
Logos who appears to man (e.g., as in the burning bush to Moses).
Philo wrote about this concept of his in the following manner:
The Absolute Being, the Father, who had begotten all things, gave an especial grace to the Archangel and
First-born Logos (Word), that standing between, He might sever the creature from the Creator. The same isever the Intercessor for the dying mortal before the immortal God, and the Ambassador and the Ruler to the
subject. He is neither without beginning of days, as God is, nor is He begotten, as we are, but is something
between these extremes, being connected with both.
The reader can see that Philos conception of the Logos, with some modifications, is very
similar to later trinitarian teaching on the Catholic Logos.
Charles Semisch has stated, The early (Catholic) Fathers only poured the contents of the
scriptures into a Philonian vessel: they view the biblical passages through a Philonian
medium.
Henry Malter believes that Philo actually wanted to prove that Judaism and Hellenism
(Greek philosophy) taught the same divine truth in just a different way.
WAS PHILO A GNOSTIC?
If we accept the thesis that Philo greatly influenced the development of the Catholic
Trinity through his idea of grafting the pagan Logos into the Old Testament teaching,then we might well consider his relationship to gnosticism.
Philip Carrington believes that Philo was a gnostic, and Carrington had this to say:(Philo was) the first and only Jewish philosopher of antiquity. To him Plato was only Moses talking Greek.
But in spite of his Judaism and Platonism, he shows only too many traces of that gnostic error which is so
fatal to sound thinking.
Elaine Pagels, in her excellent study of the gnostic gospels, has stated that Wilhelm
Bousset claims to have traced gnosticism back to ancient Babylonian and Persiansources. The gnostics believed that matter was evil, and they believed in an unknown
God with lesser emanations from the spirit world.
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Martin Larson, speaking of Christian gnosicism, said, The gnostic heresy had its roots in
the concept that Christ had existed as a separate power since the creation of the world.
And James Adam noted, The distinction which Plato...introduced into the being of the
Godhead prepared the way for the theology of Philo. Platos conception of the divine
nature as a differentiated unity...(bears) a certain resemblance to the Christian doctrine of
the Trinity.
Philo was influenced by Platos Timaeus when he called the Logos the image of God,
and the second God. This led James Adam to write:
The Timaeus did more than any other literary masterpiece to facilitate and promote the fusion of Hellenism
and Hebraism out of which so much of Christian theology has sprung.
Why dont the trinitarian Christians today want people to know the background of the
Trinity doctrine? Why do they attempt to ignore the history of the doctrine? When
confronted with this truthful history, many of them attempt to belittle the importance ofthe origins of the trinity doctrine.
H.A. Wolfson declares that the Catholic fathers, in discussing the pre-existent Christ,
show unmistakable evidence of the influence of the Philonic Logos. And Wolfson notesthat:
All of these (Catholic) fathers seemed to have identified the Johannine Logos with the Philonic Logos, and
they also seemed to have known of Philos two-fold stage theory of the pre-existent Logos, and they seem
to have consciously transferred this twofold stage theory from the Platonic Logos to the Johannine Logos.
Wolfson believes that the Catholic fathers consciously transferred the pagan idea of the
Logos to the Christian Logos of the apostle John! How can trinitarian scholars today
honestly claim that the doctrine of the Trinity has no pagan influence in it?
H. Kennedy wrote, It can scarcely be denied that (Philos) particular differentiation of
the Logos from the Supreme God had an exceptional influence on the subsequent
Christology of the church. How can trinitarians not see the influence of Greekphilosophy and the Jewish priest, Philo, on the doctrine of the Trinity? Their only answeris that the Catholic fathers merely used Greek philosophy to confirm the scripturality of
the Trinity doctrine. But since there is a glaring lack any of the components of the Trinity
doctrine in the scriptures (e.g., terms such as three persons, three-in-one, co-equal,co-eternal, not to mention the word trinity), it is obvious that this is not so.
And, as Henry Chadwick said, The history of Christian philosophy begins not with a
Christian, but with a Jew. It is sad indeed that a Jew played such a role in formulatingthe doctrine of the Trinity, which downgrades the Lord Jesus Christ to a subordinate role
contrary to scripture. Another Jew, Paul of Tarsus, warned Christians about philosophy,
vain deceit, and the traditions of men (see Colossians 2.8).
III ARCHITECTS OF THE CATHOLIC TRINITY
Clement of Alexandria (150-213 AD), head of one of the early Christian schools, whichwas heavily influenced by philosophy and gnosticism, admitted that he was opposed by
those who still considered philosophy evil. He made light of their opposition and said
that they were light and ignorant. He denounced the so-called orthodoxy who, likebeasts which work from fear, do good works without knowing what they are doing. But
Clement, of course, knew what he was doing. He had a special gnosis (knowledge) that
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the ignorant orthodox did not possess.
Friedrich Ueberweg says that Gnosticism was the first comprehensive attempt tocontruct a philosophy of Christianity. The more flagrant gnostics, such as Cerdo,
Cerinthus, Saturninus, and even Marcion, had been expelled from the church. These more
flambuoyant gnostics were only the tip of the iceberg. There was still a remnant in the
churches, who obviously began developing some philosophical system of Christianitythat would compete, so they thought, in the Gentile world.
The apostle Paul was troubled with gnostics, and spoke against those who clung tofalsely-named science (knowledge or gnosis) (1 Timothy 6.20).
Simon Magus (Acts 8), who clashed with Philip and Peter, was said to have been the
teacher of the gnostic Menander. Menander, in turn, was the master of the famousgnostics, Saturninus and Basilides.
Gnosticism, after Judaism, had the dubious honor of being the earliest heresy of
Christianity. Isnt is strange that gnostics seem to disappear, to some degree, after theascendancy of the Catholics? Gnosticism is probably the breeding ground of trinitarian
theology.
Clement of Alexander is certainly one of the Catholic fathers of the Trinity. The influenceof Philo and gnosticism is seen in both him and his successor Origen.
In Stromateis (i.vi.28), Clement wrote, Philosophy...was a schoolmaster to bringHellenism to Christ, (just) as the Law was for the Hebrews.
The Bible college at Alexandria, under the presidency of Clement of Alexandria, opened
its arms to the teachers of gnosticism (Charles Merivale).
E.G. Weltin called Clement a Christian Platonist and gnostic. Like Philo, Clement
taught that the Logos was an Angel.
In Paedagogus, Clement wrote, the Logos has appeared, and fear is turned to love, andthat mystic angel (Jesus) is born. And he wrote, God is one, and beyond the one, and
above the Monad itself.
According to Moses Stuart, Clement so distinguished between the substance of the
Father and of the Son as to make the latter inferior. And Photius wrote that Clement, in
his now lost work Hypotyposes, held to the argument of the Son as a creature, and
asserted the doctrine of the transmigration of souls.
And while Alexandria may well be the site where the Trinity doctrine was transplanted
into Catholic Christianity, there was an earlier writer from Athens, Quadratus, who mayhave written Logos theology as early as 125 AD. If Quadratus was the author of The
Epistle To Diognetus, he used the Logos doctrine and praised gnosticism.
Another Catholic architect of the Trinity doctrine was Justin Martyr (c.100-165 AD), whowas reportedly converted to Catholicism, which was probably a small minority group at
that time, in about 133 AD.
Justin never discarded his pallium (philosophers cloak). Justin taught during the time ofan outburst of gnosticism (the heyday of Valentinus, Basilides, Cerdon, and Marcion).
Justin desired to understand the Messiah in the light of Greek philosophy. He wrote:
At the beginning, before all creatures, God begat of Himself a certain rational power, which, by the Holy
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Spirit, is also called the Glory of the Lord-now Son, now Wisdom, now Angel, now God, now Lord, and
Logos.
THE SUBORDINATION OF JESUS CHRIST AS A DERIVED GOD
Justin did not teach the eternal generation of the Logos, as later Catholic fathers (suchas one of his pupils, Irenaeus, was to do) did, but rather he taught that the Logos, or
reason of God, which, was before the creation, voluntarily begotten (or emitted) fromthe Father, and was thus
converted into a real, separate Person. Thus the Son became a derived Being. This
doctrine of derivation implies inferiority, and as Alvan Lamson says, a derived God
cannot be a self-existent God.
The subordination of Jesus Christ has been a hallmark of trinitarian doctrine down
through the centuries. Although the Athanasians (and modern trinitarians) claim to have
corrected this subordination at Nicea in 325 AD, there are those today (and especially thecommon people who are trinitarians) who still argue that Jesus cannot be God the Father
due to His inferiority to God the Father.
If Jesus is not entitled to every title that belongs to God, then Jesus is not fully God. Sincewe know that Jesus is fully God, we know that He is worthy of the title God the Father.
The twofold-stage theory of the Lords birth is a key building block of the doctrine of
the Trinity. Initially, Proverbs 8.22 was used to validate this teaching. The Catholic-Confraternity-Douay Version of this passage reads: The Lord begot me, the first-born of
his ways, the forerunner of his prodigies of long ago. This was used to show that Jesus
was born before the ages. Thus, the Lord was (1) born before the ages, and (2) born atBethlehem. The gross inferiority that this brought to the Son began to be apparent, and
Catholic fathers such as Irenaeus, Origen, and Novatian, began to teach an eternal
begetting of the Son in order to assure the Sons eternal equality with the Father.
Athenagoras, Theophilus, who is first noted using the word triados (180 AD) to describethe Godhead, and Tertullian all held to the twofold stage theory.
Novatian, realizing that this greatly subordinated the Son, wrote:
But He who is before all time must be said to have been always in the Father; for no time can be assigned
to Him who is before all time. And He is always in the Father, unless the Father be not always Father, only
that the Father precedes Him-in a certain sense-since it is necessary in some degree that He should before
(since) He is Father.
He is always in the Father, but the Father precedes Him-in a certain sense? In some
degree? What contradictory nonsense! He is always in the Father, but, then again, no
He is not since the Father precedes Him? But this great spiritual truth is qualified with
in a certain sense,
and by some degree! To what lengths will the trinitarian go to keep his co-equal
Persons and yet keep his eternal Son?
Athanasius tried to correct this imbalance dogmatically, and Augustine saw it. He said,
The Son is equal to the Father, but not while the Son is in the flesh. By making this
statement, Augustine denies the incarnation, since the incarnation is God manifest in theflesh. The Son is the flesh. It is not the Son in the Son, but rather the Father in the Son.
THE LOGOS AND THE HOLY SPIRIT MADE INTO TWO PERSONS
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Another step in the origin and development of the Trinity was the introduction of the
heretical view that the Holy Spirit and the Logos were two separate divine Persons.
Wolfson notes that the Catholic fathers merely followed Philo in alleging that the Holy
Spirit and the Logos were two distinct beings or persons.
When the Catholic fathers distinguished between the Holy Spirit and the Logos, theywere then forced to re-interpret the writings of Matthew and John.
John had written that the Logos was made flesh (John 1.14), but Matthew had said that
that which was conceived in Mary was of the Holy Ghost (the supposed Third Person)(Matthew 1.20).
And Jesus clearly identified the Father as His Father (the supposed First Person). This
presented a problem for the founding fathers of the Trinity. How did they respond to thisparadox.
Justin Martyr of Rome and Theophilus of Antioch stated that the Holy Spirit in Luke 1.35and Matthew 1.20 was not actually the Third Person in this case, but rather the Logos
(the Second Person) in a sense! Here is some more specious nonsense! Justin wrote, It is
wrong to understand the Spirit and power of God as anything else (other) than the Logos,
who is also the firstborn of God (Apology I.33).
Most of the Catholic fathers were astute enough to avoid the contradiciton by maintaining
that the members of the Trinity had cooperated in the virgin birth. Clement ofAlexandria, Irenaeus, Tertullian, Hippolytus, and Novatian all held this view. Otherwise,
they would have been forced to admit that God the Father was the Holy Spirit, and that
He was the Logos (Word). Just as John 1.1 explicitly states, And the Word (Logos) was
God.
John of Damascus (675-749 AD) put it in the customary dogmatic terminology of the
Catholic-Protestant tradition when he wrote:
He was made by the whole Trinity, for the works of the Trinity are not separable...when one of the Three is
mentioned as the author of any work, the whole Trinity is to be understood as working.
This preposterous statement surely had to be made with tongue in cheek. Because the
main trinitarian argument for identifying the separate divine Persons is their individual
functions. So if one argues that the works of the Trinity are not separable, then it
becomes nearly impossible to identify the difference, for example, between the FirstPerson (a Spirit) and the Third Person (a Spirit)!
These early Catholic fathers rejected polytheism (many gods), but since they accepted thePlatonic triad of Philo, they were forced to compromise the unity of God.
God could no longer be an absolute unity, but he must perforce be a relative unity. This
is a weakness of the Trinity doctrine, since it can no longer honestly uphold the absoluteunity of God (the monarchy). There must be a relative unity that will allow within it
the combination of three distinct, separate elements, or what the trinitarians call
subsistences.
And Wolfson tells us that the Catholic fathers were constantly aware of a consciousness
of opposition to the Jewish conception of the absolute unity of God. This awareness,
says Wolfson, is noticeable throughout everything the Fathers say in support of the
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Trinity. This is why we maintain that THE TRINITY TEACHING IS REACTIONARY
IN ITS ESSENCE RATHER THAN BEING A POSITIVE DOCTRINE.
THE ORIGIN OF THE TRINITARIAN INTERPRETATION OF GENESIS 1.26
Genesis 1.26 also seems to have played a role, through its interpretation, in the origin of
the Trinity. Irenaeus interpreted Genesis 1.26 to indicate a plurality of divine Persons inthe Godhead:
For with Him were present the Logos (Word) and Wisdom, the Son and the Spirit, by whom and in whom,
freely and spontaneously, He made all things, to whom also He speaks saying, Let us make man after our
image and likeness.
Where had such a novel interpretation of the Hebrew scriptures come? Certainly, as we
have seen, no Jew would normally make much an interpretation. None of the apostles
did. But it is very likely that it can be traced to a Jew named Philo of Alexandria, who
had written concerning Genesis 1.26:
When scripture says that God made man in the image of God, it means he made him in the image of the
second God, who is the Logos. For nothing mortal can be made in the likeness of the Most High One and
Father of the universe.
The Logos trinitarian doctrine, in spite of all denials, and subsequent dogmatic tinkering
by theologians, postulates Christ in the role of the second God. Today, the terminologyhas been slightly altered to state, second Person.
Martin Werner wrote that every significant theologian of the church, in the pre-Nicene
period, has actually represented a subordinationist Christology. Of course, he meansevery significant
Catholic theologian, since no apostolic theologian would every downgrade Christ to thestatus of the second Person.
Origen (185-254 AD), although he is condemned by the Catholic church as a heretic, is
acknowledged as one of the most renowned Catholic fathers (except for perhapsAugustine).
Adolf Harnack wrote that, by the beginning of the fourth century, the theology of the
apologists had triumphed, and all thinkers stood under the influence of Origen.
And Rufus Jones says of Origen, he made a thorough study of Plato and Numenius, and
was in all his thinking profoundly influenced by the contemporary neo-platonic
movement.
Henry Chadwick also wrote, Origen admires Plato and Numenius, and say Numenius
was familiar with the scriptures...he calls him Numenius the Pythagorean, who
expounded Plato with great skill and maintained the Pythagorean doctrines. And Bell
says that Origen was influenced by the gnosticism of Egypt, and that he followed Philosallegorical method in biblical exegesis.
In Origens work, Against Celsus, who apparently protested the Catholic fathers use of
the Greek Logos, called the Logos the second God in three places.
Origen, in his interpretation of John 1.1, presaged the Watchtower Society, by stating thatho theos (the God) belonged to God the Father only, while theos (a god) was a lesser
title given to the Son. Jean Danielou attributes this interpretation of Origens to Philos
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earlier theology of the Logos. And as Bell remarked, Origen regarded the divinity of
Christ as inferior to the Fathers.
But to highlight the contradictory nature of trinitarian theology, Origens greatest
contribution to trinitarian theology might have been his teaching on the eternal
generation of the Son. This, in spite of the fact, that Origen was a subordinationist. His
teaching contained what F. Baur called the germs of both the Arian and the Athanasiandoctrines.
Origen wrote in his Commentary On Johns Gospel that We believe that the Father, Sonand Holy Spirit are three essences or substances. That this is tritheistic almost no one
would deny.
Almost all of these Catholic fathers were forced to attempt to refute the contemporaryoneness theology which was still quite prevalent.
THE CATHOLIC FATHERS IDENTIFIED THE CHRISTIAN LOGOS WITH
THE PAGAN LOGOS
It is incorrect to assume that these Catholic fathers did not identify the Christian Logos
with the pagan Logos. Justin Martyr (100-165 AD) wrote:
They who have lived in company with the Logos are Christians, even if they were accounted atheists. And
such among the Greeks, were Socrates and Heraclitus.
It is clear from this statement that Justin considered the pagan Logos and the Christian
Logos to be the same Logos. No matter that Socrates and Heraclitus were pagans-they
lived in company with the Logos (the same Logos that Justin was putting forth).
SUMMARY
Deuteronomy 6.4 states, Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God is one Lord. When asked by
a scribe, Which is the first commandment of all? (Mark 12.28). And Jesus answeredand said, The first of all commandments is, Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God is one
Lord (Mark 12.29).
The oneness of God is the most important commandment of all. There is only one Lord(Ephesians 4.5).
Jesus told the Jews, I am from above, and I am not of this world (John 8.23). And he
said, I said therefore unto you, that ye shall die in your sins: for if ye believe not that Iam he, ye shall die in your sins (John 8.24). The only one from above, who is not of this
world, and who is able to save us, is God Almighty Himself. I would not trust a second
divine Person or a second God to save me.
1 Timothy 3.16 tells us that God was manifest in the flesh, and 2 Corinthians 5.19 says
that God was in Christ.
Jesus could have identified God as a Trinity, but instead Jesus identified God as a
Spirit (John 4.24). Nowhere in the Bible is the word Trinity used. This is not
comparable to the use of the word rapture. Nowhere in the Bible is the word raptureused (the word means to be caught up in an ectasy, an adequate description of the
event), but the description of the rapture is clear in 1 Thessalonians 4.13-17 and in 1
Corinthians 15.51,52. But the Trinity is not described in the Bible. Nowhere are the
building blocks of the doctrine found. You cannot find the terms three Persons, Three-
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in-One, the eternal Son.
It is not possible to show the existence of even a second divine Person. All thedifferences pointed out between the Father and the Son only point to the sphere of the
incarnation. A trinitarian cannot find one scripture that shows a difference between the
Father and the Son, which does not relate to the incarnation. In other words, he cannot
relate differences within the sphere of the Godhead. All differences are within the sphereof the incarnation itself.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
1. Alexander Hislop, The Two Babylons (Neptune, NJ: Loizeau Bros, 1959)
2. Veronica Ions, Indian Mythology (London: Pam Hamlyn Ltd, 1967)
3. Arthur Wainwright, The Trinity In The New Testament (London: SPCK, 1962)
4. Morris Jastrow, Aspects of Religious Belief and Practice in Babylonia and Assyria
(New York: G.P. Putnams Son, n.d.)
5. Franz Cumont, The Oriental Religions in Roman Paganism (Chicago: The Open Court
Pub., n.d.)
6. J. Jacklin, Clement Huart, Henri Maspero et al, Asiatic Mythology (New York: Thom.
Crowell Co, 1932)
7. Donald A. Mackenzie, Egyptian Myth and Legend (London: Gresham Pub, n.d.)
8. Morris Jastrow, Hebrew and Babylonian Traditions (New York: Chas. Scribners Sons,
1914)
9. William B. Chalfant, Ancient Champions of Oneness, 1979
10. Frederick Woodbridge, The Son of Apollo (NY: Houghton Mifflin Co, 1929)
11. Max Fisher, What The Great Philosophers Thought About God (Los Angeles: Univ.
Book Pub., 1958)
12. Lewis R. Farnell, Greece and Babylon (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1911)
13. Grant Showerman, The Great Mother of The Gods (Madison, WI: Bulletin of The
Univ. of Wisconsin No. 43, 1901)
14. Samuel Fales Dunlap, The Ghevers of Hebron (NY: J.W. Bouton, 1898)
15. Horatio W. Dresser, A History of Ancient and Medieval Philosopher (NY: Thom.
Crowell, 1926)
16. Granville C. Henry Jr., Logos: Mathematics and Christian Theology (Lewisburg:
Bucknell Univ., 1976)
17. Virgin Corwin, St. Ignatius and Christianity in Antioch (New Haven: Yale Univ.Press, 1960)
18. John Cordner, The Philosophic Origin and Historic Progress of The Doctrine of TheTrinity
19. Alvan Lamson, The Chruch of The First Three Centuries (Boson: Walker, Wise and
Co., 1860)
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20. H. Chadwick, in The Cambridge History of Later Greek and Early Medieval
Philosophy (Cambridge Univ. Press, 1967)
21. Henry Malter, Hastings Encyclopedia of Ethics and Religion (ix, p.873).
22. Philip Carrington, Christian Apologetics in The Second Century (London: SPCK,
1921)
23. Elaine Pagels, The Gnostic Gospels (NY: Vintage Books, 1981)
24. Martin A. Larson, The Story of Christian Origins (Washington: New Republic, 1977)
25. James Adam, The Religious Teachers of Greece (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1909)
26. Harry A. Wolfson, The Philosophy of The Church Fathers (Cambridge: Harvard Univ.
Press, 1964)
27. H.A. Kennedy, Philos Contribution To Religion (London: Hodder & Stoughton,
1919)
28. Friedrich Ueberweg, History of Philosophy (NY: Chas. Scribners Sons, 1908)
29. Charles Merivale, The Conversion of The Northern Nations (NY: D. Appleton & Co)30. E.G. Weltin, The Ancient Popes (Westminister, MD: Newman Press, 1968)
31. God Incarnate, ed. John Hick (Philadelphia: Westminister Press, 1977)
32. Martin Werner, The Formation of Christian Dogma (Boston: Beacon Press, 1957)
33. Adolf Harnack, History of Dogma (London: Williams & Norgate, 1905)
34. Rufus Jones, The Churchs Debt To Heretics (London: James Clark & Co, 1924)
35. Harold Idris Bell, Cults and Creeds in Graeco-Roman Egypt (NY: Philosophical
Library, 1953)
36. Jean Danielou, A History of Early Christian Doctrine Before The Council of Nicea
(Philadelphia: Westminister Press, 1973)
37. K.R. Hagenbach, A History of Christian Doctrine (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1883)
38. Henry Milman, History of Latin Christianity (NY: A.C. Armstrong, 1899)
Most of the ancient writers can be found translated in the Ante-Nicene Christian Library(Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1868), or later editions.
THE COUNCIL OF NICEA
IN THE EARLY FOURTH CENTURY a great controversy erupted in Alexandria, Egypt,
between Arius, a presbyter (local minister), and Alexander, his bishop, over the deity ofJesus Christ. Alexandria was a major center of Greek culture and philosophy, which
heavily influenced both sides of the debate. The controversy spread rapidly and
threatened the unity of the institutional church. Although Alexander excommunicatedArius, Arius received support from some influential people, including Eusebius, bishop of
Nicomedia.
When Constantine succeeded in becoming sole emperor of Rome in A.D. 324, hepublicly embraced Christianity. Politically, he saw Christianity as an effective tool of
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unifying his domain and therefore viewed the Arian controversy as a significant threat to
his goal. To solve the problem, in 325 he convened the first ecumenical council of
Christendom since Bible days, paying for the delegates to come to the town of Nicea,near the imperial residence.
The central issue at the Council of Nicea was the identity of Jesus Christ in relation to the
Godhead. The main questions were, Is Jesus truly God? and Are the Father and the Son ofthe same essence? The council was not strictly a debate over modalism (a form of
Oneness belief) versus trinitarianism, although modalism was a factor. As things turned
out historically, it was more of a debate as to how to define the second person of thetrinity.
Some of the participants were basically modalistic or Oneness in their thinking. In fact,
one prominent member of the victorious party, Marcellus, bishop of Ancyra, vigorouslypromoted a form of modalism after the council, and another, Eustathius, bishop of
Antioch, was later condemned for modalism. Moreover, many of the average participants,
who may not have really understood the theological dispute, could have hadpredominantly Oneness concepts.
The catalyst for the controversy, however, was the doctrine of Arius. Essentially, he took
to an extreme position of the subordinationism doctrine taught by the Greek Apologists(second-century writers who defended Christianity) and the early trinitarians (third
century). They held that Jesus was a second divine person subordinate to the Father. For
support, the Arians particularly appealed to the early trinitarian writer Origen.
Arius said there is one God, not a trinity, and that Jesus is not truly God but, in effect, a
demigod. He is a created being of greater rank than humans but not equal to the Father.
The Arian position is equivalent to that of Jehovah's Witnesses today.
At the Council of Nicea the leading spokesman against Arius was Athanasius, a young
archdeacon from Alexandria who later succeeded Alexander as bishop. He taught that
there are three persons in one God and that these three persons are coequal, coeternal, andcoessential (or consubstantial, of the same substance). The debate centered on the Father
and the Son; neither side spoke definitively about the Holy Spirit. Primarily, the Arians
attacked the deity of Jesus while Athanasius defended it, saying that Jesus is equal to theFather in every way yet a second person.
Three factions developed at the council: a minority of Arians, a minority of Athanasians,
and a majority who did not fully understand the issues involved but who wanted peace. Ingeneral, this third group took an intermediate position, but it is difficult to characterize
them as a whole. Historians sometimes call many in this group Origenists or Semi-
Arians. The majority did not necessarily embrace the complete trinitarian doctrine of
Athanasius, but they eventually voted with him in defense of Christ's deity and againstthe Arian view.
Athanasius considered all who opposed Arianism to be on his side, and some of hisstrongest supporters at this time were, or turned out to be, modalists. The creed that the
Council of Nicea passed clearly rejected Arianism, but it did not definitely establish
trinitarianism or reject modalism.
Athanasius used four lines of reasoning to uphold the deity of Christ:
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(1) The Scriptures teach it.
(2) The church has always worshipped Jesus.
(3) To be our Savior, Jesus has to be God.
(4) He is the Logos (Word), and based on philosophical considerations, the Logos has to
be God. He argued that Jesus is of the same essence as the Father.It is easy to see how Athanasius' position could appeal to a Oneness believer. Faced with
a choice between Arius and Athanasius on the deity of Jesus Christ, Oneness believerswould choose the latter. In fact, the Arians objected that the doctrine of Athanasius
sounded too much like that of Sabellius, a prominent modalist of the third century.
When the council convened, Bishop Eusebius of Nicomedia offered an Arian creed,which the assembled bishops immediately rejected. Bishop Eusebius of Caesarea
proposed a compromise creed that satisfied almost everyone, but Athanasius and his
group objected because it was ambiguous and did not resolve the issue. Wanting thewidest agreement possible, Constantine pressed for inclusion of the word homoousios
("same essence") to describe the Father and the Son. His personal advisor, Bishop Hosius
of Cordova, probably gave him this suggestion.
In the end, persuaded by the oratory of Athanasius and heeding the bidding of the
emperor, the council agreed to use the word homoousios, affirming that Jesus is of the
same substance as the Father. The emperor pronounced the resulting creed to be divinelyinspired, promulgated it as the law of the land, and insisted that every bishop at the
council sign it or be deposed and exiled. Only Arius and two bishops refused to sign the
creed, and they were exiled. Eusebius of Nicomedia and two other bishops did not sign
the attached condemnatory clause and were removed from office. Some of the signershad strong reservations, however, and some, such as Eusebius of Caesarea, promptly
began interpreting it contrary to its intent.
The creed formulated by the Council of Nicea, which is not the so-called Nicene Creedused today, affirmed belief in "one God, the Father almighty... and in one Lord Jesus
Christ, the Son of God, begotten of the Father, the only begotten; that is, of the essence
[ousia of the Father, God of God, light of light, very [true] God of very [true] God,begotten not made, being of one substance [homoousiosl with the Father ... and in the
Holy Ghost."
This terminology is compatible with both Oneness and trinitarian thinking, although theclause "God of God" may erroneously imply a distinction of persons. Athanasius believed
one divine person was begotten from another divine person, but a Oneness believer could
use the same words to mean the one God came in flesh and therefore God who dwelt inJesus is the same as God before the Incarnation.
The original creed directly refutes Arianism by saying that Jesus is of one substance with
the Father. To the creed itself was appended a clause pronouncing an anathema (curse)upon various Arian statements. One of these can be seen as incompatible with modern
Oneness terminology, for it denounces the view that there was a time when the Son was
not, and Oneness theology says the role of the Son began with the Incarnation. Thepurpose of the clause was not to refute modalism, however, but the Arian idea that the
divine nature of Christ had a beginning.
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Ironically, another portion of the anathema clause contradicts modern trinitarianism
terminology, as well as that of Origen, for it denounces the view that the Father and Son
are of a different hypostasis. As used here and in Hebrews 1:3, hypostasis basicallymeans "substance," but trinitarians later began using it to mean "person" and affirming
that indeed the Son was a different hypostasis from the Father.
In summary, the Nicene Council was a clear rejection of Arianism but not a clearrejection of modalism. From a historical perspective, it was the first official step in the
establishment of trinitarianism, but at the time that was by no means clear. From the
trinitarian perspective of Athanasius, it vindicated the coequality and coessence of twodivine persons, the Father and the Son, but some of his most vocal supporters did not
accept the distinction of persons and some of his most vocal critics saw it as an
endorsement of Sabellianism.
To put the Council of Nicea in historical perspective, briefly here are the major steps in
the development of trinitarianism.
About 150 the Greek Apologists, beginning with Justin, defined the Word to be the Son,
described the Word/Son as a second divine being begotten by God the Father at a point intime before creation, and said that the Word was subordinate to God. A threefold
baptismal formula was introduced, along with some vague notions of threeness in relationto God.
About 210 Tertullian introduced the term trinity and formulated the concept of one Godin three persons. In his trinity, the Father alone is eternal, and He is superior to the other
two persons. About 215-30 Origen likewise promoted trinitarianism, contributing the key
doctrines of the eternal Son and the eternal generation of the Son. He thereby prepared
the way to elevate the status of the second person, although he himself still taught that theFather was superior to the other two persons.
Under the influence of Athanasius, the Council of Nicea in 325 rejected Arianism. It
declared that the Father and the Son are of the same substance, making them equal.
The Council of Constantinople in 381 followed the doctrine of Athanasius and the three
theologians of Cappadocia. It clarified the status of the Holy Spirit and placed all threepersons on an equal footing. The Nicene Creed used today reflects the theology
established here.
Based in part on the theology of Augustine and produced sometime in the fifth to eighthcenturies, the Athanasian Creed put in definitive form the doctrine of the victors of Nicea
and Constantinople. It declared the coequality, coeternity, and consubstantiality of the
three persons.
Over two hundred years passed from the first teaching of a plurality of divine persons
(two) (c. 150) to the full acceptance of the doctrine of the trinity (381). About one
hundred years passed from the introduction of trinitarianism (c. 200) to the time itbecame dominant (e. 300), and almost another century before it reached its definitive
form and received official acceptance (381). Yet a third century passed before all
significant political threats to it ended with the conversion of the victorious barbariansfrom Arianism to trinitarianism (496).
WHY DID JESUS PRAY IF HE WAS GOD?
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The question has been asked, "If the Lord Jesus Christ was God, why did he pray to theFather?" We teach by the word of God that there is ONE GOD, the creator of the heavens
and the earth and all mankind, manifest to mankind as Father (Creator), Son (Saviour),
and the Holy Spirit (Indwelling spirit). We believe and teach that there is but ONE GOD
with three manifestations. "For there are three that bear record" in heaven, the Father, theWord and the Holy Ghost: and these three are ONE" (I Jn. 5:7). It does not say that they
agree or work as one but that they are ONE. The Name of the ONE TRUE GOD is Jesus
Christ (Matt. 28:19, Acts 2:38). Jesus is the Father, Jesus is the Son, Jesus is the HolyGhost.
Now in asking the question, "Why did Jesus pray to the Father?" the Trinitarians try to
prove that there is more than one in the Godhead. In this question they see Jesus, the Son,the second person, praying to the Father, the final person in the Godhead.
Briefly let me bring in at this point the doctrine of the Trinity. This doctrine was the resultof the Council of Nicea which was called by Constantine , the first Christian emperor of
the Roman Empire. This council was called to settle the question of the Godhead , andthe result was the doctrine of the Trinity. Briefly the doctrine is: "The Father is God, the
Son is God, and the Holy Spirit is God." "And yet they are not three Gods but one God,"but "these three persons, being truly distinct one from another."
Also in this "trinity" of persons the son is begotten of the Father by an eternal generation,and the Holy Spirit proceeds by an eternal pro- cession from the Father and the Son, yet
not withstanding they differ as to origin, the persons are co-eternal and co-equal, all alike
are uncreated and omnipotent."
This doctrine of the Trinity is nowhere to be found in the Bible. The Word of God plainly
teaches THREE MANIFESTATIONS OF ONE GOD, not three persons or Gods.
Nowhere in the Word of God can you find these words, "Trinity", "three persons", or
"Holy Three." These are terms used by men to turn the hearts of men from the truth ofGod and who He is. Basically the doctrine of the Trinity has not changed since the
council of Nicea.
When we say that Jesus is the ONE TRUE GOD and beside Him there is no other the
Trinitarian will ask this question, "Why did Jesus pray to the Father? They often say, "If
Jesus is God then He prayed to himself." I will do my best to answer these questions.
First, let me ask the Trinitarian a question. Their doctrine states that the Father and the
Son are two persons and that they are separate and distinct one from the other, yet they
are coeternal and co-equal. In simple language this means that the Father has no morepower than the Son and likewise the Son has no more power than the Father. The Father
was not before the Son or the Son was not before the Father. Now the question I will askis this: "If the Father and Son are co-equal , why did the Son pray to the Father?" You
pray to someone because you need help, If the Son is co-equal, with the Father he had noneed to pray to Him for help because he has just as much power and might. Please think,
Mr. Trinitarian, before you ask such a question.
It is accepted everywhere that Jesus is the Son (Matt. 1:23-25). But let us prove that Jesus
is the Father as well as the Son. "For unto us a child is born , unto us a son is given: and
the government shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall be called Wonderful,
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Counsellor, the Mighty God, the Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace." (Isa. 9:6) Some
say we are foolish to call Jesus both Father and Son, but this scripture calls him Father
and Son in the same verse. A child would be born, a son given, but he would be called theMighty God, the Everlasting Father. Jesus declared that He and the Father are one (Jn.
10:30). He does not say they work as one or agree as one, but He plainly states that they
ARE one. Philip asked Jesus to show the disciples the Father in John 14:7-10. Jesus toldPhilip, "Have I been so long time with you and yet hast thou not known me, Philip. He
that hath seen me hath seen the Father ; and how sayest thou then shew us the Father?"
Some will say then if Jesus is the Son and also the Father then He prayed to Himself. ltwould not be unscriptural to say this. Before you go up in Holy Smoke let us look at the
Word of God. There is nothing unscriptural about the statement for in Heb. 6:13 we find
"when God made promise to Abraham because He could swear by no greater, He swore
by himself?" Did not God swear by himself? In Eph. 5:25-27 we read where Jesuspresents the church to himself.
Let us look at it in its true light. God is a spirit and we know by the word of God that aspirit has not flesh and bone. He created all things. This makes him Father. This same
God manifested himself to the world as a Son. "But when the fullness of time was come,God sent forth his Son, made of a woman, made under the law" (Gal: 4:4) The Son was
made. "Wherefore when He cometh unto the world, he saith, Sacrifice and offering thouwouldest not, but a body has thou prepared me." God would come to redeem fallen man
so He prepared a body in the virgin Mary and got into that body and came to us to be our
Saviour. This manifestation of God in mankind was called the Son. Not another, but Godhimself manifested in flesh. (Isa. 7:14, Matt. 1:22,23). This son was Emmanuel. "God
with us." This was the child to be born and the Son to be given, yet He was the Mighty
God, the Everlasting Father (Isa. 9:6). The Son was the mystery of Godliness beingrevealed to mankind; God manifested in flesh (1 Tim. 3:16). This was God becoming
flesh and dwelling among us (John l:l,14).
He prayed because as Son he took on himself the form of man and in taking on the formof man he took on himself a human nature (not a fallen nature!) Please read Phil. 2:5-8.
In taking on this nature he could hunger, thirst, become tired, could cry, and could even
die. But one of the principle characteristics of the human nature is that it must pray. Thereis something within all men that cries out for them to pray whether they do or not. So
Christ in his humanity prayed unto the eternal Spirit. Now even as God took these human
characteristics on himself when He came into this world, even so He laid them aside in
His resurrection, and we no longer know Him after the flesh (II Cor. 5:16). Paul said wehave known Christ after the flesh, yet now henceforth know we Him no more. After His
resurrection we know him as Thomas found Him, "My Lord, and my God" (Jn. 20:28).
We know Him as John saw Him on the isle of Patmos, as the Almighty (Rev. 1:7,8). As
the first and last (Rev. 1:17,18). If Jesus is the first and last there can be room for noother. We know Him now as King of Kings and LORD OF LORDS (Rev. 19:16).
THE GODHEAD: Part 1
Romans 1:20
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* This explains the purpose for having a Godhead study.
* The Godhead is without excuse and we must understand this in order to receive the fullrevelation of who God is.
THREE BASIC THEORIES OF THE GODHEAD
John 17:17* Sanctify them through Thy truth: Thy word is truth. We must let the Bible be the basis
for all establishment of truth.
WHO, WHAT, WHERE IS GOD? SPIRIT
John 4:23-24
* God is a Spirit. When you see the term God, it is referring to a Spirit.
Acts 7:48-49
* God is not a little figure or a person off in heaven somewhere. God is a Spirit that fills
heaven and earth, because heaven is His throne and earth is His footstool.
OMNIPRESENT (EVERYWHERE)
Psalms 189:7-10
* God is a Spirit that is everywhere. You can not hide from God.
* Where ever two or three are gathered together in His name there He is. Why? "He is
everywhere."
I Kings 8:27
* The Heaven of heavens cannot contain Thee. Why? He is everywhere.
* A place or body can contain the fulness (or quality) of God, but can not contain all ofthe quantity of God.
Deuteronomy 4:35 & 39
* Lord is God-there is none else beside Him.
* The term Lord used in all capitals always refers to God or deity (the omnipresent
Spirit).
* Verse 39: Only one God that is in heaven above and the earth beneath.
* One God or Spirit that is everywhere.
Proverbs 15:3
* Eyes of the Lord are everywhere (omnipresent). You can not make God out to be a
human or He would be all eyes according to this scripture; but it is simply saying that Heis an omnipresent Spirit.
Jeremiah 23:24
* Can not hide from the Lord. Fills heaven and earth.
* If there is only one, where are the other three (refer to chart)? We are establishing the
fact not the theory that there is only one God (not two or three) and He is a Spirit.
INVISIBLE
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St. John 1:18
* No man has seen God at any time. Some say Moses saw the hinder part of God. He sawthe manifestation of God, but not the Spirit itself. God can manifest himself as anything,
and you can see the manifestation (burning bush, dove, etc.) but you can not see the Spirit
itself, because it is invisible and no man has ever seen it.
John 5:37
* They had not seen his shape nor heard his voice. What they did see was the
manifestation of God.
Colossians 1:15
* Jesus is the image of the invisible God. He is all of God we will see and we will coverhow this is later in the study.
IMMORTAL (EVERLASTING, CAN NOT DIE)
1 Timothy 1:17
* Immortal, eternal, invisible, only wise God. Immortal means God (the Spirit) can never
die. This is important to know so you can later understand about the crucifixion of Christ.
I Timothy 6:14-16
* Jesus will show who is the only King of Kings and Lord of lords and He who only hathimmortality.
* He is also invisible. Since He is an invisible, omnipresent Spirit that fills the atoms of
the universe just like a thick fog, so if the Spirit would become visible (even after we getto heaven) we would all be blind. He will never cease to be an omnipresent Spirit, so the
only way we will ever see God is in the face of Jesus Christ (who is the visible image of
the invisible God).
Psalms 90:1-4* We dwell in the presence of God, and he is from everlasting to everlasting.
* Flesh is not eternal, but God is eternal.
Luke 24:39
* Spirit does not have flesh and bones. God is not an old man up in heaven. He is animmortal, everlasting Spirit. Flesh gets old, a spirit does not.
Ephesians 4:4-6
* One God and one Spirit (refer to chart). There is one God who is through all and in you
all. That is why the Spirit in you is called the Holy Ghost or Christ in you. There are three
offices of God, but not three Gods:
(1) Father-Spirit as creator and ruler.
(2) Son-flesh which spirit dwelt in, making him God.
(3) Holy Ghost-Spirit of God as it deals with man. I am a father, son and husband, but I
am not three persons and I only have one name.
Mark 12:29-37
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* First commandment: the Lord our God is One Lord. Spirit prophesying through David.
God and man dwelling in Christ. If the scripture says there is one, who has the right to
say there are three.
* Jesus went on to quote Psalms 110:1 to the Jews and asked them how was the messiah
going to be David's son and David's Lord. The (flesh) that was born of Mary was of the
lineage of David according to the promises God had made to Abraham, as recorded in thefirst chapter of Luke and Matthew- (Lineage is recorded all the way to Mary and Joseph
with David and his sons included.) The God that David prayed to was the same God that
dwelt inside that human body, making Jesus both David's Lord and his son. Look at thewords Lord - the first is all capitals and the second is not. It lets us know that this is the
Spirit speaking about the flesh.
* Right hand of God will be covered later but it refers to the power of God. Spirit set upflesh and gave him all power.
* The Son did not exist from the beginning, except in the plan of God, but Jesus was fromthe beginning. How? The term son refers to the flesh of God but the Name Jesus includes
both flesh and Spirit, and the Spirit of God that was in Jesus did exist in the beginning.We must realize this to understand how the terms are applied in scripture.
I Timothy 3:16
* God (deity) was manifest in the flesh.
* God was seen of angels. When did the angels see God? When the flesh was born in
Bethlehem. When will we see God? When we get to heaven and see the glorified body of
Jesus.
* Flesh could not do anything without the Spirit that dwelt in it because Jesus said the
Words he spoke was not him, but the father dwelling in him was doing the work.
II Corinthians 5:19
* God in Christ. Reconciling the world back to himself. Why? There was no other God to
reconcile him to. That is why He said He would swear by Himself, because there was no
other God up there to swear by. There is only one God (Spirit).
John 3:34-35
* Spirit in Christ given without measure. If He was co-equal God He would not have tobe given anything, but He was a man who had to have the Spirit of God in Him to be able
to do the works of God.
Matthew 1:18-25
* Verses 18-20: Mary was overshadowed by the Holy Ghost making Jesus the son of the
Holy Ghost. So unless the Holy Ghost and the Father are the same Spirit instead of Co-equal persons then Jesus would be the son of the Holy Ghost instead of the son of theFather or else He would have two fathers. We realize from this, that they are only offices
of the one Spirit of God, and the Spirit is called the Holy Ghost here because it is dealing
with man.
* Verse 21: His name shall be called Jesus which means Jehovah has become our
salvation. An angel named him, not Joseph, because it was prophesied in the Old
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Testament that the Lord would give him a new name. Keep this in mind because we will
cover it later in the study.
* Verse 23: Jesus was God (Spirit) with us. He was God manifest in the flesh.
COMPARING SCRIPTURES OF OLD AND NEW TESTAMENTS
Scriptural comparisons concerning the prophecies about Jehovah of the Old Testamentbeing fulfilled by Jesus in the New Testament (proving they are the same).
Isaiah 43:3, 10-15, 25
* Verse 3: Lord thy God is the Holy one (not 2 or 3), and the Saviour.
* Verse 10-15: There was no God formed before Him, nor after him. Yet the doctrine of
the Trinity indicates that the son proceeded out from the father in eternity before theworld was. According to this scripture that would not be possible.
* There is no Saviour other than this one God that is speaking in these scriptures, so whenthe Saviour comes to the world it will be this one God of the Old Testament.
* Called our redeemer, Holy One, Saviour, Creator, King which are terms that are applied
to Jesus in the New Testament.
* Verse 25: It is the one God that will blot out or remove our sins. Isaiah 44:6, 8, 24
* Verse 6: He is the Lord, King, Redeemer, the First and the Last and beside Him there isno God.
* Verse 8: If there is another God, He does not know about it.
* Verse 24: He is the God that made all things, created the heavens and earth alone, byHimself, and there was no other God with Him.
Isaiah 45:5, 6, 15, 18
* All these scriptures simply reemphasize the fact that there is only one God that is theSaviour and Creator and there is no other God besides Him.
Isaiah 45:21-24
* He is the only God and Saviour there is and unto Him every knee will bow and every
tongue will confess. Philippians 2:9-1 1
* The name of Jesus is above every name and at the name of Jesus, every knee will bow
and every tongue shall confess that Jesus Christ is Lord. This is the fulfillment of the
prophecy of Isaiah. It proves that Jesus is the one God of the Old Testament.
JESUS AS THE FATHER
Isaiah 9:6-7
* The son to be born is referred to as the mighty God and the everlasting Father, which
proves again that Jesus is the one God of the Old Testament that came in human flesh to
redeem man from his sin by the death of the flesh on calvary. This also makes Him ourSaviour and Redeemer which fulfills the other prophecies concerning the one true God of
the Old Testament.
John 3:13
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* Jesus was on earth talking to Nicodemus, yet He said He was in heaven also. This
proves He is man and yet God that is everywhere according to the deity that lives in His
flesh. Not a separate person, but the same one Spirit of an omnipresent God.
I Corinthians 8:4-6
* There is but one God, the Father (term father as pertaining to God always refer to theomnipresent Spirit) and one Lord Jesus Christ. (Use this in referring to the next
scripture.)
II Corinthians 3:17
* The Lord (Jesus) is that Spirit, when compared with the previous scripture, this proves
that Jesus is the same one God as the Father (Spirit).
John 10:30
* Jesus said, "I and my Father are one". How are they one? When Spirit was put in flesh
they became one person. He was fully God and fully man in one person. This statementcaused the Jews to try to stone Him because they could not accept Him as the one God of
the Old Testament, which eventually resulted in their being cut off and God turning to theGentiles to take out a people for His name's sake.
John 14:5-10
* Jesus told the disciples from henceforth you know the Father and have seen Him. Sincethe Father is an invisible Spirit that no man can see, the only way they could see Him was
in the face of Jesus Christ. He proves this on His next point.
* Philip asked to see the Father and it would satisfy him. Jesus seemed surprised that Hehad been so long with Philip and he still had not recognized that He was the Father. He
let Philip know that when you see Jesus you have seen the Father. (The body of Jesus
Christ is the only visible part of the Father you can see.)
* He revealed that it was the Father (Spirit) that was in Him who was doing the works ofthe Spirit.
John 8:24, 27
* Jesus was speaking of the Father in all of these verses and He let them know they
would die in their sins if they did not believe that He was the Father. Why? Because they
would never be baptized in His name for the remission of sins as commanded by theapostles.
Colossians 1:14-20
* Verse 14: We have redemption through His blood (this lets us know these scriptures are
referring to Jesus Christ).
* Verse 15: Image of the invisible God. Jesus is the only physical part of God we willever see and He is also the perfect image of God Spiritually because He is God in flesh.
* Verses 16-20: Jesus is the creator of all things, which means He has to be the onecreator that Isaiah prophesied about which also said there was no other God beside Him.
* He reconciled all things to himself, because there is no other God to reconcile it to.
(Flesh reconciled all things to the Spirit.)
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Colossians 2:8-12
* Paul warned against philosophy, vain deceit, tradition of men and rudiments of theworld.
* Verses 9-10: The fulness of the Godhead bodily is in Jesus Christ. The body of Jesus
does not contain all of the quantity of God, but all of the fulness of the quality of God.The body of Jesus is God's headquarters.
* Ye are complete in Him, because He is the head of all principality and power.
* Verses 11-12: Old Testament circumcision was a cutting away of flesh made with
hands, which was a type of New Testament circumcision made without hands which is
the putting away of the sins of the flesh by baptism in the Name of Jesus Christ (for the
remission of sins).
Matthew 28:17-20
* All power in heaven and earth was given to Jesus. If He was a co-equal God, then whywould He have to be given anything; but, humanity had to receive power from deity. This
is the father setting the son up on the throne as prophesied.* Baptize in the Name (singular) of the Father (not in the Father, but the name of theFather). Jesus said I come in my Father's name. The name of the Father is Jesus.
* Name of the Son-She shall bring forth a son and thou shalt call his name Jesus. Jesus isthe name of the Son.
* Name of the Holy Ghost-He promised to send the Holy Ghost in his name. The name of
the Holy Ghost is Jesus.
* Since Spirit (Father, Holy Ghost) and flesh (son) are in the same person of Jesus, the
name of the Father, son and Holy Ghost is Jesus. if the apostles use the name Jesus in
baptism, then we will know that this is the correct meaning and fulfillment of this
scripture.
Acts 2:38
* The Apostles (who had received direct revelation from Jesus) baptized in the Name of
Jesus for the remission of sin.
Acts 10:48
* The first gentile saved was commanded to be baptized in the name of the Lord. He had
just preached to them that they could receive remission of sins through his name.
Acts 4:10-12
* Jesus is the only name under heaven given among men that will save you. Where was
the name given in the plan of salvation? Baptism for the remission of sins. That is whyJesus said, "Unless you believe that I am he, ye shall die in your sins".
I John 5:5-8
* There are three that bear record in heaven. He bears record of three offices or
manifestations, but it does not say that there are three separate persons in existence,
because that would contradict the other scriptures on the Godhead. These three witnesses
are one. The three earth bearing witnesses (blood, water and Spirit) are said to agree in
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one, not are one.
I John 5:13
* You can have eternal life through believing in the name of the Son of God.
I John 5:20
* Jesus Christ is the true God and eternal life.
Jeremiah 10:10
* The Lord (Jehovah) of the Old Testament is stated as being the true God. Since there is
only one God, the Jesus of the New Testament must be the Jehovah of the Old Testament.
Zechariah 12:1
* The one Lord that created heaven and earth is doing the speaking in these chapters.
Zechariah 12:9-10
* They will look upon me whom they pierced? Who was it that was pierced on Calvary?
Jesus. This proves again that Jesus was the One Lord of Israel.
Zechariah 13:6-9
* This speaks of a time when the God of the Old Testament will return to the Jews and
they will ask Him about the wounds in His hands. Who had the nail prints in his hands?Jesus.
* He will destroy two thirds of Israel, but He will spare the third part when they
recognize Him and call upon His name. (The name of the one with the nail prints.) Hewill then answer and say it is my people and they shall say "the Lord is my God". (Jesus
is our God.)
* If He refuses to spare the Jews who have not recognized who He is, what makes us
believe He will spare the gentiles who refuse to recognize Him as the one God of heavenand earth.
Zechariah 14:1-5, 9
* The Lord's feet will touch the Mount of Olives. The feet of Jesus are the only feet God
has, because a Spirit does not have flesh and bone.
* Lord God will come and all of His saints with Him.
* Verse 9: He will be King over the whole earth, there will be one Lord and His name
one. The whole world will recognize that Jesus is the one true and living God.
Acts 1:9-12
* Jesus left from the top of the Mount of Olives and an angel told the apostles He wouldreturn in like manner. So this also confirms that Jesus will be the God whose feet touch
the mount of Olives.
I Thessalonians 3:11-13
* This states that Jesus is the one coming with His saints (fulfilling the prophesy of Zach.
14:5) proving again that Jesus is the Jehovah of the Old Testament.
NAME OF THE ONE COMING BACK
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Revelation 19:11-16
* He had a name written no man knew, but He Himself. He was called The Word of God.We will find out the name of the word in our next scripture reading.
* He is also THE KING OF KINGS and THE LORD OF LORDS.
John 1:14* Word was made flesh. Everyone realizes this scripture is saying Jesus is called the
Word.
Matthew 1:21
* Thou shalt call His name Jesus. (The name Jesus means Jehovah has become our
salvation.)
Isaiah 62:2
* The gentiles would see His righteousness and kings would see His glory and He shallbe called by a new name which the Lord shall name. That is why Joseph did not name
Him but God sent an angel to name Him. The new name is Jesus (Jehovah Saviour). This
is confirmed in the next scriptures.
Matthew 12:18-21
* He is showing here that Jesus is fulfilling the prophesy of Isaiah when he wrote "In Hisname shall the gentiles trust".
Acts 9:5 & 15
* The Lord said His name was Jesus.
* Verse 15: Paul was sent to bear His name before gentiles and kings. (The fulfillment of
Isaiah 62:2.)
Revelation 2:17* He will give a new name who no man except He that has received it.
Galatians 3:27
* We receive the name of Jesus when we are baptized in His name. That is why the ones
who have received it know His name, because you will not be baptized in His name ifyou do not believe He is the one true God.
Revelation 14:1
* They have his Father's name written in their foreheads.
Revelation 3:12
* He will write upon him the name of God. The name of the city is revealed, but the nameof God is not revealed except to say it will be His new name. Now, we realize from
scripture that the new name is Jesus and remember the name in the foreheads was also the
name of the Father, proving that the Father's new name is Jesus. He robed Himself inflesh and became a son which made Him Jehovah Saviour or Jesus.
* He is the Father in creation, the Son in redemption and the Holy Ghost in His dealings
with man; but, His name is Jesus.
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THE GODHEAD: Part 2
THE KING, THE FIRST AND THE LAST
Isaiah 44:6
* The LORD is the King and the first and the last, and besides Him there
is no God.
Revelation 1:4, 8, 11, 17, 18
* Verses 4, 8, 11: Jesus is called the Alpha and Omega, the beginning and
the end, the first and last, the one which is, which was and which is tocome, the Almighty. Jesus is the Almighty God.
* Verses 17, 18: The first and the last is the one which was dead but is
alive forevermore, and has the keys of hell and death. This has to be Jesusbecause the flesh is all that could die.
Zechariah 9:9
* Israel's King will come to them riding on the colt of a donkey. We see
this fulfilled in the next verses.
Matthew 21:2-9
* Jesus fulfilled the prophecy of Zechariah in these verses. Proving He is
the one King of Israel.
Matthew 2:2
* Jesus was born King of the Jews.
I Timothy 6:14-16
* Jesus Christ is the King of Kings and Lord of Lords.
PROPHESY OF THE OLD TESTAMENT, FULFILLED IN THE
NEW TESTAMENT.
Isaiah 35:1-6
* He prophesied that God (remember Isaiah's other prophesies about there
only being one God) would come and save them and they would see the
glory of the Lord.
* When this God comes the blind would see, the deaf would hear, the lame
would walk and the dumb would talk.
*Isaiah 42:5-8
* When He comes He will be a light to the gentiles, bring prisoners from
the prison house and His glory He will not give to another.
Isaiah 48:11-13
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* He will not give His glory to another.
* I am He; I am the first and the last.
* The creator is doing the speaking.
Isaiah 40:3-5
* The voice crying in the wilderness would prepare the way for God, and
His glory would be revealed.
Matthew 3:1-3
* John the Baptist was the one who was the voice in the wilderness who
came to prepare the way of the Lord. (The one God of the Old Testament.)
Matthew 3:10-13
* He will baptize with the Holy Ghost.
* Then cometh Jesus. He was the Lord that John was preparing the way
for.
Luke 7:20-23
* John sent word from prison to ask Jesus if He was the one who was to
come. Jesus simply answered him reminding him of the fulfillment ofprophesy. The blind see, the lame walk, deaf hear, and the gospel is
preached.
John 1:14
* This is the fulfillment of Isaiah 40:5, the glory of the Lord was revealed
in Jesus Christ. Remember, He will not give His glory to another.
Malachi 1:6, 11, 14
* This talks of a time when the priest would despise his name and not
realize it. It would be during a time when his name would be great amongthe gentiles and the heathen and incense (prayer) would be offered in his
name. This has to be speaking of the times of Jesus Christ. Because that is
when this prophesy to the gentiles was fulfilled.
Malachi 2:1, 2, 10
* He will place a curse on the priest because they did not give glory to his
name nor lay it to their heart.
* Verse 10: We all have one father and were created by one God and those
who were not obeying this were profaning the covenant (that the Lord our
God is one Lord) of our fathers.
* This proves God does care if we understand who He is and that we must
lay it to heart to love and teach that truth.
THE CONTROVERSIES OF THE GODHEAD LAMB-FLESH;
GOD-SPIRIT
(Comment: We realize there are some scriptures that seem to indicate that
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God could be a trinity, unless you take the rest of the scriptures on that
subject and compare them. The purpose of this part of the study is toanswer these contentions scripturally.)
Revelation 5:1-7, 13; 7:10
* Some read this and say there are two up in heaven because the lambtook the book from him that was on the throne.
* Remember, Revelation is wrote in symbolic form and simply showingthe purposes of his plan for coming in flesh to redeem man. Remember,
that the Lamb is the flesh but God is a Spirit that is on the throne and can
not die. The Lamb is called Root of David (flesh) which was slain.
Revelation 5:9-10
* Flesh died; humanity died, so that is why he was able to open the book.
He had been tempted in all points but without sin, yet He gave His life aransom for others to redeem them by His blood.
I Timothy 2:5
* There is one God (Spirit) and one mediator between God and man, the
man (flesh, lamb) Christ Jesus. Revelation the fifth chapter is showing this
taking place in symbolic form.
II Corinthians 5:17-19
* This is more literal fulfillment of what is symbolized in Revelation
chapter 5.
Hebrews 7:24-25
* The man (flesh, lamb) is able to make intercession to the Spirit (God on
the throne in Revelation) for us.Revelation 7:17
* The Lamb here is in the midst of the throne which simply reveals you
can not divide him from the Godhead because the Spirit set him up in this
place of power and is God's headquarters. The Father (Spirit) and son
(flesh, lamb) became one person in Jesus Christ making him God.
LET US MAKE MAN IN OUR IMAGE
Genesis 1:26-27; 3:22
* Many people contend from these scriptures that God is three persons or
a trinity.* I contend that God was counseling with His own will in the presence of
His angels and by His prophetic wisdom spoke of things that be not as
though they were.
* From this one scripture it would be impossible to tell which is correct,
so we must search other scriptures that will allow the word of God to flow
in perfect harmony.
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* I contend that for God to be speaking to a trinity of persons or Gods
would contradict the first commandment that the Lord our God is oneLord.
* Some even contend that the word Elohim translated Lord here is a plural
term, but even the Jewish scholars say it means plural in attributes and notnumber of persons.
* The next scriptures will reveal which of these points is correct.
Genesis 11:6-7
* God always used angels to carry out His biddings, so I feel He was
speaking to His angels here. (See next scripture also.)
Genesis 3:22-24
* He placed cherubims at the entrance to the garden. The angels knew thedifference between good and evil because Satan and one-third of the
angels had already been cast out.
Job 38:4, 7
* God is speaking of the time of creation. The angels were there because
He said the sons of God (angels) shouted for joy. So I contend God was
speaking to His ministering Spirits (angels) who were with Him atcreation.
Ephesians 1:11, 1:4-11
* He works everything after the council of His own will.
* Verses 4-11: We were even predestinated according to the good pleasure
of His will, which He has purposed in Himself. This says He counseled
with His own will not other gods or persons, yet He spoke in the presenceof His angels. (Example-Boss on job counseling with himself in the
presence of his men, but he is the one in authority.)
Romans 4:17
* God counseled with His own will in the presence of His angels and
spoke of things that be not as though they were.
John 1:1-3
* Word was God. (Word = Logos = thought, plan, concept; Deityexpressed.)
* The son coming was in the plan from the beginning.Isaiah 46:9-10
* He is God, there is none like Him. He declares the end from the
beginning and His council will stand.
Revelation 13:8
* Jesus Christ was the Lamb slain before the foundation of the world. He
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was slain in the plan of God, but not fulfilled until almost 2,000 years ago.
I Peter 1:19-21
* He was foreordained before the foundation of the world (in the plan of
God), but manifest in these last times for us.
Romans 5:14
* Adam was made in the figure (image) of Him that was to come (Jesus
Christ).
Romans 8:29
* He was foreknown and predestinated to be conformed to the image ofHis Son. (The image that was in His plan and the image Adam was made
in.)
Colossians 1:15
* Jesus is the image of the invisible God.
I Corinthians 15:45-47
* The man Adam was a living soul, but the second Adam (Jesus) was a
quickening Spirit.
* The first man was of the earth, earthly; the second man (Jesus) was the
Lord from heaven.
Galations 4:4
* When the fullness of time was come (according to the plan), He sent
forth His Son. How? made of a woman, made under the law dispensation.
II Timothy 1:9-10
* Grace was given to us in Jesus Christ before the world began (in the
plan), but was manifest (put into action) by the appearing of Jesus Christ.
I Peter 1:2
* We are the elect according to the foreknowledge of God.
THE WISDOM OF GOD
Proverbs 8:22-30
* Some feel this is the Son speaking here, but to see who is speaking, lets
look at two verses that tell who is speaking.
Proverbs 8:1, 12, 9:1
* The Wisdom of God is speaking. Remember, God counseled with His
own will, made a plan from the beginning and spoke of things that be not
as though they were. The son only existed in the wisdom and plan of God,until He was born at Bethlehem.
1 Corinthians 1:23-24
* Christ is the power of God and the Wisdom of God. He was made from
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the Wisdom and by the power of God. He is the wisdom and power of
God, because it is God that lives in the flesh.
I Corinthians 2:7-8
* He was the wisdom of God in a mystery, ordained before the world, and
if the princes of this world had known it, they would not have crucifiedthe Lord of Glory. God did not die, but the fleshly body died; the Spirit in
Him was the Lord of Glory.
RIGHT HAND OF GOD
Acts 7:55-56
* Stephen did not say he saw two people but the glory of God and Jesuson the right hand. He was not speaking of geographical location (how do
you get on one side of a Spirit that is everywhere?) but right hand is a
Jewish term that speaks of being in a place of power and authority. He sawJesus in His exalted position that w