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“godhead”

Trinity

Trinity. Three in One. The Godhead. Where do we get this theology from? The Bible of course. Who developed the doctrine so that three in one could be understood not as a contradiction, but as an undeniable truth? St. Ignatius of Antioch, first of the four Fathers of the Church (35 A.D. – 110 A.D.). St. Ignatius, a disciple of the Apostle John – John the Beloved – promulgates that the three Persons are God. St. Ignatius proceeds from John 1:1, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God”. In this St. Ignatius unravels the sacred truth of the Trinity. What he begins to expand on is the fact that there are three Persons sharing one divine nature. St. Ignatius drew this conclusion from Matthew 28:19 which reads, “Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit”. He noticed that the baptism was done in the ‘name’, not ‘names’. This distinguishes unity in one power, one love, one authority, one nature but given to three persons; the Father, the Son, the Holy Spirit [originally known as Paraclete]. But from the Gospel of John, St. Ignatius sees that first was God.

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Holy Spirit a Person [Paraclete]

The Holy Spirit, originally known as Paraclete, is the laminin of Christianity. Equal in divinity to God the Father and Jesus Christ the Son, He, the Holy Spirit, seems to be not get much publicity in the Christian world. The First Person (God), the Second Person (Jesus), and the Third Person (Paraclete). See article Trinity. The Holy Spirit is called the Third Person because He proceeds from God and Jesus, having been sent by them both to do works. We see in scripture that God the Father is never sent, but does the sending; therefore He is considered the First Person. Jesus was sent, as we know, by God the Father. But Jesus also sent us the Holy Spirit. This is why Jesus is called the Second Person, because He was sent but also does the sending. But the Holy Spirit is sent, proceeding from the love generated between the Father and Son. The following Biblical passages are to convey a truth in which we will understand that the Holy Spirit is a real person, not an entity or mere life force.

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