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Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson | A Wisdom Archive on Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson |  | Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson A selection of articles related to Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson |  |
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Trinity, Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson, Trinity - Christian life and the Blessed Trinity, Trinity - Dissent from the doctrine, Trinity - God exists in three persons, Trinity - Historical development, Trinity - Historical view and usage, Trinity - In popular culture, Trinity - Key scriptural texts cited by trinitarians, Trinity - One God, Trinity - Ontology of the Trinity, Trinity - Orthodox, Roman Catholic and Protestant distinctions, Trinity - Other views of the Trinity, Trinity - Scripture and tradition, Trinity - Similarities in the 16th-century Jewish Kabbalah, Trinity - Theory of pagan origin and influence, Ahura, the Zoroastrian Trinity, Ayyavazhi Trinity, Trimurthi
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson |  |  |  | Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - Scripture and traditionThe word Trinity comes from a Latin abstract noun which most literally means "three-ness" (or "the property of occurring three at once"). The term Trinity does not appear in the Bible, and indeed did not exist until about AD 200 when Tertullian (who eventually converted to Montanism) coined it as the Latin trinitas and also probably the formula Three Persons, One Substance as the Latin tres Personae, una Substantia itself roughly derived from the Greek treis Prosoponoi, Homoousios in the early third century. A term which ro ...
See also:Trinity, Trinity - Scripture and tradition, Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson, Trinity - Key scriptural texts cited by trinitarians, Trinity - Ontology of the Trinity, Trinity - Historical view and usage, Trinity - One God, Trinity - God exists in three persons, Trinity - Orthodox Roman Catholic and Protestant distinctions, Trinity - Historical development, Trinity - Dissent from the doctrine, Trinity - Other views of the Trinity, Trinity - Theory of pagan origin and influence, Trinity - Christian life and the Blessed Trinity, Trinity - Similarities in the 16th-century Jewish Kabbalah, Trinity - In popular culture Read more here: » Trinity: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - Scripture and tradition |
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Trinity - Historical view and usage.
The Trinitarian view has been affirmed as an article of faith by the Nicene (325/381) and Athanasian creeds (circa 500), which attempted to standardize belief in the face of disagreements on the subject. These creeds were formulated and ratified by the Church of the third and fourth centuries in reaction to heterodox theologies, usually involving the nature of the Trinity and/or Christ's position in it. The Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed (381 version) is still affirmed by Ort ...
See also:Trinity, Trinity - Scripture and tradition, Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson, Trinity - Key scriptural texts cited by trinitarians, Trinity - Ontology of the Trinity, Trinity - Historical view and usage, Trinity - One God, Trinity - God exists in three persons, Trinity - Orthodox Roman Catholic and Protestant distinctions, Trinity - Historical development, Trinity - Dissent from the doctrine, Trinity - Other views of the Trinity, Trinity - Theory of pagan origin and influence, Trinity - Christian life and the Blessed Trinity, Trinity - Similarities in the 16th-century Jewish Kabbalah, Trinity - In popular culture Read more here: » Trinity: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - Ontology of the Trinity |
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 |  |  | Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - Dissent from the doctrineMost Christians believe that the orthodox doctrine of the Trinity is so central to the Christian faith, that to deny it is to reject the Christian faith entirely. However a number of nontrinitarian groups, both throughout history and today, identify themselves as Christians but reject the doctrine of the Trinity in any form, arguing that theirs was the original pre-Nicean understanding. Some ancient sects, such as the Ebionites, said that Jesus was not a "Son of God", but rather an ordinary man who was a prophet. Many modern groups also teac ...
See also:Trinity, Trinity - Scripture and tradition, Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson, Trinity - Key scriptural texts cited by trinitarians, Trinity - Ontology of the Trinity, Trinity - Historical view and usage, Trinity - One God, Trinity - God exists in three persons, Trinity - Orthodox Roman Catholic and Protestant distinctions, Trinity - Historical development, Trinity - Dissent from the doctrine, Trinity - Other views of the Trinity, Trinity - Theory of pagan origin and influence, Trinity - Christian life and the Blessed Trinity, Trinity - Similarities in the 16th-century Jewish Kabbalah, Trinity - In popular culture Read more here: » Trinity: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - Dissent from the doctrine |
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Trinity - Historical view and usage.
The Trinitarian view has been affirmed as an article of faith by the Nicene (325/381) and Athanasian creeds (circa 500), which attempted to standardize belief in the face of disagreements on the subject. These creeds were formulated and ratified by the Church of the third and fourth centuries in reaction to heterodox theologies, usually involving the nature of the Trinity and/or Christ's position in it. The Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed (381 version) is still affirmed by Ort ...
See also:Trinity, Trinity - Scripture and tradition, Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson, Trinity - Scriptural texts cited as implicit support for the doctrine of the Trinity, Trinity - Ontology of the Trinity, Trinity - Historical view and usage, Trinity - One God, Trinity - God exists in three persons, Trinity - Orthodox Roman Catholic and Protestant distinctions, Trinity - Historical development, Trinity - Dissent from the doctrine, Trinity - Other views of the Trinity, Trinity - Theory of pagan origin and influence, Trinity - Christian life and the Blessed Trinity, Trinity - Similarities in the 16th-century Jewish Kabbalah, Trinity - In popular culture Read more here: » Trinity: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - Ontology of the Trinity |
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 |  |  | Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - In popular cultureIn the Valérian comics, the Trinity appeared as a tough, street-hardened police sergeant (Father), a hippie (Son) and a broken jukebox (Holy Spirit).
In the Fritz Lang film Metropolis, the city mayor Joh Fredersen represents the Father and the humble city proletariat as the Holy Spirit. The son of the mayor, Freder Fredersen, represents the Son. The film ends in statement: The intermediator between brain [Father] and ...
See also:Trinity, Trinity - Scripture and tradition, Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson, Trinity - Key scriptural texts cited by trinitarians, Trinity - Ontology of the Trinity, Trinity - Historical view and usage, Trinity - One God, Trinity - God exists in three persons, Trinity - Orthodox Roman Catholic and Protestant distinctions, Trinity - Historical development, Trinity - Dissent from the doctrine, Trinity - Other views of the Trinity, Trinity - Theory of pagan origin and influence, Trinity - Christian life and the Blessed Trinity, Trinity - Similarities in the 16th-century Jewish Kabbalah, Trinity - In popular culture Read more here: » Trinity: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - In popular culture |
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 |  |  | Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - Similarities in the 16th-century Jewish KabbalahIn the late Kabbalistic tradition, originating in the city of Safed in the 16th century, an essential part of representations of the Tree of life or Etz Hayim is a set of three vertical lines of light, each line being headed by Sefirot, or degrees of altruistic quality at the top. These three Sefirot form a spiritual or heavenly triangle, which rules the whole earthly part of the Tree of Life. It is obvious that Sefirot of Kether (Crown), Chochmah (Wisdom) and Binah (Understanding), i.e. Ancient One, Father and Mother, or even Chochmah, Bina ...
See also:Trinity, Trinity - Scripture and tradition, Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson, Trinity - Key scriptural texts cited by trinitarians, Trinity - Ontology of the Trinity, Trinity - Historical view and usage, Trinity - One God, Trinity - God exists in three persons, Trinity - Orthodox Roman Catholic and Protestant distinctions, Trinity - Historical development, Trinity - Dissent from the doctrine, Trinity - Other views of the Trinity, Trinity - Theory of pagan origin and influence, Trinity - Christian life and the Blessed Trinity, Trinity - Similarities in the 16th-century Jewish Kabbalah, Trinity - In popular culture Read more here: » Trinity: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - Similarities in the 16th-century Jewish Kabbalah |
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 |  |  | Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - Scripture and traditionThe word Trinity comes from the Latin noun Trinitas, meaning the state or condition of being three, or a group of three persons or things. The first recorded application of this Latin word to Father, Son and Holy Spirit was by Tertullian in about 200. The Greek term with the same meaning, Τρίας, has given the English word triad. The Sanskrit word, Trimurti, has a similar meaning.
In view of what is stated about Tertullian, it would be vain to look for the word "Τρίας" (Trinity) in the New T ...
See also:Trinity, Trinity - Scripture and tradition, Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson, Trinity - Scriptural texts cited as implicit support for the doctrine of the Trinity, Trinity - Ontology of the Trinity, Trinity - Historical view and usage, Trinity - One God, Trinity - God exists in three persons, Trinity - Orthodox Roman Catholic and Protestant distinctions, Trinity - Historical development, Trinity - Dissent from the doctrine, Trinity - Other views of the Trinity, Trinity - Theory of pagan origin and influence, Trinity - Christian life and the Blessed Trinity, Trinity - Similarities in the 16th-century Jewish Kabbalah, Trinity - In popular culture Read more here: » Trinity: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - Scripture and tradition |
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 |  |  | Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - Dissent from the doctrineMost Christians believe that the orthodox doctrine of the Trinity is so central to the Christian faith, that to deny it is to reject the Christian faith entirely. However a number of nontrinitarian groups, both throughout history and today, identify themselves as Christians but reject the doctrine of the Trinity in any form, arguing that theirs was the original pre-Nicean understanding. Some ancient sects, such as the Ebionites, said that Jesus was not a "Son of God", but rather an ordinary man who was a prophet. Many modern groups also teac ...
See also:Trinity, Trinity - Scripture and tradition, Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson, Trinity - Scriptural texts cited as implicit support for the doctrine of the Trinity, Trinity - Ontology of the Trinity, Trinity - Historical view and usage, Trinity - One God, Trinity - God exists in three persons, Trinity - Orthodox Roman Catholic and Protestant distinctions, Trinity - Historical development, Trinity - Dissent from the doctrine, Trinity - Other views of the Trinity, Trinity - Theory of pagan origin and influence, Trinity - Christian life and the Blessed Trinity, Trinity - Similarities in the 16th-century Jewish Kabbalah, Trinity - In popular culture Read more here: » Trinity: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - Dissent from the doctrine |
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 |  |  | Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - In popular cultureIn the Valérian comics, the Trinity appeared as a tough, street-hardened police sergeant (Father), a hippie (Son) and a broken jukebox (Holy Spirit).
In the Fritz Lang film Metropolis, the city mayor Joh Fredersen represents the Father and the humble city proletariat as the Holy Spirit. The son of the mayor, Freder Fredersen, represents the Son. The film ends in statement: The intermediator between brain [Father] and ...
See also:Trinity, Trinity - Scripture and tradition, Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson, Trinity - Scriptural texts cited as implicit support for the doctrine of the Trinity, Trinity - Ontology of the Trinity, Trinity - Historical view and usage, Trinity - One God, Trinity - God exists in three persons, Trinity - Orthodox Roman Catholic and Protestant distinctions, Trinity - Historical development, Trinity - Dissent from the doctrine, Trinity - Other views of the Trinity, Trinity - Theory of pagan origin and influence, Trinity - Christian life and the Blessed Trinity, Trinity - Similarities in the 16th-century Jewish Kabbalah, Trinity - In popular culture Read more here: » Trinity: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - In popular culture |
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 |  |  | Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - Scripture and traditionThe word Trinity comes from the Latin noun Trinitas, meaning the state or condition of being three, or a group of three persons or things. The first recorded application of this Latin word to Father, Son and Holy Spirit was by Tertullian in about 200. The Greek term with the same meaning, Τρίας, has given the English word triad. The Sanskrit word, Trimurti, has a similar meaning.
The earliest Christians were noted for their insistence on the oneness of God, in contrast to the polytheism of the p ...
See also:Trinity, Trinity - Scripture and tradition, Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson, Trinity - Scriptural texts cited as implicit support for the doctrine of the Trinity, Trinity - Ontology of the Trinity, Trinity - Historical view and usage, Trinity - One God, Trinity - God exists in three persons, Trinity - Orthodox Roman Catholic and Protestant distinctions, Trinity - Historical development, Trinity - Dissent from the doctrine, Trinity - Other views of the Trinity, Trinity - Theory of pagan origin and influence, Trinity - Christian life and the Blessed Trinity, Trinity - Similarities in the 16th-century Jewish Kabbalah, Trinity - In popular culture Read more here: » Trinity: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - Scripture and tradition |
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 |  |  | Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - Similarities in the 16th-century Jewish KabbalahIn the late Kabbalistic tradition, originating in the city of Safed in the 16th century, an essential part of representations of the Tree of life or Etz Hayim is a set of three vertical lines of light, each line being headed by Sefirot, or degrees of altruistic quality at the top. These three Sefirot form a spiritual or heavenly triangle, which rules the whole earthly part of the Tree of Life. It is obvious that Sefirot of Kether (Crown), Chochmah (Wisdom) and Binah (Understanding), i.e. Ancient One, Father and Mother, or even Chochmah, Bina ...
See also:Trinity, Trinity - Scripture and tradition, Trinity - Baptism as the beginning lesson, Trinity - Scriptural texts cited as implicit support for the doctrine of the Trinity, Trinity - Ontology of the Trinity, Trinity - Historical view and usage, Trinity - One God, Trinity - God exists in three persons, Trinity - Orthodox Roman Catholic and Protestant distinctions, Trinity - Historical development, Trinity - Dissent from the doctrine, Trinity - Other views of the Trinity, Trinity - Theory of pagan origin and influence, Trinity - Christian life and the Blessed Trinity, Trinity - Similarities in the 16th-century Jewish Kabbalah, Trinity - In popular culture Read more here: » Trinity: Encyclopedia II - Trinity - Similarities in the 16th-century Jewish Kabbalah |
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