

CHAPTER ONE -
A Gallup Poll taken in 1966 found that 97% of the American public believed in God. Of that number, 83% believed that God was a Trinity.
Yet for all this belief in the Trinity, it is a doctrine that is not clearly understood by most Christian laymen. In fact, most have neither the desire nor the incentive to understand what their churches teach. Few laymen are aware of any problems with the doctrine of the Trinity. They simply take it for granted, leaving the mysterious doctrinal aspects to theologians.
And if the layman were to investigate further, he would be confronted with discouraging
statements similar to the following: "The mind of man cannot fully understand the
mystery of the Trinity. He who would try to understand the mystery fully will lose
his mind. But he who would deny the Trinity will lose his soul." (Harold Lindsell
and Charles J. Woodbridge, A Handbook of Christian Truth, pp. 51-
Such a statement means that the concept of the Trinity should be accepted or else. Merely accepting it as doctrine without first proving it would be contrary to Scripture. God inspired the Apostle Paul to write: "Prove all things hold fast that which is good" (I Thess. 5:21). Peter further admonished Christians: "be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you" (I Peter 3:15). Therefore the Christian is duty bound to prove whether or not God is a Trinity.
Clear Explanation Difficult
If you were to confine yourself to reading the articles
on the Trinity in popular religious literature for laymen, you would conclude that
the Trinity is clearly taught in the Bible. However, if you read the Bible and what
the more technical Bible encyclopedias, dictionaries, and books say on the subject,
you would come to an entirely different conclusion. And the more you have studied
the subject, the more you would find that the Trinity is built on a very shaky theological
and philosophical foundation indeed.
The problems inherent in clearly explaining the Trinity are expressed in nearly every technical article or book on the subject. The New Catholic Encyclopedia begins: "It is difficult... in the second half of the 20th century, to offer a clear, objective, and straightforward account of the revelation, doctrinal evolution, and the theological elaboration of the mystery of the Trinity. Trinitarian discussion, Roman Catholic as well as other, presents a somewhat unsteady silhouette" (Vol. XIV, p. 295).
But why should the central doctrine of the Christian faith be so difficult to understand? Why should such an important doctrine present an unsteady silhouette? Isn't there a clear Biblical revelation of the doctrine of the Trinity? Didn't Christ and the apostles plainly teach it?
Surely the Bible would be filled with teachings about such an important subject as the Trinity. Unfortunately, the word "Trinity" never appears in the Bible.
"The term 'Trinity' is not a Biblical term, and we are not using Biblical language when we define what is expressed by it as the doctrine" (The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, article "Trinity," p. 3012). Not only is the word "Trinity" never found in the Bible, but there is no substantive proof such a doctrine is even indicated.
In a recent book on the Trinity, Catholic theologian Karl Rahner recognizes that theologians in the past have been "...embarrassed by the simple fact that in reality the Scriptures do not explicitly present a doctrine of the 'imminent' Trinity (even in the Apostle John's prologue there is no such doctrine)" (The Trinity, p. 22).
Other theologians also recognize the fact that the first chapter of John's Gospel
the prologue -
The first chapter of John's Gospel clearly shows the pre-
The Apostle John makes plain the unmistakable fact the Jesus Christ is God (John
1:1-
Seeking More Biblical "Proof for the Trinity
Probably the most notorious scripture
used in times past as "proof of a Trinity is I John 5:7. However, many theologians
recognize that this scripture was added to the New Testament manuscripts probably
as late as the eighth century A.D.
Notice what Jamieson, Fausset and Brown wrote in their commentary: "The only Greek MSS. [manuscripts], in any form which support the words, 'in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost: and these three are one. And there are three evidently from the modern Latin Vulgate; the Ravianus copied from the Complutensian Polyglot; a MS. [manuscript] at Naples, with the words added in the margins by a recent hand; Ottobonianus, 298, of the fifteenth century, the Greek of which is a mere translation of the accompanying Latin. All old versions omit the words."
The conclusions arrived at in their commentary, written over 100 years ago, are still valid today. The more conservatively oriented The New Bible Commentary (revised) agrees, though quietly with Jamieson, Fausset and Brown. "...The words are clearly a gloss and are rightly excluded by RSV [Revised Standard Version] even from its margin" (p. 1269).
The editors of Peake's Commentary on the Bible wax more eloquent in their belief
that the works are not part of the original text. "The famous interpolation after
'three witnesses' is not printed even in RSV, and rightly... It cites the heavenly
testimony of the Father, the logos, and the Holy Spirit, but is never used in the
early trinitarian controversies. No respectable Greek MS contains it. Appearing first
in a 4th century Latin text, it entered the Vulgate and finally the NT [New Testament]
of Erasmus" (p. 1038). Scholars clearly recognize that
I John 5:7 is not part of the
New Testament text. Yet it is still included by some fundamentalist Christians as
biblical proof for the Trinity doctrine.
Even the majority of the more recent New Testament translations do not contain the above words. They are not found in Moffatt, Phillips, the Revised Standard Version, Williams or the Living Bible (a paraphrase).
It is clear, then, that these words are not part of the inspired canon, but rather were added by a "recent hand." The two verses in I John should read: "For there are three that bear record, the Spirit, and the water and the blood: and these three agree in one ''
Three things bear record. But to what do they bear record? A Trinity? We shall see.
Bear Record to What?
The Spirit, the water and the blood bear record of the fact that
Jesus Christ, the Son of God, is living His life over again in us. John clarifies
it in verses 11-
"And this is the record, that God hath given to us eternal life, and this life is in his Son. He that hath the Son hath life; and he that hath not the Son of God hath not life."
But how do these three elements -
"The Spirit beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the children of God" (Rom. 8:16). (We will see more about the part the Spirit plays in Chapter Three.)
Water is representative of baptism, which bears witness of the burial of the old
self and the beginning of a new life (Rom. 6:1-
The blood represents Christ's death by crucifixion, which pays the penalty for our sins, reconciling us to God (Rom. 5:9, 10).
Now understand why Christ commands the apostles to baptize in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit (Matt. 28:19). First of all Jesus did not command the apostles to baptize in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit as an indication that God is a Trinity. Such a relationship is not indicated in the Bible.
They were to baptize in the name of the Father, because it is the goodness of God that brings us to repentance (Rom. 2:4), and because the Father is the One "of whom the whole family in heaven and earth is named" (Eph. 3:15). We are baptized in the name of the Son because HE is the one who died for our sins. We are baptized in the name of the Holy Spirit, making us the Father's begotten sons (Rom. 8:16).
Many theologians have misunderstood the part that the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit play in each person's salvation. The doctrine of the Trinity is the result of that misunderstanding.
The Trinity is not a biblical doctrine. It has no basis in biblical fact. Then how did this doctrine creep into the Church? Pagan theology, about the nature of God, was used to interpret scripture. God tells us that scripture is to interpret scripture, not pagan mythology.
History of the Trinity
The ancient idea of monotheism was shattered by the sudden
appearance of Jesus Christ on the earth. Here was someone who claimed He was the
Son of God. But how could He be? The Jewish people believed for centuries that there
was only one God. If the claims of "this Jesus" would have been accepted, then in
their minds, their religion would have been no different from that of the polytheistic
pagans around them. If HE were the Son of God, their whole system of monotheism would
have disintegrated.
When Jesus plainly told certain Jews of His day that He was the Son of God, some were ready to stone Him for blasphemy (John 10:33).
To get around the problem of the plurality in the Godhead, the Jewish community simply rejected Jesus. And to this day, Orthodox Judaism will not accept Jesus' Messiahship. However, the more liberal Jews will at least admit that He was a great man, maybe even a prophet.
But the "new" Christian religion still faced a problem. How could proponents explain that there was only one God, not two?
"The determining impulse to the formulation of the doctrine of the Trinity in the church was the church's profound conviction of the absolute Deity of Christ, on which as on a pivot the whole Christian concept of God from the first origin of Christianity turned" (International Standard Biblical Encyclopedia, article "Trinity," p. 3021).
The deity of Christ does not mean that the doctrine of the Trinity is necessary, as we shall see in Chapter Two.
Roots in Greek Philosophy
Many of the early church fathers were thoroughly educated
in Babylonian, Egyptian and Greek philosophy, from which they borrowed such non-
But some are not so careful to make such a distinction. Notice: "Although the notion
of a Triad or Trinity is characteristic of the Christian religion, it is by no means
peculiar to it. In the Indian religion, e.g., we meet with the trinitarian group
of Brahma, Siva, and Visnu; and the Egyptian religion with the trinitarian group
of Osiris, Isis, and Horus, constituting a divine family, like the Father, Mother
and Son in medieval Christian pictures. Not is it only in historical [not biblical]
religions that we find God viewed as a Trinity. One recalls in particular the Neo-
Of course, the fact that someone else had a Trinity does not in itself mean that
the Christians borrowed it. McClintock and Strong make the connection a little clearer
-
In his book, A History of Christian Thought, Arthur Cushman McGiffert shows that the main argument against those who believed that there was only one God and that Christ was either an adopted or created being was that their idea did not agree with Platonic philosophy (ibid., p. 240).
In the latter half of the third century, Paul of Samosata tried to revive the adoptionist idea that Jesus was a mere man until the Spirit of God came upon Him at baptism, making him the Anointed One or Christ. In his beliefs about the person of Jesus Christ, he "rejected the Platonic realism which underlay most of the Christological speculation of the day" (ibid., p. 243).
At the end of his chapter on the Trinity, McGiffert concludes: "It has been the boast of orthodox theologians that in the doctrine of the Trinity both religion and philosophy come to highest expression" (Vol. I, p. 247).
The influence of Platonic philosophy on the Trinity doctrine can hardly be denied.
However, trinitarian ideas go much further back than Plato. "Though it is usual to
speak of the Semitic tribes as monotheistic, yet it is an undoubted fact that more
or less all over the world his deities are in triads. This rule applies to eastern
and western hemispheres, north and south. Further, it is observed that, in some mystical
way, the triad of three persons is one...The definition of Athanasius [a forth-
It was Athanasius' formulation for the Trinity, which was adopted by the Catholic Church at the Council of Nicaea in A.D. 325. Athanasius was an Egyptian from Alexandria and his philosophy was also deeply rooted in Platonism.
"The Alexandria catechetical school, which reversed Clement of Alexandria and Origen, the greatest theologians of the Greek Church, as it heads, applies the allegorical method to the explanation of Scripture. Plato influenced its thought: its strong point was [pagan] theological speculations. Athanasius and the three Cappadocians had been included among it members" (Ecumenical Councils of the Catholic Church, by Hubert Jebin, p. 29).
In order to explain the relationship of Christ to God the Father, the church fathers felt that it was necessary to use the philosophy of the day rather than the scriptures. They obviously thought that their religion would be more palatable if they made it sound like the pagan philosophy that was extant at the time. These men were versed in philosophy, and that philosophy colored what understanding of the Bible they had.
It was the doctrine of the Trinity -
Even theologians recognize that the Trinity is a creation of the fourth century,
not the first! "There is a recognition on the part of the exegetist and Biblical
theologians, including a constantly growing number of Roman Catholics, that one should
speak of Trinitarianism in the New Testament without serious qualifications. There
is also the closely parallel recognition -
The Council of Nicaea
It was at the Council of Nicaea in A.D. 325 that two members
of the Alexandrian congregation -
The Council of Nicaea was not called by the church leaders, as one might suppose,
but by the Emperor Constantine. He had a far-
"In 325 the Emperor Constantine called an ecclesiastical council to meet at Nicaea in Bithynia. In the hope of securing for his throne the support of the growing body of [professing] Christians he had shown them considerable favor and it was to his interest to have the church vigorous and united. The Arian controversy was threatening its unity and menacing its strength. He therefore undertook to put an end to the trouble. It was suggested to him, perhaps by the Spanish bishop Hosius, who was influential at court, that if a synod were to meet representing the whole church both east and west, it might be possible to restore harmony. Constantine himself of course neither knew or cared anything about the matter in dispute but he was eager to bring the controversy to a close, and Hosius' advice appealed to him as around" (A History of Christian Thought, Vol. I, p. 258).
The decision as to which of the two men the church was to follow was more or less an arbitrary one. Constantine really didn't care which choice was made. All he wanted was a united church. (Arius was banished, but later recalled by Constantine, examined and found to be without heresy.)
The majority of those present at the Council were not ready to take either side in
the controversy. "A clearly defined standpoint with regard to this problem -
The Council rejected Arius' views and rightly so, but they had nothing with which
to replace it. Thus the ideas of Athanasius -
After the Council, the Trinity became official dogma in the church. However, the controversy did not end. In the next few years, more Christians were killed by other Christians over that one doctrine then were finally killed by the different pagan emperors of Rome. Yet, for all the fighting and killing, neither of the two parties had a Biblical leg on which to stand.
CHAPTER TWO -
In the past, in most theological circles, a rejection of the doctrine of the Trinity included a rejection of the divinity of Christ. But, before this article becomes classed as an Arian heresy, let me quote from the Catholic theologian, Karl Rahner: "...We must be willing to admit that should the doctrine of the Trinity have to be dropped as false, the major part of the religious literature could well remain virtually unchanged...the Christian idea of the incarnation would not have to change at all, if there were no Trinity.
"It is not surprising then, that Christian piety practice remembers from the doctrine
of the incarnation only the 'God' has become man, without deriving from this truth
any clear message about the Trinity" (The Trinity, p. 10-
A rejection of the doctrine of the Trinity does not constitute a rejection of the
incarnation -
Jesus Was the Problem
To this day, Christianity is still confused about who and what
Jesus Christ really was. A majority believes in a mysterious Trinity and a vociferous
minority believes that Christ was a created being. Neither has the truth.
But why all the confusion?
Who Jesus was is clearly indicated in the pages of the Bible. It has been there for
centuries. While Christians were busily excommunicating and killing each other over
the questions of who Jesus was, the answer has been in the pages of Bible, and that
explanation is not in harmony with what is taught by most churches today. Christ
is not the second person in a Trinity, and God did not create Him -
In the Beginning
To find out who Jesus was, let's go back to the beginning. Beginnings
are mentioned in the Bible, in at least two separate places -
The Apostle John began his Gospel by describing Who and what Jesus was before He
came to this earth, as the Savior of mankind. "In the beginning was the Word, and
the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God.
All things were made by him; and without him was not anything made that was made...And
the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory
as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth" (verses 1-
If we read no further in the New Testament than this, we would be able to know, beyond
a shadow of a doubt, that Jesus Christ was God and that He was the One who created
man in Genesis 2:7. John clearly stated that the Word -
But the Apostle John was not the only New Testament writer who wrote about the pre-
(I Cor. 10:1-
Paul clearly tells us that Jesus Christ was the God of the Old Testament -
Yet, the doctrine of the Trinity hinges on the assumption that God manifested Himself as the Father in the Old Testament and Christ in the New Testament. Such assumptions are false and without scriptural proof.
Duality of God Throughout the Bible
The plurality of God in not merely a "plural of
majesty" as some would have us believe. Six hundred years before Christ, the Prophet
Daniel recorded for us a vision. "I saw in the night visions, and, behold, one like
the Son of man came with the clouds of heaven, and came to the Ancient of days..."
(Dan. 7:13). The "Son of man" he describes can be none other than the One who later
became Jesus Christ. Daniel then saw Him given rulership and a Kingdom that will
never be destroyed (verse 14). The "Son of man" mentioned here could hardly be a
mere physical human being!
The Ancient of Days, in this instance, is the divine Being who is called the Father in the New Testament. Jesus Christ referred to the same occurrence as mentioned in the vision in His parable of the nobleman (Himself) who went to a far country (heaven) to receive a kingdom, and to return (Luke 19:12).
David also referred to the duality of the God family in Psalms 110. "The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit thou at my right hand, until I make thine enemies thy footstool" (verse 1).
Two different Lords are mentioned here. One is the being who became God the Father
and the other is the One who became Jesus Christ. Paul quoted this passage to the
Jewish Christians -
Was the Son also God? Verse 8 answers, "But unto the Son he saith, Thy throne, O God, is forever" There can be no doubt that God the Father and Jesus the Son are mentioned as two separate beings in the Old Testament.
Who Was Melchizedek?
Now, Notice Hebrews 5:5-
So Christ holds the office of Melchizedek. Who was Melchizedek? He was one of the Beings composing God. In Genesis 14:18, he is called the king of Salem and the priest of the Most High God. Notice why he could not have been merely a human being.
The Apostle Paul, described Him further in Hebrews 7:2-
Paul could not have been describing a human being, or even an angel in those verses, for he is describing a Being that eternally existed, as only God has eternally existed.
Melchizedek was a priest of the Most High God. Who was the Most High God? Why of course, the being that became the Father! Jesus Christ said, "My Father is greater than I" (John 14:28). And also Melchizedek still lives (and if you will read Hebrews 7:8 carefully, you will see that Paul repeats this supremely important fact) and is still that High Priest. But Christ is also a High Priest (see Heb.7:26; 8:1). There cannot be two High Priests both holding the same office, so Melchizedek and Jesus Christ must be the same.
So we see that even in the first book of the Bible, the plurality of God is shown, although clear understanding of this truth could not be known until Jesus came to reveal it in the New Testament. Jesus said, "No man knows who the Son is, but the Father; and who the Father is, but the Son, and he to whom the Son will reveal him" (Luke 10:22).
Jesus Came to Reveal the Father
A clear distinction has been made in the New Testament
between Christ and the Father, again proving that Christ was the God of the Old Testament.
"No man has seen God at any time; the only begotten Son, which is in the bosom of
the Father, he hath declared him" (John 1:18). Christ came to the earth to reveal
the Father and to show that a family relationship has existed in the Godhead.
Unless Jesus had revealed the Father to us, there would be no way for us to know Him. "All things are delivered unto me, of my Father, and no man knoweth the Son, but the Father; neither knoweth any man the Father, save the Son, and he to whomsoever the Son will reveal him" (Matt. 11:27).
The Meaning of the Word YHVH
In the Hebrew of the original inspired text, there are
two different names that are commonly used to refer to God. The word first used for
"God" in the Genesis is Elohim. The second word is YHVH (commonly pronounced "Jehovah").
This word YHVH is generally translated "LORD" (In capital letters) in the King James
Version of the Bible. It is first used in Genesis 2:7. There it was the LORD GOD
-
Therefore, it was the LORD GOD of the Old Testament who became the Jesus Christ of the New Testament. This fact is illustrated by grammatical derivation of the word YHVH.
The word YHVH is explained by Rabbinic sources as encompassing three Hebrew words,
HYH meaning was, HVH meaning is (literally "present tense" -
Putting the words all together, YHVH actually means the "Was-
By His very name, God quite literally encompasses all aspects of time -
Even etymologically, Jesus Christ and YHVH can be equated. Yet, this is only a small part of the picture, because the clear statements of both the Old and New Testaments give overwhelming proof that the God of the Old Testament is the One who became Jesus Christ.
People Stumbled at Christ
In Isaiah 8:13-
Most editions of the King James Version of the Bible note that these verses refer to the One who later became Jesus Christ. But even more accurate proof is found in the New Testament.
In his first epistle, the Apostle Peter writes: "Wherefore also it is contained in
the scriptures, Behold, I lay in Sion a chief corner stone, elect, precious: and
he that believeth on him shall not be confounded. Unto you therefore which believe
he is precious: but unto them which be disobedient, the stone which the builders
disallowed, the same is made the head of the corner, and a stone of stumbling and
a rock of offence, even to them which stumble at the word, being disobedient: whereunto
also they were appointed" (I Pet. 2:6-
The very same prophecy is alluded to in Luke 2:34. There can be no denying the fact that Jesus Christ was the God of the Old Testament, the Stone over which many people stumbled.
The religious leaders of the time simply could not understand how Jesus could have been God. Yet, the Old Testament, which they had copied for centuries, is filled with prophecies about Him. Truly, they were blinded, and most remain so to this day. The Apostle Paul explains this in the ninth to the eleventh chapters of his epistle to the Romans.
While Jesus Christ, the God of the Old Testament, was on earth as a human being,
there was only one God-
The Jews and the Arians, found it hard to believe that God could become man. Yet, the New Testament explains that it did indeed happen. One of the members of the Godhead became a man that we might have the opportunity to be born into the family of God.
The Apostle Paul explained this concept in his epistle to the Philippians. The Amplified
Bible makes the passage a little clearer. In chapter 2:5-
The true impact and importance of the oft-
CHAPTER THREE -
We have seen that Jesus Christ is, was
and always will be God. However, you can search the Bible from Genesis to Revelation
and you will find no such Bible teaching with regard to the Holy Spirit. The Bible
does not teach that the Holy Spirit is a third member of the God family or of a Trinity.
This is not a prejudiced anti-
Discussing the evidence for the doctrine of the Trinity in the Bible, Dr. W. N. Clarke,
writes: "The New Testament begins the work, but does not finish it; for it contains
no similar teachings [like John 1:1-
Theologians need to recognize that there is no biblical proof for the divinity or personality of the Spirit. In order to arrive at a doctrine of the Trinity, they must go outside of the Bible to develop an incomplete doctrine, which is false.
Karl Barth, one of the most noted theologians of the 20th century, admits that the church has gone beyond the Bible to arrive at its doctrine of the Trinity.
"The Bible lacks the express declaration that the Father, Son and Holy Spirit are of equal essence and therefore in an equal sense of God Himself. And the other express declaration is also lacking that God is God thus only thus, i.e., as the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. These two express declarations which go beyond the witness of the Bible are twofold content of the church doctrine of the Trinity" (Doctrine of the Word of God, p. 437).
Since, as theologians recognize, the Bible is not the source of the Trinity doctrine, how can they square it with the Bible teachings, that inspired Scripture should be the source of doctrine? (II Tim. 3:16).
The answer is, they cannot square it with the Bible. They must freely admit the painful facts.
The Spirit of God in the Bible
The personality of Jesus Christ is thoroughly provable
from the Bible, but there is no such proof for a personality of the Holy Spirit.
"The Old Testament clearly does not envisage God's spirit as a person, neither in
the strictly philosophical sense, nor in the Semitic sense. God's spirit is simply
God's Power. If it is sometimes represented as being distinct for God, it is because
the breath of Yahweh acts exteriorly (Isa. 48:16; 63:11; 32:15)." So say the authors
of the New Catholic Encyclopedia.
But let them continue: "Very rarely do the OT writers attribute to God's spirit emotions
or intellectual activity (Isa. 63:10; Wis. 1:3-
In the Old Testament, God's Spirit is pictured as His power, by which the One who became Jesus Christ, as executive for the Father, created the entirety of the universe. These theologians also recognize that when the Spirit is spoken of as a person or in a personal way, the Bible writer is merely personifying the Spirit, as he would wisdom or any other attribute, without the intent of declaring such personification a person or a separate being of the Godhead.
Now, what about the New Testament? They say: "Although the NT [New Testament] concepts of the Spirit of God are largely a continuation of those of the OT, in the NT there is a gradual revelation that the Spirit of God is a person."
But this would be true only if you are armed with a preconceived notion that God is a Trinity. We will see there are only a few scriptures that can even remotely be construed as presenting the Spirit as a person, and in each case only as the result of a grammatical misunderstanding.
But again, let us let the New Catholic Encyclopedia Continue. "The majority of NT texts reveal God's spirit as something, not someone; this is especially seen in the parallelism between the spirit and the power of God."
Though theologians would like for the Bible to say that the Spirit is a person, they must admit that the majority of the scriptures connected with the topic show that it is not someone, but something. Even the personification of the Spirit is not proof of its personality.
"When a quasi-
After such admissions, it is almost inconceivable that any theologian could still teach that the Spirit is a person. Yet, some do!
A Lesson in Greek Grammar
The one section of the scripture that most theologians believe
describes the Spirit as a person is resolved by a grammar lesson in the Greek language.
In the Greek language, like the Romance languages (Italian, Spanish, French and others),
every noun possesses gender; that is, it is masculine, feminine or neuter. The gender
of a word has nothing to do with whether it is really masculine or feminine; it is
a grammatical tool.
Most Trinitarian theologians use the Gospel of John, Chapters 14, 15 and 16, as proof
of their theory that the Spirit is a person. Here Jesus is recorded as referring
to the Spirit as "the Comforter." The pronoun "he" is used in connection with the
word "comforter" -
All pronouns in Greek must agree in gender with the word to which they refer. Therefore, the pronoun "he" is used when referring to the Spirit as the parakletos or "Comforter." The other New Testament writers use the word pneuma, which means "breath" or "spirit." This is the Greek equivalent of ruah, the Hebrew word for "spirit" used in the Old Testament. Pneuma is a grammatically neuter word and is always represented by the pronoun "it."
However, the translators of the King James Version, being swayed by the doctrine of the Trinity, have generally mistranslated the pronouns referring to pneuma as masculine. One Instance where they did not mistranslate, is found in Romans 8:16. "The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the children of God."
John's use of the parakletos is no proof the Spirit is a person. For if the simple gender of a noun were the basis for the personality of the Spirit, then the Spirit changed gender from the Old to the New Testament. The Hebrew word for "spirit" in the Old Testament can be found in the feminine gender in a majority of cases and in a masculine sense less often.
The fact that the word "spirit" is feminine in the Hebrew has led some theologians to believe that the Spirit was a feminine being of the Godhead. They believe in a Trinity of the Father, the Mother and the Son. Interestingly enough, the Trinitarians, who used the same kind of ploy to prove that the Spirit was a masculine being, are condemned by their own belief!
The Holy Spirit -
The Spirit, or Holy Spirit as it is called in the New Testament, was the power by which Jesus Christ was begotten. "Now the birth of Jesus Christ was on this wise: When as his mother Mary was espoused to Joseph, before they came together, she was found with the Child of the Holy Ghost [Spirit]" (Matt. 1:18).
When Joseph was about to put Mary away because she was pregnant, "the angel of the Lord appeared unto him in a dream, saying, Joseph, thou son of David, fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife: for that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost [Spirit]" (Matt. 1:20).
Jesus was begotten in the womb of Mary by the power of the Holy Spirit. He was literally born with God's Spirit in His mind. He became the Son of God and died for us that we might have the same opportunity to be born into the family of God.
The Apostle Paul plainly taught this vital scriptural truth in Romans 8:16. "The
Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the children of God."
Paul did not mean this in some sentimental sort of way, as he goes on to show in
the next verse. "And if the children, then heirs; heirs of God, and joint-
Paul declares that Jesus Christ is the heir of all things in Hebrews 1:2. We then have the opportunity, if we have God's Spirit in our minds, to inherit all things with Jesus Christ.
The Spirit of God unites with our minds, and we are begotten (or Conceived) again
-
The Holy Spirit impregnates us with God's nature. That spiritual begettal imbues
us with the nature and mind of God. Throughout our Christian lives, we continue to
grow and to develop in the understanding and mind of God until we are finally born
into the God family and made immortal at the return of Jesus Christ to this earth
(I Cor. 15:49-
How can we obtain this Spirit? The Apostle Peter gave the answer on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2). When Peter was asked at the end of his sermon what to do, he answered: "Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost [Spirit]" (Acts 2:38).
Here again, we can see why the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit are mentioned
in the "baptismal formula" in Matthew 28:19. God the Father is the One who brings
us to repentance. Jesus Christ -
How plain the truth of the Bible is. The Holy Spirit is the power of God. It is not
a person. It is the power by which we are begotten that we might become sons of God.
CHAPTER
FOUR -
In Chapter two, we found that the Bible teaches that Jesus Christ is the God of the Old Testament. We found that he became flesh and came to this earth to die for mankind. He is called the Son of God and He calls God His Father. By now, the relationship should be clear, God is a family.
We found in Chapter three that we can become begotten sons of God by the impregnation
of God's Spirit -
There is only one God Head [family]. Yet, there are presently two members, and in the future, there will be many more. Jesus was called "the firstborn of many brethren" (Rom. 8:29).
Look at yourself. Whether married or single, you are part of a family. You have parents and maybe even children or grandchildren of your own. Yet, you are still one family.
It was God who created man and put him on the earth. He created marriage and the family relationship as a type of His divine family.
God's Name Is Plural
The Hebrew word for "God" used in Genesis 1:1 and 26 is Elohim.
It is plural in form. Though this word taken by itself does not prove that there
are two beings in the Godhead, it allows for the plurality that is clearly indicated
in other parts of the Bible.
By what we understand from the rest of the Bible, this word Elohim can act like our English words "family, group, church or crowd." These words often require a singular verb form, but they all contain more than one member.
The Apostle Paul exemplifies this for us in I Corinthians 12:20. Speaking about the Church he says: "But now are they many members, yet one body."
God is One [family]. Presently, there are two members in that God family, God the
Father -
Belief in a Trinity clouds the real purpose that God has in store for mankind. If we are taught that God is a closed Trinity of three persons, we lose sight of the fact that God's real purpose is to create many more members of the God family.
Look at the creation account in Genesis 1. God created fish after the fish kind,
birds after the bird kind, and animals after the animal kind. But in verse 26, God
made man -
God created man in their own image. Man is greater than the rest of the creation,
because God gave him mind power. He has dominion over all the creatures. Man is not
an animal. He was created in the image of God -
Taught in the New Testament
The Apostle John understood God's plans for mankind. Notice
what he wrote in I John 3:1: "Behold, what manner of love the Father [here is the
family relationship -
It is clearly God's plan to bring many sons into His family. "For it became him [God the Father], for whom are all things, and by whom are all things, in bringing many sons unto the glory, to make the captain of the salvation [Jesus Christ] perfect though sufferings" (Heb.2:10).
The pages of the Bible are filled with God's great purpose for man. And yet, the
majority of this world's professing Christians are blinded to this central biblical
truth. Why? Because Satan has deceived the whole world (Rev. 12:9). God is not a
closed Trinity, God is a family -
Why the Deception?
Why has Satan deceived the world with the doctrine of the Trinity?
Because he doesn't want you to rule in his place! Satan fomented a rebellion to dislodge
God from His position as Ruler over the whole universe (Ezek. 28:11-
Yet Satan and his demonic cohorts, being disqualified, do not want anyone else to ever take their place. For this reason, they have tried to hide the breathtakingly beautiful truth of God from the world for nearly 6,000 years. If they can succeed in making you believe in the Trinity, you will be deceived into thinking that the Godhead consists of only three persons. You would then never in your wildest dreams imagine that you were created to be born into the God family and to actually have a part in ruling this Earth!
Satan wants you to think that God is a limited Trinity and not a growing family or kingdom into which we may enter, through the grace of God.
That is the truth of the Trinity. God's family isn't closed to mankind as Satan wants you believe. It is wide open to you and your family and all humankind. You can be made in the exact likeness of God at Christ's return!
For Further Study -
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