God'S Trinity
God'S Trinity
God'S Trinity
Trinity
Now we look more closely at God’s design plan, focusing on the concept of trinity.
Trinity means functioning simultaneously in three different ways.
God uses three-in-one design extensively throughout his creation.
For example, space is one nature, but a trinity: height, width and depth. Time is one nature, but a
trinity: past, present and future. Matter is one nature, but a trinity: solid, liquid and gas.
Man is a trinity
Man is one nature, but a trinity: body, soul and spirit.
We know about our own trinity from inside information; not just from something we observe, but from
something we experience, from our own understanding of ourself. We have:
• Body - physical
• Soul - mental (mind, will and emotion)
• Spirit - God connection
We say things like, I tell my body to get going, but it just doesn’t want to move.
We come to know God by knowing ourselves.
God is a trinity
The Bible says that God himself is a trinity – Father, Son and Holy Spirit – and that man was created
in God’s image.
Therefore, because we resemble God, and God resembles us, we get important insight into both
natures, how they coincide, and how they work together.
God-the-son
As an analogy, suppose you want to communicate to a colony of ants. You could shout, gesture and
drop notes, but all to no avail. The only way is for you to become an ant and go down among them.
Similarly, God had to become a man to communicate with us.
True, he could continue sending prophets, as he did in the Old Testament, but people would not be
able to distinguish between who is real and who is fraudulent or misguided. Many would claim to be
prophets, and most people would not believe them, and we would be left in in the dark.
So, for a brief time, the Son came into our world bodily as the god-man, being born of the Virgin Mary.
The Son is Jesus Christ. He was human body with divine soul and spirit. Jesus is His name (like
James or Robert). Christ is his title (Christos in Greek, meaning the one sent by God).
He authenticated his deity with miracles and eye witnesses. He told us everything we need to know
about God.
God physically appeared at the time in human history – which we mark as the starting date of our
calendar – when people had developed to the point that they were able to comprehend a fuller
revelation of God and understand a new spiritual concept based on trinity ... the new deal, the New
Testament, as explained in Day 1 ... the key features of this new deal being a once-for-all forgiveness
of sin and a new kind of personal relationship between God and man ... through Jesus Christ and the
Holy Spirit.
Because Jesus had a human body, he was limited to one place at a time. Even though he came into
a highly developed Greco-Roman culture, most people still could not read or write, and there were no
printing presses, no radio or television, no cars or planes. He couldn’t physically be with everyone,
then or now.
God-the-holy-spirit
And that's where the third part of the trinity comes in.
Just as a part of God came into the world, a part of God can come into every person, individually, if
invited. His spirit in our spirit.
Now it’s more than God among us; it’s God in us!
The Greek word for spirit literally means wind or breath. A Christian can have the breath of God
within him.
Spirit world
Permeating the physical world, there is a spirit world we cannot see and can only barely understand;
not only the Holy Spirit, but angels, Devil and demons. This mysterious realm is most discernible to
people who open themselves to spirit influences and powers. Generally, modern Western culture is
cerebral and chooses not to acknowledge spirits except in jest.
Christians need not be much concerned about it, except to recognize that the spirit world is very real
and can have considerable power over individual lives.
Fortunately, salvation, explained in Day 5, takes care of it all for us. When we accept Jesus as Savior,
we also get the Holy Spirit. To the extent we yield to the Holy Spirit, he (a part of God living within us)
drives away evil powers that want to corrupt our lives. We don’t even have to think about it. We just
focus on God.
Heaven
Heaven is both a place and a state of being. The Bible says people there will have a different body
(perfect!), and there will be no sin, pain or sorrow.
There are many references to heaven in the Bible but no detailed description except for a symbolic
dream in the book of Revelation.
Heaven is beyond our capacity to comprehend, and human words cannot describe it.
We should dismiss as pure fantasy images such as a person with wings walking around heaven
playing a little harp.
All we can know, and need to know, is that heaven is the wonderful place after death, with God; it’s
where we want to go!
Hell
Hell is what’s left after God leaves.
It is confinement together of all unforgiven sinners, Satan and evil spirits, left alone to fend for
themselves in an environment of unstrained evil and suffering, without God and unable to die.
Hell is the exact opposite of heaven. It is the terrible place for people who are not in heaven, totally
abandoned by God, cursing themselves for rejecting Christ in their earthly life.
We should dismiss as pure fantasy images such as the Devil with a tail, red suit and pitchfork.
All we can know, and need to know, is that hell is the horrible place after death, without God; it’s
where we don’t want to go!
Original sin
Now, for another illustration, look at this train diagram. It will to help explain some key Christian
concepts and terminology.
Original sin means that everyone comes into the world on Track 1, headed for hell because of sin,
and stays on Track 1 unless the person makes a deliberate decision to get off and go to Track 2.
Because God is just, there are exceptions, as explained in Day 7: for children ... for mentally
handicapped ... for people who have never clearly heard about Jesus ...
But the exceptions DON’T APPLY to listeners and readers here. We KNOW, or at least are put on
notice to investigate further. And now we will be held accountable, individually, for our response.
Predestination
Some people say there is really nothing we can do about our destiny ... that God has determined it in
advance (predestination).
True, he has laid the tracks, and he has limited our option to only two tracks. He has predestined that
all on Track 1 go to hell, and that all on Track 2 go to heaven.
But, we can choose, with our own free will, the track we want!
We can look out the window and heed the signs at the stops and platforms along the way, which are
our decision points. To change, we simply get off the train on Track 1 and walk across the platform to
the waiting train on Track 2, as explained in Day 5. Besides getting us to the desired destination, the
train on Track 2 has softer seats and nicer passengers.
Election
God has chosen (elected) the category of people that will go to heaven – the ones on Track 2 – but
each individual chooses (with his own free will) whether or not he wants to be a part of that category.
Failing to make a decision to change means that the person deliberately chooses to remain with the
group on Track 1.
Justification
By what right (justification) can someone simply get off the train on Track 1 headed for hell and get
on the train on Track 2 headed for heaven? Because Jesus Christ offers a fully paid ticket, purchased
by his substitution death on the cross.
Grace
We don’t pay for the Track 2 ticket with our own money or works. It's a free gift from God, more
than we deserve –that’s grace!
ONLY WAY?
Progressive revelation
God’s revelation of himself and his creation is progressiveover the centuries. He parcels out
information a little at a time.
God began telling about himself to Adam ... he revealed more about himself through Abraham ... and
then through Moses ... and the prophets. His greatest self-revelation was through Jesus Christ ... and
the eye-witness apostles ... and today through the Holy Spirit within us.
Not only has God been progressively revealing himself, but he has also been progressively revealing
his creation, allowing us to gradually discover how to use his physical laws and atomic building blocks
for our own creations.
In both realms – spiritual and physical – enlightenment comes as we investigate and use each new
discovery as a bridge to more discoveries. Today we know more about God and his physical world
than mankind has ever known. In our next state of life – heaven or hell – we will know even more.
In theology: Audience
Messages are intended for the persons to whom they are addressed and delivered.
The New Testament is the part of the Bible that contains the message for us, here today, BUT not
everyone has received this message. (The difference between Old Testament and New Testament is
explained in Day 1.)
What about people who lived before Christ? Or lived – or now live – in places where the New
Testament is unknown? Are these people held accountable for responding to the message to us, or
are they subject to other messages or special revelation we don’t know about?
God may have other ways to heaven for people outside the New Testament audience. As examples,
the New Testament mentions Abel, Enoch, Job and Noah, ancient people who pleased God but lived
before there were Jews, Christians, Muslims or any of today’s scriptures and religions.
Other examples mentioned in the New Testament are Jews like Abraham, Moses, David and the
prophets. And non-Jews, too, like Melchizedek and Rahab.
The New Testament says that they are all in heaven because of their faith and obedience. They died
without knowing anything about Jesus Christ!
Since these people, and many others specifically named in the New Testament, are cited as
examples, we can assume that others like them will also be in heaven.
They were accountable only for responding to what THEYknew about God in THEIR lifetime, not for
what WE know today.
Revelation varies according to each person’s time and place.People are judged according to the
light God gives them.
But Jesus said: 'I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through
me.' (John 14:6-7)
There are two explanations for reconciling these Bible statements:
• Jesus was not referring to all humanity, but only to the New Testament audience, or
• Jesus was referring to all humanity, but the benefits of his sacrificial death are imputed to people
who don’t even know about him if these people are seeking God in the best way they know with their
limited knowledge.
In theology: Impute
The word impute, when used in theology, means to credit to one person the righteousness of
another.
For example, Jesus’ righteousness was imputed to the thief being crucified on the adjacent cross.
The thief had lived a life so bad that civil authorities sentenced him to death. He understood very little
about Jesus, and apparently he was never baptized.
But because of the thief’s last minute response to what little spiritual knowledge he had, Jesus said
he will be in heaven, in contrast to the mocking thief on the other cross.
The Bible says: 'He [Jesus] is the atoning sacrifice for our sins, and not only for ours but also for
the sins of the whole world.' (I John 2:2)
WE DO NOT KNOW how many people throughout history have had the benefits of Christ’s
death imputed to thembecause they lacked spiritual information or capacity to understand.
Uninformed or misinformed
Most people have never heard a clear presentation of Jesus’ death, resurrection and offer of salvation
as stated in the New Testament or as restated in sermons and presentations like this.
Will they go to hell because they never heard about Jesus ... or because what they heard was
incomplete, convoluted or misleading?
Jesus said that we should not judge, that we should leave this to God. But we can’t help speculating
about this question.
Among Christians, there is a wide range of opinions, from narrow conservative to broad liberal:
• A narrow conservative opinion is that heaven is granted only to those who consciously and
explicitly invite Jesus Christ into their lives as personal savior. All others – regardless of knowledge,
place or time – go to hell. It doesn’t matter that we don’t understand or think it fair; God is sovereign
and does whatever he wants.
• A broad liberal opinion is that God’s saving grace is operative in every culture, place and time. A
person receives the grace of God on the basis of an honest search for God and obedience to God’s
word [Holy Spirit] as heard in the heart and conscience. That believer is a member of Christ’s body
and is destined to receive the grace of conversion and explicit knowledge of Jesus Christ at a later
date, whether in this life or after death.
It is clear from an objective reading of the Bible that everyone must eventually pass through
Jesus to reach the Father – see Day 4 for explanation of the trinity – BUT apparently there is
more than one path through Jesus.
Because God is present in the whole world, God’s grace is also at work in some way among all
people.
We can speculate, but we DO NOT KNOW how God will judge the uninformed and misinformed or
what special arrangements he may have for them.
But we DO KNOW how he will judge us!
Prayer
Jesus’ disciples asked him to teach them how to pray. He gave them a model prayer, recorded in
Matthew 6 and Luke 11, consisting of five points:
1 Submit humbly to Almighty God
2 Ask God to align us with his will
3 Ask God to supply our daily needs
4 Ask God to forgive us, and we forgive others
5 Ask God for spiritual guidance and protection
Prayer is for adjusting us to God’s purposes, not for us telling God how to bless our endeavors and
fulfill our desires. We don’t give God directions; we ask for his guidance and strength.
Jesus said further that we should pray with sincere faith, without public piety or vain repetitions, and
listen as well as petition.
He also said to pray for others and think of ways we can help them.
He said to pray often, formally or informally, word-by-word with articulated language or thought-by-
thought in spiritual harmony, alone and with others.
Even if we have already been saved from the penalty of sin, we need to confess known sins and
truly desire to cooperate with God in not repeating them. Confession and repentance cleans the
contamination of sin from our lives and relationships.
Bible reading
An important way God speaks to us is through the Bible. When we read it, we know we are getting
God’s words, not human philosophy. The Bible keeps God’s message from becoming distorted over
time.
The Old Testament has hundreds of commandments regulating worship and conduct. Most are
arcane and no longer fit modern society, but dozens – including the Ten Commandments – are still
relevant for today.
As recorded in Matthew 22, Jesus was asked which is the most important of all the commandments.
He answered:
‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This
is the first and greatest commandment.
‘And the second is like it: Love your neighbor as yourself. All the law and the prophets hang on
these two commandments.’
We don’t need a long list of do's and don’ts that choke us. That’s what Jesus came to replace. Mostly,
we just remember the two guiding principles and apply them to every situation.
In the Gospels, we read the teachings of Jesus. In Acts and the Letters, we read the Apostle’s
instructions to new churches. We get into greater detail – about specific sins (like lying, stealing and
gossip) and about specific virtues (like compassion, charity and fidelity) – and the Holy Spirit uses
these words to activate our spirit and identify issues that need personal attention.
The Bible shapes our Christian life style.
Bible commentaries, books, sermons and testimonies, when in accord with the Bible, can also be
helpful in keeping our spirit clean and strong.
Christian life
Christian life is a journey, and we experience spiritual growth and maturity along the way. Not
everything happens at once.
In Galatians 5 we have a list of nine qualities that characterize a life directed by the Holy Spirit:
‘The fruit [result, consequence] of the spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness,
faithfulness, gentleness, self-control.’
These qualities express themselves in practical ways: Positive attitude. Loyal and compassionate
friend. Good listener. Good citizen. Feeding the hungry. Caring for the sick. Giving to the poor.
Working for social justice. Cleaning the environment. Encouraging the downhearted. Acting with
honesty, integrity, responsibility and consistency, and more ...
Christian life, lived in the spirit, is quality life.
CHURCH
Apostles
Our understanding of church comes primarily through two apostles – Peter and Paul – in the first
century. Apostlemeans a first-hand witness and special messenger chosen by Jesus.
Peter was one of the twelve apostles who spent three years with Jesus, witnessing his ministry and
absorbing his teachings. He was an ordinary fisherman by trade, but emerged as leader of this group,
in Jerusalem.
Meanwhile, Paul was a Roman citizen and highly educated member of Israel’s Sanhedrin
(comparable to U.S. Senate). In his government position, he persecuted the disciples of Jesus in and
around Jerusalem. The Sanhedrin believed these disciples were becoming a threat to the practices of
Judaism and to Israel’s political relationship with Rome.
On the road from Jerusalem to Damascus, shortly after Jesus’ death, Paul had a dramatic conversion
experience with Jesus (blinding light and voice), and for the next three years he was taught by Jesus
through personal revelation.
Paul and Peter became the most influential missionaries of the first century. Together with other
disciples, they started churches throughout the Roman Empire.
Luke, a physician, wrote the book of Acts, a chronological history of the growth of the early church.
He detailed important events and conversations so we can understand what happened as this good
news (called the gospel) began transforming lives around the world.
55% of the New Testament (Acts and Letters) are history from Luke and instructions from Paul, Peter,
James and John to those new churches. That is how the books got their names. For example, Paul
wrote the book of Romans to the church in Rome (Italy), Philippians to the church in Philippi
(Greece), and Colossians to the church in Colosse (Turkey).
All Christians believe that what these men taught and wrote to the early churches – the direct
teachings of Jesus – are still instructions from God to us today.
The early churches were basic and simple, with little resemblance to most churches today. Much has
been added to the core beliefs, practices and facilities.
Changes
In 312 Emperor Constantine declared Christianity to be the religion of the entire Roman Empire. The
church merged with the state and became institutionalized and corrupted, except for pockets of
genuine Christians who continued to follow the Apostle’s teachings.
• In 1054, the catholic-state church split into Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox branches.
• In 1521-1610, the Reformation divided the Roman Catholic church into Catholic and Protestant
branches. The Protestant reformers resisted central hierarchy and believed that salvation is by grace
alone, apart from any works of the church. Since then, the Catholic church has undergone many
internal reformations, even as recently as Vatican II in 1965, and is today much different from the
Catholic church of earlier times.
Today approximately 33% of all people in the world say they are Christian: Catholic 17%, Protestant
10%, Orthodox 6%.
Within the United States, 79% say they are Christian: Evangelical 26%, Catholic 24%, Mainline
Protestant 18%, Historic Black 7%, Other Christian 4%, Other religions 5%, No religion 16%.
Each branch of Christianity has divided and splintered into so many parts that labels no longer tell
what any particular congregation believes and practices.
Within each branch and sub-branch, there are both genuine Christians (see Day 5) and cultural
Christians (in name only).
Worship styles
The gospel is for all people of all places, cultures, times and personalities. Therefore, the church is
very diverse in its expressions.
It is the central message that's important, not style or structure.
Some churches sing old hymns, some modern choruses. Some pray from a prayer book, some pray
extemporaneously. Some emphasize learning, some emphasize experiences. Some are large, some
are small.
The Bible does not prescribe any particular style of worship or organization.
Each individual can find the local church that best fits his or her needs, beliefs and personality.
Sacraments
A sacrament is a special religious observance or ceremonial act.
There are seven sacraments in Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches: Baptism,
confirmation, holy communion, penance, anointing the sick, holy orders and marriage.
Protestants avoid the word sacrament and instead use the word ordinance when referring to an
outward sign of commitment ordained by Christ himself. Most protestants say there are
three ordinances: baptism, communion and marriage.
For the most part, these are differences in terminology and form, but there ARE differences between
Catholic/Orthodox churches and Protestant churches with regard to baptismand communion.
Baptism
Generally speaking, Catholics (and some Protestants) believe that baptism confers salvation to a
child through the church.
Most protestants believe that salvation comes only from God himself, through personal faith in Jesus
Christ, apart from any work of the church.
In many respects, the two views eventually come together, in this way:
• Those who believe in salvation through baptism usually also believe that when a child becomes old
enough to understand spiritual matters, he or she must confirm the baptism, usually facilitated by a
course of study in the church, so that parents’ choice then becomes personal choice by ratification.
They believe an individual can lose the salvation by ignoring or disaffirming it.
• Those who believe that salvation is by faith alone, apart from any work of the church, usually also
believe that a child is automatically saved until old enough to understand God's offer of salvation, and
then he or she either rejects it explicitly, rejects it by ignoring it, or accepts it by personal faith in Jesus
Christ. They believe that baptism is essentially a public testimony of the decision to follow Christ.
Different churches use different modes of baptism: Some sprinkle. Some pour. Some immerse. Most
evangelicals immerse as adults, citing the way Jesus was baptized.
Communion
Catholics call communion and accompanying liturgy the eucharist and celebrate it every Sunday as
the central part of their worship service, called mass. Most Catholics believe the bread and wine
miraculously turn into the actual flesh and blood of Jesus.
Protestants typically celebrate communion once a month as a part of their worship service. They
believe that the bread and wine are symbolic only.
All Christians celebrate communion with the same objective:
to commemorate Christ’s death and resurrection.
Spiritual hospital
True, there are hypocrites found in the church, but hypocrites are everywhere. Hypocrisy is a part of
the human condition, not an indictment of the church.
Think of the church not as a SPIRITUAL MUSEUM but as a SPIRITUAL HOSPITAL ... caring for all
kinds of people, wounded and frail because of sin.
Though far from perfect, the church is the vehicle for Christian interaction, communicating the gospel
to new generations, and extending the love of Christ throughout the world.