Affiliation:
1. School of Law, University of Notre Dame Australia Sydney Campus, Chippendale, NSW 2007, Australia
Abstract
In this essay I explain that the Christian doctrine of the Trinity was first developed as a response to Jewish claims of Christian apostasy and polytheism. At the beginning of Christianity, most of its converts were observant Jews. The Jewish authorities took steps to reclaim their lost sheep and to stem the flow of departures. Their primary intellectual ammunition in that effort was the claim that the Christians were polytheists, because they claimed to believe in two Gods–the Father and His Son, Jesus Christ. The Christians’ apostasy was manifest by simple referring to the Mosaic commandment that righteous Israel should have only one God. This Jewish accusation of polytheism also neatly answered the inflammatory Christian charge that the Jews had crucified God and raised significant doubt about their claims of a special resurrection. The doctrine of the Trinity answered all those criticisms. God and Jesus Christ together were the one true God. But the nature of that oneness took some time to work out, and it is within a process of contending with pagan philosophical arguments and intra-Christian heretical positions, that a Christian doctrine of the Trinity begins to congeal. The work of Ante-Nicene Fathers—Justin Martyr, Theophilus of Antioch, Clement of Alexandria, Tertullian, Origen, Novatian, and others—whose voices we allow to be heard below—contain a trajectory of ideas that explain how the tri-unity is expressed in the momentous Creeds of Nicaea (AD 325) and Constantinople (381).
Reference33 articles.
1. Esler, Philip (2017). The Early Christian World, Routledge. [2nd ed.].
2. Barnard, Leslie (1967). Justin Martyr: His Life and Thought, Cambridge University Press.
3. Bettenson, Henry (1956). The Early Christian Fathers: A Selection from the Writings of the Fathers from St. Clement of Rome to St. Athanasius, Oxford University Press.
4. Chadwick, John (2017). Tertullian and Montanism, Vance. First published 1863.
5. Chazan, Robert (2004). Fashioning Jewish Identity in Medieval Western Christendom, Cambridge University Press.