| The
Trinity: True or False?
Chapter
8
"THEY
SHALL WANDER INTO MYTHS"
The
historical development of the Doctrine of the Trinity
THE
THIRD CENTURY
CLEMENT
OF ALEXANDRIA
Alexandria
was one of the greatest cities in the world. For centuries
it had been a seat of learning: the fame of its philosophers
rivalling that of Athens and Rome. Here was the greatest library
of the ancient world, reputedly containing over four hundred
thousand volumes. It was almost inevitable therefore that
in Alexandria the real interface between Greek and Christian
ideology should occur. Towards the end of the second century
a Christian theological school was established in the city,
where 'Christian ideas were handled in a free and speculative
fashion and worked out with the help of Greek philosophy'.
(92)
In the early days of the third century the school was presided
over by Clement, a man of great learning in both Greek culture
and philosophy, and in Christian thought and ethics. Clement's
achievement was not to further develop Christian theology,
(93) but to make it more respectable
in the eyes of the outside world. Many have commented on this:
'The
crucial achievement of Clement and Origen was to put over
the Gospel in terms by which it could be understood by people
familiar with the highest forms of Greek culture. They established
once for all the respectability of the new faith'.
(94)
'He
was the first to bring all the culture of the Greeks and
the speculations of Christian heretics to bear on the exposition
of Christian truth.' (95)
In Clement's view Plato and the other Greek philosophers were
inspired by the Logos, although not to the same extent as
the Hebrew prophets, with the objective of making the Gentile
world receptive to Christ. For example he states:
'Philosophy
... educated the Greek world as the law did the Hebrews
to bring them to Christ. Philosophy therefore is a preparation,
making ready the way for him who is being perfected in Christ'.
(96)
It
will be seen that this is a radical departure from New Testament
Christianity which had a different view of the 'wisdom of
this world':
'Where
is the wise man? Where is the scribe? Where is the debater
of this age? Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the
world? For since, in the wisdom of God, the world did
not know God through wisdom, it pleased God through
the folly of what we preach to save those who believe' (1
Corinthians 1:20-21).
As far as Clement's theology was concerned, he followed what
had become the traditional approach, being influenced by thinkers
such as Plato. For example, after quoting part of Plato's
second 'Epistle' he comments:
'For
myself, I cannot understand the meaning of this text except
as referring to the Holy Trinity: for the third is the Holy
Spirit, and the second the Son, by whom "all things were
made" according to the Father's will'.
(97)
Thus
Rusch is certainly correct when he says:
'Clement
presents in a Platonic framework an image of the Trinity
which he linked with the Christian triad of Father, Son
and Holy Spirit (Who is the Rich Man That is Saved?
34.1). Understandably, Clement's trinity, although Christian
in character, has a strong resemblance to the triad of Neoplatonism,
the One, Mind and World Soul'. (98)
But it is necessary to stress once more that, in common with
Justin, Clement still regarded Christ as a created being.
As Lamson says:
'None
of the Platonising Fathers before Origen have acknowledged
the inferiority of the Son in more explicit terms than Clement.
Photius, writing in the ninth century, besides charging
him with making the Son "a creature", says that he used
"other impious words full of blasphemy".'
(99)
Thus Clement's views on Christalready more developed and different
from the earlier Fathers were later regarded as blasphemous
by a Church which had adopted the Trinitarian formula.
TERTULLIAN
Tertullian
lived about the same time as Clement, but westward along the
North African coast at Carthage. He was the first Christian
of note who wrote in Latin; and brought into common use the
basic terms that were so vehemently discussed in the Arian
controversy a century or so later. He coined the expression
trinitas to denote Father, Son and Holy Spirit, and
also the concepts of persona and substantia,
which later were expressed as the 'three persons in one substance'.
This was in response to criticism that the Christians were
either worshipping two separate Gods, the Father and the Son,
thus exposing themselves to the charge of polytheism; or teaching
that there was no difference at all between them, and therefore
God Himself actually suffered on the cross. He considered
that the one divine 'substance' was shared between two 'persons':
thus God is at the same time one or two depending on how He
is viewed. But despite these attempts at explanation the rank
and file Christians at this time regarded these speculations
of their scholastic leaders as something new. As Lamson again
says: 'That the whole "logos doctrine", as it was called,
was by many regarded as an innovation, clearly appears. Neander
in his "Lectures on Christian Dogmas" notices what he calls
a "Unitarian monotheistic interest" as manifesting itself
about the time of Origen, or a little earlier. He quotes Tertullian
as saying that "ignorant people" were "alarmed at the names
of the Trinity, and accuse us (that is, the philosophical
Christians) of wishing to teach three Gods, while they would
be worshippers of one God.' (100)
It is salutary to thus learn that the doctrine which is regarded
today as the mainspring of Christianity was rejected by many
when it was first defined.
But whilst advocating a sort of unity in the Godhead, Tertullian
at the same time decidedly retained the ideas of Justin concerning
the pre-existence and creation of the Son, and his subordination
to his Father.
One opinion of Tertullian, however, had a most potent legacy.
Because many rank and file Christians were comparatively poorly
educated and needed short and simple answers to their questions,
he felt it better to appeal to the Rules of Faith and the
Creeds than to Scripture. In this way the tradition and authority
of the Church began to be put on a par with revelation, leading
fairly swiftly to the dominance of the Church authority; so
that it even made binding pronouncements on how Scripture
should be interpreted. So for the past 1600 years or so the
position has been that as described by this 19th century cleric:
'My belief in the Trinity is based on the authority of the
Church: no other authority is sufficient'.
(101)
ORIGEN
Origen
was without doubt the most influential Christian scholar of
the third century. Born of a Christian family in Alexandriathat
place where, as mentioned earlier, 'Christian ideas were handled
in a free and speculative fashion and worked out with the
help of Greek philosophy' (102)
he was a diligent student both of Scripture and philosophy.
Although many of his views were repudiated by his contemporaries,
and even more by later generations, the sheer industry with
which he set about recording the results of his studies has
bequeathed to him a reputation unequalled among early Christian
writers. We are not here concerned with his many fanciful
opinions which were later rejected by his fellow Christians,
but only with his contribution to the definition of the Christian
doctrine of God.
The tide of opinion concerning the Godhead which commenced
its flow with Justin and Ignatius was now flowing strongly,
and men such as Clement and especially Origen needed only
to channel it into more clearly defined directions. Abbot
says of this time:
'It
is certain that what is called the "development" of Church
dogmas was now very rapidly proceeding. As to the influence
of "philosophy" upon this growth of Church opinion, it may
be distinctly traced throughout the second century. ...
In Clement and Origen this tendency received open encouragement
... ' (103)
In confirmation of the accuracy of the last statement one
only needs to turn to almost any writer who describes Origen's
contribution to the debate about God. It is striking that
although Origen professed to rely only on Biblical writings
for his knowledge of divine things, in no case can one find
recorded any reasoned Scriptural arguments of his
on the topic. Instead later writers consistently allude to
philosophy as the source of his concepts. The following
are just a few of many representative samples of such comments
on Origen, commencing with Jerome, who belonged to the next
generation or so after him:
'In
this work (Stromateis) he compared the teaching of Christians
and philosophers with one another, and demonstrated all
the principles of our religion from Plato, Aristotle, Numenios,
and Cornutus'. (104)
'Origen was the first to enter into the genuine
tradition of the Platonic school, and both his intake and
his output fully reflect the Platonic heritage which was
alive in his day, and which was of increasing influence'.
(105)
'As a philosophical idealist, however, he transmutes the
whole contents of the faith of the church into ideas which
bear the mark of Neo-Platonism'.
(106)
'Origen tried to express the Christian faith in terms of
the prevailing Platonic philosophical ideas of his time'.
(107)
'This voluminous author, bible scholar, and theologian moved
beyond Clement in constructing a theological system that
weds the church's threefold understanding of God to the
categories of Middle Platonism. Origen's imaginative work
represents one of the most significant episodes in the history
of theology'. (108)
There seems little doubt, then, as to the source of Origen's
ideas about God. With reference to the last quotation one
could legitimately enquire why, if the Apostles had laid down
the elements of a faith 'which was once for all delivered
to the saints' (Jude 3), Origen and his contemporaries needed
to produce 'imaginative work' on the 'threefold understanding
of God'.
Origen's contribution to the debate was an attempt to develop
further the ideas on the 'begettal' of the Son. Up to now
the belief had been that the Son had been created by the Father
at some remote but distinct time. In some of his writings
Origen suggests that the begettal was a continuous process:
'Thus
human thought cannot apprehend how the unbegotten God becomes
the Father of the only-begotten Son. For it is an eternal
and ceaseless generation, as radiance is generated from
light.' (109)
Here Origen propounds the concept of eternal generation,
and thus laid the foundation of the current Trinitarian
view. Rawlinson says of this:
'His
doctrine of the Eternal Generation of the Son by the Father
is the great contribution of Alexandrine Platonism to the
Christian Creed'. (110)
Origen's concept of the eternal generation of the
Son was the basis of the Arian controversy to which we will
come shortly. The main dispute centred around the origin of
the Son. Was he a created or uncreated being? The eternal
generation aspect of Origen's belief was appealed to
by those who believed the Son had always existed. On the other
hand the Arians protested that Origen quite definitely supported
their time-honoured idea that the Son was subordinate to the
Father. And this is true. He says that the Son and Spirit
'are excelled by the Father, as much, or more, than they excel
other beings'; (111) and
that "The Father, who sent him (Jesus), is alone good, and
greater than he who was sent';
(112) 'prayer should be offered to God alone, definitely
not to the Son, who had the office of High Priest and mediator;
(113) and that 'Greater is the power of the Father
than that of the Son and the Holy Spirit; and greater that
of the Son than that of the Holy Spirit'.
(114)
How the Church resolved these opposing views will become evident
when we consider the Council of Nicea and later events; but
for the moment we note that both sides claimed support from
Origen, and also that in the middle of the third century the
position of the Holy Spirit was considered to be inferior
to both the Father and the Son.
It is also worth recalling in passing that philosophers considered
man to be composed of three entitiesa 'soul' that was pre-existent,
a 'mind' and a 'body': a three-in-one relationship. We have
already seen that the Platonic concept of the world soul,
of which human souls were a part, had infiltrated into Jewish
and then Christian thought. This led to the analogy that because
man was made in the image of God so the Divine essence also
had to be manifested in three aspects. Among others,
Origen leaned to this view, which probably contributed considerably
to the inclusion of the Holy Spirit as the third member of
the Godhead.
ARTEMON,
BERYLLUS, AND PAUL OF SAMOSATA
Before
leaving the time of Origen three other personalities can contribute
a little to our unravelling of the ebb and flow of ideas in
these formative years of Church doctrine. All three claimed
that Jesus did not personally pre-exist prior to his birth,
and alleged that in this they were retaining the original
faith. At the beginning of the third century Artemonwith other
shadowy figures known mainly from the allusions by Eusebius
seems to have declared that Christ was born of a virgin by
the power of the Holy Spirit. Of these that historian writes:
'They
affirm that all the ancients, and the very Apostles, received
and taught the same things which they now assert: and that
the preaching of the truth was preserved till the times
of Victor, who, from Peter, was the thirteenth Bishop of
Rome; but, from the times of Zephryrinus, the truth has
been adulterated'. (115)
So even in the middle of the third century some were still
insisting on what they claimed was the old faith. The inference
that this original faith was being modified by some in the
third century is therefore very strong. We also know little
about Beryllus, bishop of Bostra in Arabia, except that he
too seems to have taught that Christ had no personal pre-existence
before his appearance on earth, though while on earth the
divinity of the Father dwelt in him. However, we do know that
Origen converted him to what was by then the orthodox views
of the pre-existent Logos.
The views of the third writer, Paul of Samosata, in the second
half of the third century, are a little more defined. He believed
that the Son did not always exist as a person, but did exist
from all time only in the foreknowledge of God. Lamson
describes them thus:
'He
held that there was in the divine nature only one hypostasis
or person; that Christ was man by nature, yet was higher
than other men, as conceived by the Holy Spirit. He first
began to exist when born of Mary. The divine Logos united
itself with him, and dwelt in him as in no other sent of
God, but did not, properly speaking, incarnate himself in
him; it had no personal subsistence. The divine Reason itself,
the Wisdom or Power of God, revealed itself in him, as it
had never revealed itself in any other prophet. So great
was the illumination he hence received, and so was his nature
exalted by means of it, that he could with propriety be
called the Son of God.' (116)
Hanson confirms that for Paul 'the Son was Jesus Christ the
historical figure without any pre-existent history at
all'. (117)
So Chadwick comments that 'Paul's doctrine is akin to the
primitive Jewish/Christian idea of the person of Christ'.
(118) Here again we seem to be
hearing the echoes of the original, non-trinitarian, beliefs
about the nature of Christ.
The question needs to be faced here that if the pre-existence
of the Son as the divine Logos and creator of the world had
been from the beginning an integral part of the Christian
message, it would be most unlikely that in the middle of the
third century some leading Christians (for Paul of Samosata
had a large following) would be propounding a doctrine that
would apparently degrade the leader of their movement into
a mere man. It would have been detrimental, if not fatal to
the Christian cause of converting the world from paganism.
All the prejudices and hostility of the those who believed
in the majesty of the gods would have been aroused. But the
fact that in such circumstances the doctrine was preached,
and gained sufficient foothold for Church councils to be called
to denounce it, (119)
is strong presumption that the beliefs they were advancing
were indeed ancient, if not original.
As
we conclude our brief review of the third century we note
that during it the Church, using the instrument of philosophy,
had made great advances in its thinking about the Son, whilst
still accepting his subordination; but at the same time there
were considerable groups who regarded this progress as denying
the original beliefs of the Apostolic Church.
FOURTH
CENTURY DEVELOPMENTS
REFERENCES
92.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, Art, 'Origen'
93.
'Clement gives us no theory of the relation of the logos
to the Father or to the Holy Spirit, nor any doctrine in regard
to the nature of Christ's humanity' - Leitzmann, Vol. II p.294.
94.
Lion Handbook, The History of Christianity, p.77
95.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, Art. 'Clement of Alexandria'
96.
Stromateis, 6.6.
97.
Stromateis, 5.14
98.
Rusch, p.12
99.
p.150.
100.
p. 224.
101.
Rev. J. Hughes, quoted by White, p.67.
102.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, Art. 'Origen'
103.
Footnote on p.189 of Lamson
104.
Jerome, Epist. 70,4,3
105.
Leitzmann, Vol. II, p. 298
106.
ibid.
107.
Lion Handbook, p.103
108.
Rusch, p.13.
109.
Extracted from De Principiis. I.2.3-6
110.
A.E.J.Rawlinson. Essays on the Trinity and Incarnation,
p.250
111.
Comment in Joan, t, xiii, 25
112.
ibid. t. vi,23
113.
De Orat. 15
114.
De Princip. 1,i, c.3,5
115.
Eusebius, 5,28.
116.
Priestly, p.256.
117.
p.71 - italics ours
118.
p.114
119.
At Antioch, A.D. 269-272 (These were the councils that
also condemned the use of the word homoousia, 'consubstantial'
to describe the relationship between the Father and Son: which
term became orthodox after the Council of Nice!).
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