Here follow a few excerpts
from:
The Origin of the Trinity: From Paganism to Constantine
by Cher-El L. Hagensick
http://www.heraldmag.org/olb/Contents/doctrine/The%20Origin%20of%20the%20Trinity.htm
If you wish to read the whole article including the references, I suggest
visiting the link above.
If you prefer to read a few excerpts that highlight the main points, read on:
The words in Blue are my own notes added for clarification.
The words in red are highlights
from the text that I wanted to emphasize.
The historian, H. W. F. Saggs, explains that the Babylonian triad consisted of
�three gods of roughly equal rank... whose inter-relationship is of the essence
of their natures�
. . .
In his Egyptian Myths, George Hart, lecturer for the British Museum and
professor of ancient Egyptian heiroglyphics at the University of London, shows
how Egypt also believed in a �transcendental, above creation, and preexisting�
one, the god
Amun. Amun was really three gods in one.
Re was his face, Ptah his body, and Amun his hidden identity.
" Egyptian .
. . three gods in one."
. . .
The well-known historian Will Durant concurs that Ra, Amon, and Ptah were
�combined as three embodiments or aspects of one supreme and triune deity�
" . .
. three embodiments or aspects of one supreme and triune deity� "
. . .
Additionally, a hymn to Amun written in the 14th century BC defines the
Egyptian trinity:
�All Gods are three: Amun, Re, Ptah; they have no equal.
His name is hidden as Amun, he is Re... before men, and his body is Ptah�
. . .
Dr. Gordon Laing, retired Dean of the Humanities Department at the University
of Chicago, agrees that �the worship of the Egyptian triad Isis, Serapis, and
the child Horus� probably accustomed the early church theologians to the idea
of a triune God, and was influential �in the formulation of the doctrine of the
Trinity as set forth in the Nicaean and Athanasian creeds�
" . .
.accustomed the early church theologians to the idea of a triune God . . .
. . .
The historical lecturer, Jesse Benedict Carter, tells us of the Etruscans.
As they slowly passed from Babylon
through Greece
and went on to Rome, they brought
with them their trinity of Tinia, Uni, and Menerva.
This trinity was a �new idea to the Romans,� and yet it became so �typical of Rome�
that it quickly spread throughout Italy.
Even the names of the Roman trinity: Jupiter, Juno, and Minerva, reflect the
ancestry.
That Christianity was not ashamed to borrow from pagan culture is amply shown
by Durant: �Christianity did not destroy paganism; it adopted it�.
Christianity did not destroy paganism; it adopted it.
. . .
Dr. Jaroslav Pelikan, a Catholic scholar and professor at Yale, confirms the
Church�s respect for pagan ideas when he states that the Apologists and other
early church fathers used and cited the pagan Roman Sibylline Oracles so much
that they were called �Sibyllists� by the 2nd century critic, Celsus.
. . .
The attitude of the Church toward paganism is best summed up in Pope Gregory
the Great�s words to a missionary:
�You must not interfere with any traditional belief or religious observance
that can be harmonized with Christianity�
�You must not
interfere with any traditional belief or religious observance that can be
harmonized with Christianity�
. . .
Even though �Word,� �Spirit,� �Presence,� and �Wisdom� are used as
personifications of God, Biblical scholars agree that the Trinity is neither
mentioned nor intended by the authors of the Old Testament
. . .
As for his relationship with the Father, Jesus said,
�... I seek not mine own will, but the will of the Father which hath sent
me�, {# Joh 5:30}
...�my doctrine is not mine, but His that sent me�; {# Joh 7:16}
. . .
The word �trinity� was not coined until Tertullian, more than 100 years after
Christ�s death,
and the key words (meaning substance) from the Nicene debate, homousis and
ousis, are not biblical, but from Stoic thought.
A person named Tertulian was
the first Christian theologean to use the word "trinity" to describe
God.
He used that term about a hundred years after Jesus left
the earth.
And yet Tertulian's concept of the trinity did not match
exactly with the concept of the trinity that the Church adopted later.
Nowhere in the Bible is the Trinity mentioned.
Nowhere in the Bible does the
word "trinity" appear, anywhere. That is what the author, Hagensick,
meant.
According to Pelikan, �One of the most widely accepted conclusions of the 19th
century history of dogma was the thesis that the dogma of the Trinity was not
an explicit doctrine of the New Testament, still less of the Old Testament, but
had evolved from New Testament times to the 4th century.
If the Trinity did not originate with the Bible, where did it come from?
To find the origins of the Trinity in Christianity, we need to take a look at
the circumstances in which early Christians found themselves.
Even the Church of the Apostles� day was far from unified.
. . .
According to McGiffert, the concepts of philosophy prevalent during the time of
the early church were Stoicism, . . . and Platonism . . .
. . .
That these philosophies affected Christianity is a historical fact.
What did these philosophers teach about God?
In Plato�s Timeus, �The Supreme Reality appears in the trinitarian form of the
Good, the Intelligence, and the World-Soul�
. . .
Laing attributes elaborate trinitarian theories to the Neoplatonists, and
considers Neoplatonic ideas as �one of the operative factors in the development
of Christian theology�
. . .
Durant ties in philosophy with Christianity when he states that the second
century Alexandrian Church, from which both Clement and Origen came, �wedded
Christianity to Greek philosophy�
. . . and finally, Durant writes of the famed pagan philosopher, Plotinus, that
�Christianity accepted nearly every line of him...�
. . .
In the desire to grow, the Church compromised truth, which resulted in
confusion as pagans became Christians and intermingled beliefs and traditions.
. . .
As more and more pagans came into Christianity, they found the Judaic influence
offensive.
. . .
Harnack affirms that the early church view of Jesus was as Messiah, and after
his resurrection he was �raised to the right hand of God� but not considered as
God .
" . . . the
early church view of Jesus was as Messiah . . . but not considered as
God."
. . .
As for the holy Spirit, McGiffert tells us that early Christians considered the
holy Spirit �not as an individual being or person but simply as the divine
power working in the world and particularly in the church�.
" . . .
early Christians considered the holy Spirit �not as an individual being or
person but simply as the divine power . . . "
. . .
Durant summarizes early Christianity thus: �In Christ and Peter, Christianity
was Jewish; in Paul it became half Greek; in Catholicism it became half Roman�
in Paul it became
half Greek
. . .
The world around the early Church was changing.
The Roman empire began to crumble and Constantine
came to power.
He wished to unify the Empire, and chose Christianity to do so.
But Christianity was far from unified.
. . .
He concludes that the Nicene dogma marked the �transition from the prophetic
Oracle of Yahweh... to Catholic dogma�
. . .
The Nicene was not a popular creed when it was signed.
Durant affirms that the majority of Eastern bishops sided with Arius in that
they believed Christ was the Son of God �neither consubstantial nor co-eternal�
with his Father.
Arius was a priest who had
many followers.
His followers were known as Arians (not to be confused
with the ethnicity, Aryan.
His views of Jesus more closely matched those of Islam.
The last of the Arians were slaughtered just before
Muhammad began to receive his revelations.
So, we see that when the truth of Jesus was destroyed from
the world, God Al-Mighty sent anothre prophet to set the record straight.
. . .
There is an unfortunate side to the whole Athanasian/Arian debate.
Campbell could find no parallel in
medieval nor modern times in the intensity of debate.
The debate between the Arians,
who had a view of Jesus and a view of God which was similar to Islam, and the
followers of Athunasias was so heated that it often led to extreme violence.
In the end, it was the followers of Athunasias who won.
Durant details the problems that arose from the Council at Nicea and summarizes
that period with a dreadful verdict:
�Probably more Christians were slaughtered by Christians in these two years
than by all the persecutions of Christians by pagans in the history of Rome�
. . .
The evolution of the Trinity can be well seen in the words of the Apostles�
Creed, Nicene Creed, and the Athanasian Creed.
As each of the creeds became more wordy and convoluted, the simple, pure faith
of the Apostolic church became lost in a haze.
" . . . the
creeds became wordy and convoluted . . . "
Even more interesting is the fact that as the creeds became more specific (and
less scriptural) the adherence to them became stricter, and the penalty for
disbelief harsher.
In summary, the common culture of the day was one filled with triune gods.
From ancient Sumeria�s
- Anu, Enlil, and Enki
and Egypt�s dual trinities of
- Amun-Re-Ptah
and
- Isis, Osiris, and Horus
to Rome�s
- Jupiter, Juno, and Minerva
the whole concept of paganism revolved around the magic number of three.
In Greek philosophy, also, we have seen how the number three was used as an
unspecified trinity of intelligence, mind, and reason.
Constantine
invited the bishops from East and West to join him in the small seaside village
of Nicea for a council to unify the
church.
McGiffert summarizes the council: three main groups were present at this
council:
Eusebius of Nicomedia presenting the Arian view of the Trinity,
Alexander of Alexandria presenting the Athanasian version,
and a very large �middle party� led by Eusebius of Cesarea whose various
theological opinions did not interfere with their desire for peace.
Eusebius of Nicomedia submitted the Arian creed first and it was rejected.
Then Eusebius of Cesarea submitted the Cesarean baptismal creed.
Instead of submitting a creed of their own, the anti-Arians modified Eusebius�,
thereby compelling him to sign it and completely shutting the Arians out.
Those Arians who did not sign were deposed and exiled
Thus Constantine had his unified Church which was not very unified.
McGiffert asserts that Eusebius of Cesarea was not altogether satisfied with
the creed because it was too close to Sabellianism (Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit are three aspects of one God).
Eusebius was uncomfortable enough with the Nicene creed that he felt it
expedient to justify himself to his own people in a long letter in which he
states that he �resisted even to the last minute� until the words were examined
and it was explained that the words �did not mean all they seemed to mean but
were intended simply to assert the real deity of the Son...�.
McGiffert goes on to show that a �double interpretation [was authorized by the
leaders in order to win Eusebius and his followers.�.
Lonergan shows just how much of the creed Eusebius took exception to as the
words were explained.
�Out of the Father�s substance� was now interpreted to show that the Son is
�out of the Father�, but �not part of the Father�s substance.�
�Born not made� because �made� refers to all other creatures �which come into
being through the Son�, and �consubstantial� really means that the Son comes
out of the Father and is like him.
It is clear that the council strongly lacked unity of thought.
Lonergan goes on to explain that the language of debate on the
consubstantiality of the Father and the Son has made many people think that the
�Church at Nicea had abandoned the genuine Christian doctrine, which was
religious through and through, in order to embrace some sort of hellenistic
ontology�.
The 19th century scholar and
Protestant minister, Alexander Hislop, devotes several chapters of his book The
Two Babylons to showing how this original belief in one god was replaced by the
triads of paganism which were eventually absorbed into Catholic Church dogmas.
. . .
Hislop devotes the first 128 pages of his book The Two Babylons to proving that
the Christian Trinity is directly descended from the ancient Babylonian
trinity.
In particular, he convincingly proves that the origin of the Babylonian
trinity was the triad of Cush (the grandson of Noah), Semiramis (his wife), and
Nimrod (their son).
At the death of Cush,
Semiramis married her son, Nimrod, and thus began the confusion between the
father and son so prevalent in early paganism.
. . . and thus
began the confusion between the father and son so prevalent in early paganism.
Edited by Beebok - 05 December 2012 at 8:31am