The Doctrine of the Trinity: Christianity's Self-Inflicted Wound

Overview

This work is a detailed biblical investigation of the relationship of Jesus to the one God of Israel. The authors challenge the notion that biblical monotheism is legitimately represented by a Trinitarian view of God and demonstrate that within the bounds of the canon of Scripture Jesus is confessed as Messiah, Son of God, but not God Himself. Later Christological developments beginning in the second century misrepresented the biblical doctrine of God and Christ by altering the terms of the biblical presentation ...
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Overview

This work is a detailed biblical investigation of the relationship of Jesus to the one God of Israel. The authors challenge the notion that biblical monotheism is legitimately represented by a Trinitarian view of God and demonstrate that within the bounds of the canon of Scripture Jesus is confessed as Messiah, Son of God, but not God Himself. Later Christological developments beginning in the second century misrepresented the biblical doctrine of God and Christ by altering the terms of the biblical presentation of the Father and Son. This fateful development laid the foundation of a revised, unscriptural creed which needs to be challenged. This book is likely to be a definitive presentation of a Christology rooted, as it originally was, in the Hebrew Bible.
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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9781573093101
  • Publisher: International Scholars Publications
  • Publication date: 9/1/1998
  • Pages: 365

Table of Contents

Foreword
Acknowledgments
Introduction 1
I The God of the Jews 13
II Jesus and the God of the Jews 31
III Did Jesus' Followers Think He Was God? 57
IV Paul and the Trinity 89
V From the Hebrew World of the Bible to the Twentieth Century Via Greek Philosophy 113
VI The Trinity and Politics 137
VII The Nature of Preexistence in the New Testament 153
VIII John, Preexistence and the Trinity 173
IX The Holy Spirit: A Third Person Or God in Action? 215
X The Conflict Over the Trinity in Church History and the Current Debate 231
XI The Challenge Facing Trinitarianism Today 257
XII Have We Bartered for Another God? 285
XIII An Appeal for a Return to the Biblical Christ 305
XIV Epilogue: Believing the Words of Jesus 323
Bibliography 329
Scripture Index 337
Author Index 347
Subject Index 351
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