Unsearchable: Christ and the Trinity

Steve Stewart's picture

If there is one aspect of the mystery of Christ that has most profoundly affected me over this past season, it is undoubtedly the contemplation and study of the Trinity. For many years it was simply a doctrine of which I was aware (and rarely, if ever taught on), but I had missed the depth and richness of experientially knowing the triune God. In fact, I am convinced that it is not possible to know God rightly apart from the Trinity.

In Part Four, we looked at the doctrine of the Incarnation that expresses the mystery that Jesus Christ is fully human and fully God. This union of God and man is not merely a moral or spiritual union; it is a physical union of two natures so as to make One Person. This union is grounded in the eternal fellowship of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit––the Trinity.

The term trinity appears nowhere in the Bible, so where do we get this doctrine from? It is progressively revealed through both the Old and New Testaments, beginning in the Creation account where God says, “Let Us make man in Our image, after Our likeness.” (Gen 1:26) From the earliest days of the Church, the church fathers unanimously read this verse as being Trinitarian. In the second verse of the Bible we read, “And the Spirit of God was hovering over the face of the waters.” There are over 70 specific references to the Holy Spirit in the Old Testament. (For some of the many references to the Son in the Old Testament, see Part Three.)

The revelation of the Trinity becomes more complete in the New Testament, beginning with Jesus’ baptism where we see all three members of the Trinity functioning. God the Father is speaking from heaven; God the Son is being baptized; God the Holy Spirit is descending from heaven and resting on Jesus to anoint Him for ministry. At the end of His ministry as recorded in Matthew, Jesus tells his disciples to go to all nations “baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit”. In this context, clearly Jesus viewed the Holy Spirit as a Person and equal with the Father and the Son.

The New Testament writers usually use the name “God” to indicate the Father and “Lord” to refer to the Son. Thus, 1 Cor 12:4-6 is clearly Trinitarian: “There are different gifts, but the same Spirit. There are different ministries, but the same Lord. And there are different activities, but the same God.” Likewise, the final verse in 2 Cor: “The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with all of you.” Other Trinitarian scriptures include Eph 4:4-6; 1 Pe 1:2; Jude 20,21.

Just as many councils gathered in the first centuries of the church to come to agreement on the nature of Jesus as fully man and fully God, likewise fathers and theologians in the church developed, from an understanding of the revelation of scripture, the doctrine of the Trinity. They knew that an understanding of the Trinity is vital because, without the Trinity––Father, Son and Holy Spirit––we do not know God rightly. The Trinity is about infinite and eternal inclusion. It is about eternal, joyful, Other-centered, self-giving love. The kenotic love demonstrated at the cross is at the core of the joy of the triune life of God; it is this creative force of love that goes out into the cosmos. It is “the triune being of God [that] is the vital oxygen of Christian life and joy.” 1 And there never was a time when God was alone, One in essence. God has always been Trinity.

Over time, as the church began to lose its focus on the Trinity, God became increasingly remote. Instead of seeing the wonder and beauty of beholding the Trinitarian life of God in its perfect fellowship, we “re-created” the essential meaning of holiness from transcendent beauty into primarily a legal term to reflect moral rightness. (Thanks to C. Baxter Kruger for this insight.) The result was a Christianity built upon obedience to a distant God who demands a high standard of performance, rather than the good news that we have been invited into the joyous communion with an infinitely joyful triune God.

Jesus declared a truth about God that shook the 1 st century religious elite. God is not first of all a Ruler or even Creator. No, Jesus told His audience that the most foundational truth about God is that He is a Father. Yes, God rules His creation, but He does so not as a Ruler-Judge, but as a Father. When we understand this in our inner being, we start to see our life and all of creation in a new way. The motivation of a father is to nurture, to encourage, to be a life-giver. To be a Father means to love. Before time began, the Father––our Father––was loving, delighting, and giving life to the Son. “Father God” is not a title, not an expression of respect. Father is a description, because fathers beget life (without this, there is no life and therefore they are not fathers). Again, the most foundational truth about God is that He is a Father––not that He is a Creator, a Ruler or even Almighty. Above all else, He is a Father. Without this understanding, the Cross is primarily about payment made for wrongdoing. With this understanding, we see that the Cross is about a Father reaching out to His children to bring them home to Him.

The Apostle John writes: "God is love. God’s love was revealed among us in this way: God sent His one and only Son into the world so that we might live through Him." (1 Jn 4:8-9) God is love. He doesn’t need to create or rule in order to be who He is: love. However, love must have an object, and that object is the eternal Son. Jesus was loved from the foundation of the world; in fact, the Father’s love for Him was at the core of His very being. (Jn 17:24; Jn 5:20). Jesus lived out of the place of perfect security and identity because He lived in the eternal triune communion with the Father, unwaveringly as the object of His love. In the Trinity, love flows both ways; in fact, I have come to see the activity of the Trinity as a continuous divine dance between Father, Son and Holy Spirit with each One giving and receiving kenotic love.

The Father’s love is not distant or theoretical. It is not only love for the Son. The Father pours love into us by the third Person of the Trinity: the Holy Spirit. As we have seen, the Son is God With Us (Emmanuel) by becoming one of us; the Holy Spirit is God With us by living among us. 2 The Holy Spirit takes Christ’s victory on the Cross and applies it to us individually. The Holy Spirit within us makes us alive to the Trinity’s joyous, eternally life giving and life exchanging activity that is always going on in all of creation. (More on this later.)

The Trinity is not an aspect of being God. The Trinity is God; this is how God is God. When this becomes revelation, our relationship with the infinitely relational, communal and triune God changes forever. Of this, I am convinced.

~ Steve

1 Michael Reeves, Delighting in the Trinity (IVP Academic, 2012)
2 Fred Sanders, The Deep Things of God (Crossway, 2010)

 
Add new comment

Add new comment

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

Results

Results 61 - 70 of 488

Pages

Supernatural Church

Supernatural Church

by Mark and Patti Virkler | 62 Pages

This book is designed to be used in a 13-week new members' class of a church which is pursuing intimacy with the Holy Spirit. As people come to your church, they come with many different theological backgrounds and expectations as to what church ought to be like. It is crucial that you align these people's hearts and minds as they join the church, or they will end up pulling in many different directions and causing division.

Price: $9.95
Talking With Jesus - Front Cover

Talking with Jesus

by Evelyn Klumpenhouer

A full year of daily devotionals in which the Holy Spirit “opens up” Scripture!

These short, powerful devotionals for every day of the year are easy to read in less than two minutes. Each daily verse (with reference) is followed by God speaking directly to you concerning that verse. These inspiring messages provide an incredibly uplifting way to begin each day.

"Were not our hearts burning within us…while He was explaining the Scriptures to us?" (Lk. 24:32).

Price: $14.95

The Faith Zone

by Steve Long and Mark Virkler

Click here for Kindle version.

IF ONLY I HAD A LITTLE MORE FAITH...

Have you ever thought that before? Most of us have thought it, or even heard it from others, at some point in our lives. But what exactly is faith anyway? And how do we get more of it? And if we did get more of it, could we actually move mountains into the sea?

Price: $15.99

The Utter Relief of Holiness

How God's Goodness Frees Us from Everything That Plagues Us - by John Eldredge

What a relief it would be to be set free from all that plagues us -- the inner struggle with anger, or contempt, the habitual sins. Is such an experience possible?

Price: $5.00
Through the Bible

Through the Bible

by Mark and Patti Virkler | 142 Pages

Listening to God through Scripture! Were not our hearts burning within us while He was...explaining the Scriptures to us (Lk. 24:32)?  This book will guide you in letting God reveal truth to you as you meditate on the stories and teaching of those who have gone before you. Your heart will be set afire by God!

Price: $19.95
Twenty Key Biblical Principles for Management

Twenty Key Biblical Principles for Management

by Mark and Patti Virkler | 111 Pages

Does the Bible contain principles which should be followed if you are managing a business, a church or a home? Do the most successful businesses, churches and homes follow these principles? The answer to both questions is, "Yes!" Do you know what these key principles are for successful management? If not, this book is for you. The book is designed with quick, easy evaluation worksheets provided for each of the 20 principles.

Price: $12.95
Wading Deeper Into the River of God

Wading Deeper Into the River of God

by Mark Virkler | 212 Pages

This book is the story of Mark’s personal journey toward revelation knowledge. With his trademark transparency and humor, you’ll identify with his challenges along the way and rejoice in his breakthroughs as he endeavors to continually wade deeper into the river of God.

Price: $16.95

When Heaven Touches Earth

by Greig, Virkler, Rogers, Goll, Fuller | 140 Pages

The central theme of this book is that average Christian believers can learn to exercise the eyes of their hearts and receive Spirit-led visions to worship in heaven, to receive the Lord's healing of their hearts, His authority, and His strategies to bring heaven down to earth (Matt. 6:10). Heavenly encounters initiated and led by Jesus with angels and those who have gone before us may sometimes be a part of these visionary experiences, as they were in Scripture.

Price: $14.95

Your Extraordinary Life! - case of 52

by Mark & Patti Virkler | 197 Pages | $14.99 Retail (Per Copy)

Purchase a case of 52 at ONLY $4.79 each - Distribute widely - Impact future generations of Christians

Can you imagine starting new believers off with the Holy Spirit! What if the first thing you were taught as a newborn Christian was how to connect easily and daily with the Holy Spirit Who was living inside you, anointing you, empowering you and transforming you?

Price: $249.08

Counseled by God Complete Discounted Package

2 books, 13 sessions on 6 CDs and 6 DVDs, save 25% now

Act Now: 

Recently Released – 35th Anniversary Edition

The foremost training series in the world teaching you how to become emotionally whole by hearing the voice of the Wonderful Counselor (Isa. 9:6)! This is your best value, putting all the tools in your hands you will need to ensure this message bears fruit in your life and equipping  you to share it with others.

Price: $99.00

Pages