Doctrine Of The Trinity Essay

837 Words2 Pages

The Doctrine of the Trinity
The Christian Doctrine of the Trinity defines God as one in essence yet three in person. The concept of the Trinity is so complex and difficult to comprehend, that many believe it is contradictory. Despite there not being a simple one verse explanation, when analyzing all of Scripture there is clear evidence concerning the nature of God. God is three distinct persons: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, yet they are all fully God making Christianity a monotheistic religion with which many disagree.
The Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost are all unique and individual persons. God the Father sent his Son (The Holy Bible: ESV, John 3:16); They can therefore not be the same person. Similarly, after the Son returned …show more content…

Arianism was an anti-Trinitarian belief system taught by Arius, an elder in the Alexandrian church, in the early fourth century AD. However, in was finally condemned at the Council of Constantinople in 381 CE (“Holy Trinity”). Unitarianism, on the other hand, is the doctrine of the “oneness” of God. Historically, Unitarian Universalists are defined by their rejection of the Trinity and their belief that all of humanity will ultimately receive salvation (“Holy Trinity”). Today, Unitarians draw from a many different religious traditions and do not focus on doctrine and creeds as much as love and justice between human beings. This is also why, now, Unitarian arguments against the Trinity are scarce (“Holy Trinity”). Jehovah’s Witnesses, on the other hand, is a Christian group that was founded in the United States but rejects the doctrine of the Trinity. With many of their beliefs based on Arianism, they believe that God the Father is the one and only true God, and Jesus is his Son. They also believe that the Holy Spirit is merely an acting-force and not an actual being (“Holy Trinity”). Mormonism is also another group that claims the doctrine of the Trinity as false, stating that God is three individual beings who are one in purpose but not in being (“Holy Trinity”). Lastly, Islam choses to disagree with doctrine of the Trinity. Muslims believe that Jesus is a “great prophet of Allah but not...God incarnate” (Little 131). Muslims believe that there is only one true God:

Open Document