On a personal note I can understand why a Christian would believe so. I believed so for many years myself. It was only after I sought evidence as to why we were taught about the Trinity, when I could find no reference prior to the Nicene Counsel. Then it struck me as even odder that since the Nicene Council was composed of the Catholic Church, why do so many who consider themselves Christian deny other teachings of the Catholic Church. Seems like it is a belief brought about through selective "evidence".
I don't think many would not believe in God's(swt) ability to create a trinity. I just do not think we have seen any evidence that he has done so.
Woodrow, many people who are raised in a Christian home (at least nominally Christian) might believe in the Trinity because it is just part of the Christian "package" of beliefs. A person like that who later tries to figure God out using only reason and logic might then question or even reject a belief like the Trinity that was initially accepted on faith. That is all understandable. But then there are so many other things we cannot, and should not be expected to, understand about God using only reason and logic, that where does it end? Not believing in God at all, like some of the atheists who post here?
When you're dealing with God and the supernatural, at some point I think we all just accept certain things on faith and expect that at some point later, in the sweet by and by, we will get all the answers to our unanswered questions. At that point, I suspect many of our questions will not even be important anymore. The thing I think important is that eternity is soooo long and our present life is soooo short that when so much depends on what we do or believe in this short side of eternity, it becomes crucial to the extreme---a matter of spiritual (and eternal) life and death, so much so that if we mess up and get it wrong now, we will likely not have a second chance to get it right on the other side.
I appreciate this forum because it gives us all an opportunity explore the belief systems of people who reject our own belief system, as well as to perhaps explain to them that which we presently hold dear, while hearing how others explain what they presently hold dear. Hopefully, we all have as a goal the search for TRUTH, even though at any given moment we may all think we already have it. This forum is like a grand cyberspace university offering countless classes, each thread a different class, in which ideas pro and con are bounced off each other in the search for that TRUTH. I appreciate the role of the moderators to keep that process civil and respectful, and therefore fruitful. It is usually lack of understanding of another person's point of view that leads to lack of civility, which we may all be guilty of from time to time.
Now then... back to the Trinity. I think the belief in Jesus' Deity may have been one of those things that was accepted early on but which later called for a gathering of teachers and theologians to debate it, hence Nicea, when someone began to question it and teach something against it. All the early church Fathers taught His Deity, calling Jesus "God" and when the final decision was made concerning it at that Council, there was perhaps one or two (among hundreds) that argued against His Deity. I mean the vote was not even close. And it was not really a matter of Catholic vs. non-Catholic. It was a matter of what saith the Scriptures? That was their authority so that is what really decided the issue. Arianism (named after Arius, the dissenter) was determined to be heresy and therefore rejected by the Council. There may have been no reference, or very little, to the Trinity prior to that Council, as you note, because it was not until then that it was even an issue.
As a non-Catholic I don't think it is "selective evidence" that causes me to reject some Catholic teachings---it is no evidence at all, from a scriptural standpoint. For example, I reject the idea of purgatory because I believe there is NO evidence for that doctrine in the Bible, and much evidence that goes against it. I mean, that is such a major doctrine---what happens when you die? do you go straight to heaven or hell, or stop off in purgatory on your way to heaven?---that if it were true, it would be explicitly and unambiguously taught in place after place (like hell is) throughout the Scriptures. But it is NOT! So I reject it.
Peace
Last edited: