The doctrine of the
Holy Trinity is not merely an "article of faith" which men are called to
"believe." It is not simply a dogma which the Church requires its good
members to "accept on faith." Neither is the doctrine of the Holy
Trinity the invention of scholars and academicians, the result of
intellectual speculation and philosophical thinking.
The doctrine of the Holy Trinity arises from
man's deepest experiences with God. It comes from the genuine living
knowledge of those who have come to know God in faith.
The paragraphs which follow are intended to
show something of what God has revealed of Himself to the saints of the
Church. To grasp the words and concepts of the doctrine of the Trinity
is one thing; to know the Living Reality of God behind these words and
concepts is something else. We must work and pray so that we might pass
beyond every word and concept about God and to come to know Him for
ourselves in our own living union with Him: "The Father through
the Son in the Holy Spirit" (Ephesians 02:
18-22).
In the Old Testament we find Yahweh, the one
Lord and God, acting toward the world through His Word and His Spirit.
In the New Testament the "Word becomes flesh" (John
01:14). As Jesus of Nazareth, the only-begotten Son of God
becomes man. And the Holy Spirit, who is in Jesus making him the Christ,
is poured forth from God upon all flesh (Acts 02:17).
One cannot read the Bible nor the history of
the Church without being struck by the numerous references to God the
Father, the Son (Word) of God and the Holy Spirit. The New Testament
record, and the life of the Orthodox Church is absolutely
incomprehensible and meaningless without constant affirmation of the
existence, interrelation and interaction of the Father, the Son, and the
Holy Spirit towards each other and towards man and the world.
The main question for the Church to answer
about God is that of the relationship between the Father, the Son, and
the Holy Spirit. According to Orthodox Tradition, there are a number of
wrong doctrines which must be rejected.
One wrong doctrine is that the Father
alone is God and that the Son and the Holy Spirit are creatures, made
"from nothing" like angels, men and the world. The Church
answers that the Son and the Holy Spirit are not creatures, but are
uncreated and divine with the Father, and they act with the Father in
the divine act of creation of all that exists.
Another wrong doctrine is that God in
Himself is One God who merely appears in different forms to the world:
Now as the Father, then as the Son, and still again as the Holy Spirit.
The Church answers once more that the Son and Word is "in the beginning
with God" (John 1:12) as is the Holy Spirit,
and that the Three are eternally distinct.
The Son is "of God" and the
Spirit is "of God."
The Son and the Spirit are not merely aspects
of God, without, so to speak, a life and existence of their own. How
strange it would be to imagine, for example, that when the Son becomes
man and prays to his Father and acts in obedience to Him, it is all an
illusion with no reality in fact, a sort of divine presentation played
before the world with no reason or truth for it at all!
A third wrong doctrine is that God is
one, and that the Son and the Spirit are merely names for relations
which God has with Himself. Thus, the Thought and Speech of God
is called the Son, while the Life and Action of God is called the
Spirit; but in fact -- in genuine actuality -- there are no such
"realities in themselves" as the Son of God and the Spirit of God. Both
are just metaphors for mere aspects of God. Again, however, in such a
doctrine the Son and the Spirit have no existence and no life of their
own. They are not real, but are mere illusions.
Still another wrong doctrine is that the
Father is one God, the Son is another God, and the Holy Spirit still
another God. There cannot be "three gods," says the Church, and
certainly not "gods" who are created or made. Still less can there be
"three gods" of whom the Father is "higher" and the others "lower." For
there to be more than one God, or "degrees of divinity" are both
contradictions which cannot be defended, either by divine revelation or
by logical thinking.
Thus, the Church teaches that while there is
only One God, yet there are Three who are God -- the Father, the
Son, and the Holy Spirit -- perfectly united and never divided
yet not merged into one with no proper distinction. How then does
the Church defend its doctrine that God is both One and yet Three?
First of all, it is the Church's teaching and
its deepest experience that there is only one God because there is only
one Father.
In the Bible the term "God" with very few
exceptions is used primarily as a name for the Father. Thus, the Son is
the "Son of God," and the Spirit is the "Spirit of God." The Son is born
from the Father, and the Spirit proceeds from the Father -- both in the
same timeless and eternal action of the Father's own being.
In this view, the Son and the Spirit are both
one with God and in no way separated from Him. Thus, the Divine Unity
consists of the Father, with His Son and His Spirit distinct from
Himself and yet perfectly united together in Him.
One God, One Father
What the Father is, the Son and the Spirit are also. This is the
Church's teaching. The Son, born of the Father, and the Spirit,
proceeding from Him, share the divine nature with God, being "of one
essence" with Him.
Thus, as the Father is "ineffable,
inconceivable, invisible, incomprehensible, ever-existing and eternally
the same" (Divine Liturgy of St. John
Chrysostom), so the Son and the Spirit are exactly the same.
Every attribute of divinity which belongs to God the Father -- life,
love, wisdom, truth, blessedness, holiness, power, purity, joy --
belongs equally as well to the Son and the Holy Spirit. The being,
nature, essence, existence and life of God the Father, the Son and the
Holy Spirit are absolutely and identically one and the same.
Since the being of the Holy Trinity is one,
whatever the Father wills, the Son and the Holy Spirit will also. What
the Father does, the Son and the Holy Spirit do also. There is no will
and no action of God the Father which is not at the same time the will
and action of the Son and the Holy Spirit.
In Himself, in eternity, as well as towards the
world in creation, revelation, incarnation, redemption, sanctification,
and glorification -- the will and action of the Trinity are one: from
the divine Father, through the divine Son, in the divine Holy Spirit.
Every action of God is the action of the Three. No one person of the
Trinity acts independently of or in isolation from the others. The
action of each is the action of all; the action of all is the action of
each. And the divine action is essentially one
Since each person of the Trinity is one with
the others, each knows the same Truth and exercises the same Love. The
knowledge of each is the knowledge of all, and the Love of each is the
Love of all.
If taken in distinction, each person of the
Trinity knows and loves the others with such absolute perfection,
knowledge, and love that there is nothing unknown and nothing unloved of
each in the others, and all in all. Thus, if the creaturely knowledge of
men can unite minds in full unanimity, and if the creaturely love of men
can bring the divided together into one heart and one soul and even one
flesh, how incomparably more perfect and absolutely uniting must be the
oneness when the Knowers and Lovers are eternal and divine.
The Three Divine Persons
In Orthodox terminology the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit are
called three divine persons.
Person is defined here simply as the
subject of existence and life --
hypostasis in the traditional
church language.
As the being, essence or nature of a reality
answers the question "what?", the person of a
reality answers the question "which one?" or "who?" Thus, when we ask
"What is God?" we answer that God is the divine, perfect, eternal,
absolute ... and when we ask "Who is God?" we answer that God is the
Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
The saints of the Church have explained this
tri-unity of God by using such an example from worldly existence. We see
three men. "What are they?" we ask. "They are human beings," we answer.
Each is man, possessing the same humanity and the same human nature
defined in a certain way: created, temporal, physical, rational, etc. In
what they are, the three men are one. But in
who they are, they are three, each absolutely
unique and distinct from the others. Each man in his own unique way is
distinctly a man. One man is not the other, though each man is still
human with one and the same human nature and form.
Turning to God, we may ask in the same way: "What
is it?" In reply we say that it is God defined as absolute perfection:
"ineffable, inconceivable, invisible, incomprehensible, ever-existing,
and eternally the same." We then ask, "Who is
it?", and we answer that it is the Trinity : Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit. In who God is, there are three persons who are each absolutely
unique and distinct. Each is not the other, though each is still divine
with the same divine nature and form. Therefore, while being one in
what they are; the Father, the Son, and the
Holy Spirit are Three in who they are. And
because of what and who
they are -- namely, uncreated, divine persons -- they are undivided and
perfectly united in their timeless, spaceless, sizeless, shapeless
super-essential existence, as well as in their one divine life,
knowledge, love, goodness, power, will, action, etc.
Thus, according to the Orthodox Tradition, it
is the mystery of God that there are Three who are divine; Three who
live and act by one and the same divine perfection, yet each according
to his own personal distinctness and uniqueness. Thus it is said that
the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit are each divine with the same
divinity, yet each in his own divine way. And as the uncreated divinity
has three divine subjects, so each divine action has three divine
actors; there are three divine aspects to every action of God, yet the
action remains one and the same.
We discover, therefore, one God the Father
Almighty with His one unique Son (Image and Word) and His one Holy
Spirit. There is one living God with His one perfect divine Life, who is
personally the Son, with His one Spirit of Life. There is one True God
with His one divine Truth, who is personally the Son, with His one
Spirit of Truth. There is one wise and loving God with His one Wisdom
and Love, who is personally the Son, with His one Spirit of Wisdom and
Love. The examples could go on indefinitely: the one divine Father
personifying every aspect of His divinity in His one divine Son, who is
personally activated by His one divine Spirit. We will see the living
implications of the Trinity as we survey the activity of God in his
actions toward man and the world
The Holy Trinity in
Creation
God the Father created the world through the Son (Word) in the Holy
Spirit. The Word of God is present in all that exists, making it to
exist by the power of the Spirit. Thus, according to Orthodox doctrine,
the universe itself is a revelation of God in the Word and the Spirit.
The Word is in all that exists, causing it to be, and the Spirit is in
all that exists as the power of its being and life.
This is most evident in God's special creature,
man. Man is made in the image of God, and so he bears within him the
unique likeness of God which is eternally and perfectly expressed in the
divine Son of God, the Uncreated and Absolute Image of the Father. Thus,
man is "logical"; that is, he participates in God's
Logos (the Son and Word) and so is free, knowing, loving,
reflecting on the creaturely level the very nature of God as the
uncreated Son does on the level of divinity.
Man also is "spiritual"; he is the special
temple of God's Spirit. The Breath of God's Life is breathed into him in
the most special way. Thus, among creatures man alone is empowered to
imitate God and to participate in His life. Man has the competence and
ability to become a Son of God, mirroring the eternal Son, reflecting
the divine nature because he is inspired by the Holy Spirit as is no
other creature. Thus, one saint of the Church has said that for man to
be a man, he must have the Spirit of God in him. Only then can he
fulfill his humanity; only then can he be made a true Son of God,
likened to him who is only-begotten.
On the most basic level of creation, therefore,
we see the Trinitarian dimensions of the being and action of God: the
Word and the Spirit of God enter man and the world to allow them to be
and to become that for which the Father has willed their existence.
The Holy Trinity in
Salvation
With man's failure to fulfill himself in his created uniqueness, God
undertakes the special action of salvation. The Father sends forth His
Son (Word) and His Spirit in yet another mission. The Word and the
Spirit come to the Old Testament saints to make known the Father. The
Word, as it were, incarnates himself in the Law (in Hebrew called the
"words") which is inspired by the Spirit. The Spirit inspires the
prophets to proclaim the Word of God. Thus, the Law and the Prophets are
revelations of God in His Word and His Spirit. They are partial
revelations, "shadows" (as the New Testament calls them), prefiguring
the total revelation of the "fullness of time" and preparing its coming.
When the time is fulfilled and the world is
made ready, the Word and the Spirit come once more -- no longer by their
mere action and power, but now in their own persons, dwelling personally
in the world.
The Word becomes flesh. The only-begotten Son
is born as a man, Jesus of Nazareth. And the Spirit who is in him is
given to all men to make them also sons of the Father in an eternal
development of attaining His perfection by growing forever "to the
measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ" (Eph
4:13).
Thus, in the New Testament we have the full
epiphany of God, the full manifestation of the Holy Trinity: the Father
through the Son in the Spirit to us; and we in the Spirit through the
Son to the Father.
The Holy Trinity in the Church
The life of the Church is the life of men in the Holy Trinity. In the
Church all become one in Christ, all put on the deified humanity of the
Son of God. "For as many as have been baptized into Christ have put on
Christ" (Gal 3:27). The unity of the Church
is the unity of many into one, the one Body of Christ, the one living
temple of God, the one people and family of God.
Within the one body there are many individual
members. Many "living stones" constitute the living temple. Many
brothers and sisters make up the one family of which God is the Father.
The unique diversity of each member of the one Body of Christ is
guaranteed by the presence of the Holy Spirit. Each unique person is
inspired by the Spirit to be a true man, a true son of God in his own
distinct way. Thus, as the Body of the Church is one in Christ, the one
Holy Spirit gives to each member the possibility of fulfilling himself
in God and so of being one with all others in calling God "Father" (See
1 Corinthians 12).
The Church, then, as the perfect unity of many
persons into one fully united organism, is a reflection of the Trinity
itself. For the Church, being many unique and distinct persons, is
called to be one mind, one heart, one soul and one body in the one Truth
and Love of God Himself. The calling of the Church to be one in all
things is the prototype of the vocation of all mankind which was
originally created by God as many persons in one nature, ultimately
destined by God for ever-more-perfect growth in free unity of Truth and
Love, in the life of God's Kingdom.
The Holy Trinity in the
Sacraments
The sacraments of the Church portray the Trinitarian character of the
life of God and man. Each person is baptized
by the Holy Spirit into the one humanity of Christ. Being baptized, each
person is given the "seal of the gift of the Holy Spirit" of God in
chrismation to be a "christ", i.e. an anointed
son of God to live the life of Christ.
In marriage the unity
of two into one makes the new unity a reflection of the unity of the
Trinity, and the unity of Christ and the Church. For the family of many
persons united in one truth and love is indeed the created manifestation
of the one family of God's Kingdom, and of God Himself, the Blessed
Trinity.
In penance once more
we renew our new life as sons of the Father through the grace of Christ
by the power of the Holy Spirit, forgiven and reunited into the unity of
God in His Church.
In holy unction the
Spirit anoints the sufferer to suffer and die in Christ and so to be
healed and made alive with the Father for eternity.
The priesthood
itself, the ministry of the Church, is nothing other than the concrete
manifestation in the Church of the presence of Christ by the same Holy
Spirit who makes accessible to all men the action of the Father and the
way to everlasting communion in and with Him.
Finally, the "mystery of mysteries," the
Holy Eucharist, is the actual experience of
all Christian people led to communion with God the Father by the power
of the Holy Spirit through Christ the Son who is present in the Word of
the Gospel and in the Passover Meal of His Body and Blood eaten in
remembrance of Him. The very movement of the Divine Liturgy -- towards
the Father through Christ the Word and the Lamb, in the power of the
Holy Spirit -- is the living sacramental symbol of our eternal movement
in and toward God, the Blessed Trinity.
Even Christian prayer is the revelation of the
Trinity, accomplished within the third person of the Godhead. Inspired
by the Holy Spirit, men can call God "our Father" only because of the
Son who has taught them and enabled them to do so. Thus, the true prayer
of Christians is not the calling out of our souls in earthly isolation
to a far-away God. It is the prayer in us of the divine Son of God made
to His Father, accomplished in us by the Holy Spirit who himself is also
divine.
For we have received the Spirit of
adoption, whereby we cry Abba! Father! The Spirit itself bears
witness that we are children of God … for we know not what we should
pray for as we ought; but the Spirit itself intercedes for us …
(Romans 8:15-16, 26)
The Holy Trinity in
Christian Life
The new commandment of Christian life is "to be perfect as your heavenly
Father is perfect" (Mt 5:48). It is to love
as Christ himself has loved. "This is my commandment, that you love one
another as I have loved you" (Jn 15:12). Men
cannot live the Christian life of divine love in imitation of God's
perfection without the grace of the Holy Spirit. With the power of God,
however, what is impossible to men becomes possible. "For with God all
things are possible." (Mk 10:27)
The Christian life is the life of God
accomplished in men by the Spirit of Christ. Men can live as Christ has
lived, doing the things that he did and becoming sons of God in Him by
the power of the Holy Spirit. Thus, once more, the Christian life is a
Trinitarian life.
By the Holy Spirit given by God through Christ,
men can share the life, the love, the truth, the freedom, the goodness,
the holiness, the wisdom, the knowledge of God Himself. It is this
conviction and experience which has caused the development in the
Orthodox Church of the affirmation of the fact that the essence of
Christianity is "the acquisition of the Holy Spirit" and the
"deification" of man by the grace of God, the so-called
theosis.
The saints of the Church are unanimous in their
claim that Christian life is the participation in the life of the
Blessed Trinity in the most genuine and realistic way. It is the life of
men becoming divine. In the smallest aspects of everyday life Christians
are called to live the life of God the Father, which is communicated to
them by Christ, the Son of God, and made possible for them by the Holy
Spirit who lives and acts within them
The Holy Trinity in Eternal Life
At the end of the ages Christ will come in the glory of God the Father,
He will make the Father known throughout all creation. The Holy Spirit
will fill all things and enable all to be in union with God through
Christ for eternity. Again we have the presence and action of the Holy
Trinity.
What we know and experience now in the world as
members of the Church will be manifested in power in the life of the
kingdom to come. The essence of life everlasting is the life of the Holy
Trinity, the same eternal life given to us already in the mystery of
faith.
And I saw no temple in the city, for the
Lord God Almighty and the Lamb (Christ) are the temple of it. And
the city had no need of the sun … for the glory of God did lighten
it, and the Lamb (Christ) is the light thereof…
And the throne of God and the Lamb
(Christ) shall be in it, and his servants shall see him … and they
shall see his face…
And the Spirit and the Bride (the
Church) say Come!
(Revelations 21:22; 22:3, 17)
In the eternal life of the Kingdom of God,
the Holy Trinity will fill all creation: the Father through the Son
in the Holy Spirit. Every man enlightened by Christ in the Spirit
will know the invisible Father. "And this is eternal life, that they
may know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom thou hast
sent" (Jn 17:3). Such knowledge is
possible only by the indwelling of the Spirit of God, "the fullness
of Him who fills all in all" (Eph
1:23; 2:22).
Come O Ye People! Let us
adore the Three-Personal Godhead, the Son in the Father with the
Holy Spirit.
For before all time the
Father gave birth to the Son, co-eternal and co-enthroned with
Himself.
And the Holy Spirit was
in the Father,
glorified with the Son.
Adoring One Power, One
Essence, One Divinity,
let us cry:
O Holy God who made all
things by the Son through the cooperation of the Holy Spirit!
O Holy Mighty through
whom we know the Father and through whom the Holy Spirit comes ino
the world!
O Holy Immortal, the
Spirit, the Comforter, who proceeds from the Father and rests in the
Son!
O Most Holy Trinity!
Glory to Thee!
(The Vespers of Pentecost)