| The
Trinity: True or False?
Chapter
8
"THEY
SHALL WANDER INTO MYTHS"
The
historical development of the Doctrine of the Trinity
SECOND
CENTURY DEVELOPMENTS
IGNATIUS
Ignatius
was bishop of Antioch and was put to death in the Coliseum
at Rome sometime between the years 110 and 117. On his fateful
journey to Rome he wrote epistles to various churches that
had sent emissaries to cheer him on his way, and to one individual,
Polycarp of Smyrna. Of the epistles once attributed to him,
seven are now regarded as genuine, although they may contain
some interpolations. (53)
In all these letters the essential distinction between God
and Jesus and the subordination of the Son to the Father is
evident. He speaks of God as the 'Father of Jesus Christ',
(54) of 'one God, who has manifested himself through
Jesus Christ his Son' (55),
exhorts his hearers to 'subordinate yourselves to the bishop
and to one another, as Jesus Christ in the flesh did to the
Father', (56) and refers to
the 'God of Jesus Christ'. (57)
In the following passage, by the repetition of the word 'truly',
Ignatius was clearly attacking the Docetians in stressing
the reality of the person of Jesus, but at the same time gives
a summary of then Christian belief, which contains no hint
of any co-equality or pre-existence but rather stresses the
dependence of Christ on God ('his Father raised him', etc.):
'Stop
your ears therefore when anyone speaks to you apart from
Jesus Christ, who was descended from David, who was the
son of Mary, who was truly born, who both ate and drank,
was truly persecuted under Pontius Pilate, was truly crucified
and died, in the sight of those in heaven and on earth and
under the earth; who was also truly raised from the dead,
when his Father raised him, and his Father in like manner
will raise us up also who believe in him through Jesus Christ,
without whom we can have no true life'.
(58)
There is clearly no hint here of any relationship between
God and Christ as is demanded by Trinitarian dogma. If Ignatius
believed the modern idea of the Trinity he could and almost
certainly would have used other arguments to combat the errors
of the Docetians.
But on the other hand elsewhere in his letters Ignatius does
seem to go further than the Apostles in that he describes
Jesus as 'God', using phrases such as 'Jesus our God', and
'our God Jesus Christ'. We say 'seem' advisedly, because there
is some possibility that here we have examples of the later
interpolations alluded to above; although probably few would
go along with Lamson's view that the text is 'hopelessly corrupt'.
(59)
The uncertainty arises because in a Syriac version Ignatius'
Epistle to the Romans closes with 'Jesus Christ our God',
whilst the other versions simply says 'Jesus Christ'. Similarly
in his Epistle to the Ephesians 'blood of Christ' was changed
into 'blood of God'. This raises suspicions that other occasions
where Jesus is called God may have been similarly edited to
suit later beliefs. (As we have already seen from a consideration
of 1 John 5, this is by no means uncommon, see pp.32,198).
Alternatively Ignatius could have been using the term in the
sense that Justin and Tertullian did some years later. Speaking
of Jesus they said: 'Who, since he is the first-begotten ...
of God, is God', (60) and
'whatever is born of God is God' (61);
Here they are saying that Jesus is God, not in the trinitarian
sense, but in same way that one born of human parents is human.
Even so, could it be said that we have here the very beginnings
of the process that led to the full doctrine of the Trinity?
Whilst Ignatius in no way regarded Jesus as God in the Trinitarian
sense, we might detect a slight shift of emphasis away from
the Apostles' teaching. As Leitzmann says:
'John
preached that the logos had become flesh, but Ignatius goes
further and says without hesitation that God had come in
the flesh or had appeared as man, and this characterisation
of Christ as divine, leads him, in the end, actually to
speak of the sufferings of God and the blood of God'.
(62)
But even this was but a first step on the long road to the
Trinity. As the same author continues concerning Ignatius'
views:
'Nevertheless
the person of the Son is clearly distinguished from that
of the Father ... The difference between the Father and
the Son becomes still more evident when the subordination
and the exemplary obedience of the Son are emphasised. ...
Both in the abstractions of theology, and in the concrete
religion of Ignatius, the Risen Lord is a person clearly
separated from the Father, the one God of his monotheism'.
(63)
So whilst Ignatius might have used the word 'God' in referring
to Jesus, he was not using the term in its highest sense and
saying that Father and Son were equal.
THE
LETTER OF POLYCARP
When
Ignatius left Philippi on the last stage of his fateful journey
to Rome he left the Philippians instruction to write to Polycarp
at Smyrna asking for copies of Ignatius' other letters. In
complying with this request Polycarp sent his own epistle
to them as well. Unlike the epistles of Ignatius, in Polycarp's
letter there is nothing with the slightest Trinitarian implication.
He never speaks of Christ as God, and always maintains a clear
distinction between the Father and the Son. The Father is
Christ's God, the 'Almighty', and Jesus the 'Saviour';
(64) God is the 'Father of our Lord Jesus Christ'
(65); Christ received glory from God at his resurrection;
(66) and belief must be 'in our Lord Jesus Christ
and in his Father who raised him from the dead'.
(67)
It would thus seem from Polycarp that Ignatius was expressing
a far from universal viewpoint when he termed Christ 'God';
or maybe there is some truth in the suggestion that his original
text was modified later.
THE
SHEPHERD OF HERMAS
The
next example of early Christian literature dates from about
140. It is a rather whimsical book of visions described by
Hermas, written in an attempt to stir up the Christians in
Rome to greater spirituality. Although not part of the canon
of Scripture, it was highly regarded by later writers such
as Irenaeus. Here, possibly for the first time, we have the
pre-existence of Christ firmly stated:
'The
Son of God is far older than all his creation, so that he
was the Father's counsellor in his creation'.
(68)
But the subordination of the Son to the Father, and his dependence
on Him is not questioned. Jesus received the law 'from the
Father', and 'received all power from his Father'.
(69)
THE
EPISTLE OF BARNABAS
Probably
the next document, chronologically speaking, is the Letter
of Barnabas, circa 150. Like the above work it was highly
regarded in the early church. When Tischendorf found the Codex
Sinaiticus in the convent of St Catherine at the traditional
site of Mt. Sinai, this epistle was bound in with the rest
of the New Testament, coming after the book of Revelation.
By now the doctrine of the Son's pre-existence is firmly established,
and he is designated creator:
'..
he (Jesus) was Lord of all the world, to whom God said,
at the foundation of the world, "Let us make man in our
image and in our likeness"'. ... ' .. when as they look
at the sun ... which is the work of his (Christ's) hands'.
(70)
NO
LOGOS DOCTRINE
At
this point in our study of the history of the Trinity it is
worth noting that nowhere in the 'Apostolic Fathers' (as the
writers we have so far studied are called) has the logos
doctrine been referred to. It is highly significant that the
opinions which were later to become the essence of Justin
Martyr's teaching have received not the slightest attention.
Lamson comments on this:
'The
absence of all traces of the (Logos) doctrine in these writings
can be explained only on the supposition that the authors
"did not", in the words of Souverain, "find it in the Christian
religion, nor in the Jewish; and, not having studied in
the school of Plato, they could not import it from that
school into the Church of Christ". Hagenbach concedes that
the authors of these writings "do not make any particular
use of the peculiar doctrine of the Logos". Semisch, after
observing that the most ancient Fathers of the Church, in
their speculative inquiries into the person of Christ, took
their direction from Philo, whose doctrine of the Logos
was their starting point, adds, "We except, however,
the so-called Apostolic Fathers. Every such application
of the idea of the Logos was foreign to their minds"'.
(71)
JUSTIN MARTYR
Up
to this point of our historical review the detail of the lives
and the beliefs of the early Christians have been fragmentary
and obscure. But with the advent of Justin Martyr we enter
a period well chronicled with writings that are universally
accepted as genuine. Justin was born probably about the turn
of the century, and continued until about 165, when he suffered
a martyr's death. Before his conversion to Christianity he
was devoted to studies of philosophy, and even afterwards
he continued to preach Christianity dressed in the conventional
robe of a philosopher. (72)
His main works consist of two Apologies (i.e. defences
of Christianity) addressed to the Emperor and a Dialogue
with Trypho, a Jew antagonistic to Christian beliefs.
As a person of high ideals, intrepidly witnessing to his beliefs,
and showing fearless courage even to the sacrifice of his
own life, he must command our respect and appreciation.
Yet to a modern reader Justin's somewhat abrasive style of
writing, his rather unexpected beliefs, his poor mustering
of the arguments, his inaccurate quoting or even modification
of scripture, his belief that even philosophers like Socrates
and Plato were inspired by God through the logos,
(73) give rise to disappointment if a systematic
and vigorous defence of Christianity is expected. According
to Justin all the evils in the world are traceable to the
demons who sprang from the illicit union of the angels with
the daughters of men. (74)
These
antagonists of God and of all that is good were responsible
throughout history for all the lies, fraud and false religions
such as paganism; but their deceptive practices had now been
discovered and exposed by the coming of Christ. In this we
can see that Justin was influenced by the thinking of his
age rather than Apostolic and scriptural Christianity, for
demonology was of the essence of pagan religions.
(75)
This is even more true of his statements about Christ, where
it is universally acknowledged that he derived his views from
the philosophers rather than scripture. It was Justin who
invested the word logos with the meaning that Trinitarians
give it today, i.e. a pre-existent person rather than a thought
or purpose that became reality at the birth of Jesus. Justin
reinterpreted the O.T. passages which previously had been
regarded as Hebrew idioms or figures of speech
(76) to mean that the Logos was bodily present from
old time. Thus passages such as 'By the word (LXX logos)
of the Lord were the heavens made' (Psalm 33:6) and the creative
acts of wisdom in Proverbs 8:22-31 he regarded as descriptions
of Christ's actual operations in creation.
To ensure that we are not misrepresenting the 'philosopher
turned Christian', in alleging Plato as the real source of
his views on the relationship of God and Christ, we give just
a small selection of comments by historians on the source
of Justin's ideas:
'These
apologists, the most notable of whom was Justin Martyr,
defended Christianity ... Their defence was that if there
was any truth in traditional religion, it lay ... in a lofty
philosophical piety, and that the truth glimpsed by the
philosophers (especially the Platonists) was grasped more
surely by Christianity. ... The appeal to philosophy, especially
to Platonism, and the claims that Christianity was vindicated
by what was best in the philosophers .... most appealed
to Eusebius' (77)
'The earliest Christian philosophers, particularly Justin
and Athenagoras, likewise prepared the way for the speculations
of the Neoplatonists ... by their attempts to connect Christianity
with Stoicism and Platonism' (78)
'Justin was converted, but did not understand this
to mean the abandonment of his philosophical enquiries,
nor even the renunciation of all that he had learnt from
Platonism. ... The transcendent God of Plato, beyond mortal
comprehension, is the God of the Bible. ... Justin's debt
to Platonic philosophy is important for his theology in
one respect of far-reaching importance. He uses the concept
of the divine Logos or Reason both to explain how the transcendent
father of all deals with the inferior, created order of
things, and to justify his faith in the revelation made
by God through the prophets and in Christ.'
(79)
'It is obvious that Justin's Christianity is divided into
two halves; one is a philosophic religion which clothes
Greek ideas and conceptions in a loose Biblical garment,
... and the second aspect is that of the unreasoned faith
of the Church in which words of Jesus, sacramental mysticism,
and church-life combine to form an active unity'.
(80)
Thus it is indisputable that if we seek the source
of Justin's theology we need to look no further than the
philosophical concepts outlined at the beginning of this
chapter. It came from Plato rather than the Jewish and Christian
scriptures. The Platonic concept, now revised by the emerging
Neoplatonists of Justin's age, of a transcendent, unknowable
God who revealed himself to the material world by means
of a 'second god', the Logos, was transported into Christianity
to produce the Father and the pre-existent Son, the creator
and redeemer of the world.
But, let it be noted, this is still far from the full Trinitarian
concept as it was later developed. Justin's views differed
from the final church position in several respects. First,
Justin clearly states that Jesus was a being created by
God. Using the words of later controversy, "there was a time
when he was not". He taught that the Logos or Reason, originally
an attribute of God, was converted into a real being by a
voluntary act of the Father; and this took place some time
before the creation of the world. His words are:
'In
the beginning, before all creatures, God begat of himself
a certain rational power, which, by the Holy Spirit, is
also called the Glory of the Lord, .... Son, Lord, and Logos'
(81)
Thus, because the Son was created, Justin regards him as a
distinct person, inferior and subordinate to the Father. He
speaks of the Father as 'Lord of that Lord who appeared on
earth' and the source of all his power.
(82)
He frequently applies to the Son such phrases as 'next in
rank' or 'next after God'; the Son is 'the first power after
God the Father and sovereign Lord of all'.
(83)
Thus Justin recognised a great difference between the Father
and Son. There was no belief in Jesus forming one of three
co-eternal and consubstantial 'persons'; rather he was distinct
in essence and nature, having a real individuality, separate
from God, from whom he derived all his power and authority,
and was subject to his Father's will in all things.
Although the germ of the Trinity had now been firmly introduced,
it does not mean to say that the teaching about the pre-existent
Logos was universally accepted by the Church. Justin was probably
an avant garde thinker, similar to some of the Church
leaders of our day who propound controversial ideas. In support
of this suggestion we have the comment of Leitzmann who mentions
that Tatian, a disciple of Justin, and Athenagoras, a later
second century writer, both felt unable to wholeheartedly
accept Justin's views:
'...
the doctrine of the logos is only dealt with in a passage
(of Tatian's) that requires it, and with much restraint
as compared with Justin. ... Apparently neither of these
two men (Tatian and Athenagoras) was willing to recognise,
in the extra-biblical world, "the seed-corn of the logos",
which Justin had brought into discussion'.
(84)
In fact Justin himself implies that his views about Christ
did not reflect the universal belief of his time. He recognises
that there were some who rejected them, being believers in
the simple humanity of Jesus. To these Justin accords respect
even if he cannot agree with them something his present day
successors could copy with profit. In his dialogue with Trypho
he admits the possibility of his being wrong; but that even
if he could not prove the Son's pre-existence, the latter's
position as Christ is not affected. Trypho had protested:
'For
as to your assertion that this Christ pre-existed, being
God, before the ages, and then submitted to be born and
made man ... appears not only paradoxical, but foolish'.
To
which Justin replies:
'I
know that this assertion appears paradoxical, especially
to you Jews. Nevertheless, Trypho, the proof that he is
the Christ of God stands, if I cannot show that he pre-existed,
the son of the Creator of the universe, so being God, and
that he was born of the Virgin as man. But, since it is
fully demonstrated that he is the Christ of God, whatever
be his nature, even if I do not succeed in proving that
he pre-existed .... in the latter respect only would it
be just to say that I have erred. You would still not be
authorised to deny that he was a man, born of human parents,
and should it be shown that he became Christ by election:
for there are some of our race who acknowledge that he is
the Christ, but affirm that he was a man ... from whom I
dissent'. (85)
This is a most important passage. Justin admits the possibility
of his ideas being unproveable; and accepts that there were
some who disagreed with him, but he does not term them heretics.
Clearly Justin did not believe, as was later held and is maintained
until this day, that the divinity and pre-existence of Christ
were essential for the accomplishment of his mission, and
belief in it essential for salvation. There were sufficient
proofs to demonstrate that Jesus of Nazareth was the Christ.
This for Justin was the all-important fact: whether or not
Christ pre-existed could be left as a matter of opinion.
There is possibly another reason for the shift in emphasis
in the public presentation of Christ's origin. Put ourselves
in Justin's position. His objective was to present Christianity
in the best possible light, first in an attempt to reduce
persecution, but ultimately to convert the world. Yet the
pagans were asked to believe in someone who appeared to them
to be a common criminal, and who after being condemned at
a civil trial was slain in the manner reserved for the lowest
of society. Notwithstanding his subsequent resurrection, this
fact of history must have been seen as a continuing source
of embarrassment as the movement grew. Whilst a century earlier,
when the sect was small and insignificant, Paul could have
unashamedly and defiantly proclaimed the cross as 'foolishness'
to the Greeks and a 'stumblingblock' to the Jews (1 Corinthians
1:23) the thought of a world-wide religion being based on
an executed criminal was daunting. As Justin says 'We are
accused of madness; because, as they say, we assign the second
place, after the immutable and eternal God, the Creator of
all things, to a crucified man'. (86)
If however it could be shown to the Roman world that the Christian
leader was one of the gods, an emanation from the divine mind,
the pre-existent creator, then Christianity would become more
reputable.
Justin
and the Holy Spirit
Although
the position of the Son was being defined during this period,
the role of the Holy Spirit was less to the fore. It was still
regarded as the power of God in action, often being referred
to as 'the prophetic Spirit', that is, the Spirit that effected
divine inspiration. Sometimes the writers of this period fail
to distinguish between the Logos and the Spirit, even at times
using the terms interchangeably. There is no hint of a personal,
co-equal member of a trinity in this extract from Justin:
'We
are not atheists, worshipping as we do, the Maker of this
universe, ...offering up to him prayers and thanks ... And
that we with reason honour Jesus Christ our teacher of these
things and born for this end, .. receiving him as the son
of the true God, and holding him in the second place, and
the prophetic Spirit in third rank'.
(87)
Here Justin clearly distinguishes between the 'worship' rendered
to the Father, and the 'honour' given to the Son. In third
rank was the Holy Spirit, the inspirer of the prophetic scriptures,
and to reverence these writings was to honour the 'prophetic
Spirit' that spoke through them. The modern Trinity is nowhere
expressed here; indeed, worship of the Father, Son and Holy
Spirit on equal terms is expressly excluded. Evidently the
doctrine as we know it today was not the belief of Justin
or his Christian contemporaries.
THEOPHILUS
OF ANTIOCH
Soon
after Justin's martyrdom Theophilus became bishop of Antioch.
He is noteworthy for being the first to use the word 'trias',
trinity, in reference to the Deity. But Theophilus was still
a believer in the supremacy of God, and the Son as a creation
of God, being produced 'before all things' from the reason
(logos) of the Father. In fact an examination of the passage
in which 'trias' is used shows that Theophilus was not attempting
to describe a trinitarian relationship. He is indulging in
what for many of the 'Fathers' was a favourite pastime attempting
to find 'types' of Christianity in the Old Testament record.
Speaking of the Genesis record of the creation of the sun,
moon and stars he says:
'In
like manner, also, the three days which were before the
luminaries, are types of the triad of God, and
his word, and his wisdom. And the fourth is the type of
man, who needs light, that so there may be God, the Word,
Wisdom, Man. Wherefore on the fourth day the lights were
made'. (88)
No unbiased reader would ever conclude from this that Theophilus
believed in and was referring to the Trinity in its conventional
sense.
IRENAEUS
The
writings of Irenaeus in the closing years of the second century
marked a consolidation of the opinions that eventually gave
rise to the Trinity. In some ways Irenaeus took Justin's arguments
a little further. Because he felt that the Logos doctrine
of Justin gave rise to the criticism that he was preach-ing
two separate Gods, Irenaeus in an attempt to emphasise the
monotheism of God insisted that the Logos was inseparable
from the Father, just as light is inseparable from the sun.
To quote Leitzmann on this: 'God was entirely nous,
entirely logos, entirely operative spirit, and entirely light,
and anyone who separated one of these from God would make
him a composite being.' (89)
The question was 'How could God beget a Son and remain only
one God?'. Irenaeus could not find a logical answer, and so
resorted to saying that such things were unknowable by humans
and not revealed in Scripture. Isaiah 53:8 was quoted in support:
'Who shall declare his generation?' Thus it seems that Irenaeus
was the first to introduce the idea of an unknowable 'mystery'
into the debate about God.
But the subordination of the Son to the Father is still not
in doubt: Irenaeus says 'the Father is above all, and is himself
the head of Christ'. (90)
Thus with many such allusions he leaves us in no doubt that
the co-equality of the Son with the Father was not part of
his teaching. Rusch comments here:
'For
Irenaeus the Son is fully divine. ... Still he is clearly
a second-century theologian, as his picture of the Trinity
discloses. There is a single personage, the Father, the
Godhead itself, with his Word (reason) and his Wisdom. Not
only is monotheism reaffirmed, but the real, eternal distinctions
in the Godhead are stressed. (91)
Irenaeus also more closely defines the Holy Spirit, making
an exact distinction between it and the Logos..
THIRD
CENTURY DEVELOPMENTS
REFERENCES
53.
For discussion on this see Moeller, pp.112-114; Mosheim,
Vol. I. Cent I, ch.II, para 20 and footnotes.
54.
Magnesians 3:2
55.
Ibid, 8:2
56.
Ibid, 13:2
57.
Trallians 7:1
58.
Ibid 9:1-2
59.
Lamson, op. cit. p.16.
60.
Justin, Apol. I p.81
61.
Tertulian, Apol., adv. Gentes,c.21
62.
Leitzmann: History of the Early Church, Vol.
1, p242
63.
Ibid, p243
64.
Chapter 1
65.
Chapter 12:2
66.
Chapter 2:1
67.
Chapter 12:2
68.
Parable 9, chapter 12.
69.
Parable 5, ch.6
70.
Chapter 5:5,10
71.
Lamson, p.25
72.
Eusebius IV,11
73.
First Apology, 46
74.
The reference is to Genesis 6:1-3but few today would
accepts Justin's interpretation of this passage.
75.
For a detailed critique of Justin's writings see Lamson,
pp26-60, and Leitzmann, Vol. II, p183-185; and a briefer comment
in Mosheim, Vol. I Cent. II, Ch. II, para 5.
76.
Lamson, pp.70-74 deals extensively with this.
77.
Louth, A, Eusebius, p. xiv-xv
78.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, Art. 'Neoplatonism'
79.
Chadwick, pp 75-77.
80.
Lietzmann, Vol. II p.185.
81.
Dial. c.61, Otto's translation.
82.
Dial p.222
83.
Apol. I p.63.
84.
Leitzmann, Vol. II, p186
85.
Dial, pp143-5
86.
Apol. I p.51
87.
Ibid.
88.
Ad Autol., 1. ii, c. 15.
89.
Vol. II, p.210.
90.
Contra Her. 1, v. c, 18, para 2
91.
Rusch, W.G. The Trinitarian Controversy p.7.
Fortress Press, Philadelphia, 1986
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