The question we are asking is what future is there
for the traditional, classical, doctrine of the Trinity, I am bound to reply,
even within these walls of Trinity College, ‘Not much’.
The classical statement of the doctrine of the
Trinity, the so-called Athanasian Creed, ends: ‘This is the Catholic Faith:
which except a man believe faithfully he cannot be saved’. This has been
paraphrased in less dignified language: ‘Accept my model or I’ll do you’, or
rather, ‘This is God’s model: accept it or he will do you’, to which a distressingly
large number of Christians in the past were eager to add, ‘and I am ready to
act as God’s agent.’
Jesus was not just another prophet (though they did
call him a prophet) to whom the word of God had been spoken; he was a personal
embodiment of God’s address to us; he was God’s word or wisdom or spirit (in
Hebrew wisdom writings those three terms are synonymous) incarnate. With this
concept [there came] to be combined a different model…Under the influence,
especially, of Platonist thought [logos] is God’s pre-existing agent in
creation, his firstborn Son…So the way was open…for the process of
personification to be completed. If Jesus is seen as the incarnation of God’s
word, and if the word is taken to mean Philo’s Logos, then the Logos is,
and always was, Jesus. The personal identity of Jesus is projected back on to
the pre-existent Logos. He is no
longer Son of God in the sense in which Adam, Israel, and the Messiah are Son
of God; he is God the Son: a quite different model. [Logos/Son] has always
proved extraordinarily difficult—many would say impossible—to reconcile with
the assertion of the genuine manhood of the historical Jesus.
A model which had been developed to make it
possible to claim that Jesus is God, and yet to deny that God is Jesus, simply
and, as it were, without remainder leads to the theological puzzle of two
distinct entities…I believe that had Christians in the beginning adopted a
model or inspiration to express their experience of deity in Jesus, and spoken of
him as a man totally moved and inspired by God (indeed, by God’s spirit, wisdom
or word, so long as these are not personified as distinct divine beings), they
could have claimed for Jesus what their faith demanded without their doctrine
running out into meaninglessness.
It was in the fourth century that the orthodox
doctrine of the deity of the Holy Spirit was finally worked out…it asserted the
doctrine of a third ‘person’ of the deity. Yet it soon proved impossible to
distinguish this entity from the other two…This presented a theological
problem. If the Spirit was neither made nor begotten he would be a second
ingenerate principle: there would be two Fathers. If he was begotten, there
would be two Sons.
If we do substitute unitarianism for trinitarianism
it must not be the unitarianism that denies the divinity of Christ. On the
contrary, I believe we can assert that God was in Christ, without using the
model of ‘God the Son’.
Do you have the book & page citation for this? I would love to know which book this is from? Thank you!
ReplyDeleteIt was an essay written for journals back in the 60-70s.
DeleteThanks. Do you have the actual source? I am wanting to cite this reference in a book I am writing and I want to be accurate. I've looked for the source for a long time. Thanks a lot friend
ReplyDelete"What Future for the Trinity," Explorations in Theology, 8, SCM Press, 1981, p. 31.
Delete