A Trinity of Purpose, Beings, and Pillars

The three greatest events ever to occur are:

  1. The Creation
  2. The Fall
  3. The Atonement

They are inseparably woven together in to a tapestry exactly as the Godhead is woven into a numeric count of one.

To most of Christianity, God the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost are mysteriously connected into a single essence or substance. This is often called the Trinity Doctrine.

The history of the Catholic Church seems to be swept under the rug and the argument between Arias and Athanasius all but dismissed (James L. Barker, Apostasy From the Divine Church, pp. 238-271).

The very concept of three distinct beings, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost being combined into one substance was a result of a doctrinal argument that cost lives, memberships, and strained the newly founded political church headed by the powerful sun-worshipper Constantine (James E. Talmage, The Great Apostasy, pp. 101-112).

Instead of using the scriptures to discover doctrine, past and current supporters of trinity use(d) the scriptures to justify the dogma based upon personal, political, or traditional beliefs. It cannot be defended from a logical, doctrinal, or historical point of view.

 

Published by

Richard Himmer

Author, PhD in Organizational Psychology.