Our Triune God
John
MacArthur
The Trinity is an unfathomable, and yet
unmistakable doctrine in Scripture. As Jonathan Edwards noted, after studying
the topic extensively, “I think [the doctrine of the Trinity] to be the highest
and deepest of all Divine mysteries” (An Unpublished Treatise on the Trinity).
Yet, though the fullness of the Trinity is far
beyond human comprehension, it is unquestionably how God has revealed Himself in
Scripture—as one God eternally existing in three Persons.
This is not to suggest, of course, that the
Bible presents three different gods (cf. Deut.
6:4). Rather, God is three Persons in one essence; the Divine essence
subsists wholly and indivisibly, simultaneously and eternally, in the three
members of the one Godhead—the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. (We considered the
deity of Christ last Thursday, in this
post .)
The Scriptures are clear that these three
Persons together are one and only one God (Deut.
6:4). John
10:30 and 33
explain that the Father and the Son are one. First Corinthians 3:16 shows that the Father and the Spirit
are one. Romans
8:9 makes clear that the Son and the Spirit are one. And John 14:16, 18, and 23 demonstrate that the Father, Son, and Spirit are
one.
Yet, in exhibiting the unity between the members
of the Trinity, the Word of God in no way denies the simultaneous existence and
distinctiveness of each of the three Persons of the Godhead. In other words, the
Bible makes it clear that God is one God (not three), but that the one God is a
Trinity of Persons.
In the Old Testament, the Bible implies the idea
of the Trinity in several ways. The title Elohim (”God”), for instance, is a
plural noun which can suggest multiplicity (cf. Gen.
1:26). This corresponds to the fact that the plural pronoun (”us”) is
sometimes used of God (Gen.
1:26; Isa.
6:8). More directly, there are places in which God’s name is applied to more
than one Person in the same text (Ps.
110:1; cf. Gen.
19:24). And there are also passages where all three divine Persons are seen
at work (Is.
48:16; 61:1).
The New Testament builds significantly on these
truths, revealing them more explicitly. The baptismal formula of Matthew 28:19 designates all three Persons of the Trinity: “Go
therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of
the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit.” In his apostolic benediction to the
Corinthians, Paul underscored this same reality. He wrote, “The grace of the
Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God [the Father], and the fellowship of the
Holy Spirit, be with you all” (2 Cor.
13:14). Other New Testament passages also spell out the glorious truth of
the Triune God (Romans
15:16, 30; 2 Cor. 1:21–22; Eph.
2:18).
In describing the Trinity, the New Testament
clearly distinguishes three Persons who are all simultaneously active. They are
not merely modes or manifestations of the same person (as Oneness theology
incorrectly asserts) who sometimes acts as Father, sometimes as Son, and
sometimes as Spirit. At Christ’s baptism, all three Persons were simultaneously
active (Matt. 3:16–17), with the Son being baptized, the Spirit
descending, and the Father speaking from Heaven. Jesus Himself prayed to the
Father (cf. Matt.
6:9), taught that His will was distinct from His Father’s (Matt. 26:39), promised that He would ask the Father to send
the Spirit (John
14:16), and asked the Father to glorify Him (John
17:5). These actions would not make sense unless the Father and the Son were
two distinct Persons. Elsewhere in the New Testament, the Holy Spirit intercedes
before the Father on behalf of believers (Rom.
8:26), as does the Son, who is our Advocate (1 John
2:1). Again, the distinctness of each Person is in view.
The Bible is clear. There is only one God, yet
He exists, and always has existed, as a Trinity of Persons—the Father, the Son,
and the Spirit (cf. John 1:1, 2). To deny or misunderstand the Trinity is to deny or
misunderstand the very nature of God Himself.
Today’s article was adapted from John’s
commentary on 1-3 John.
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