The Bible Book

(Chris Devlin) #1
299
See also: The Divinity of Jesus 190–93 ■ The Nature of Faith 236–41 ■
The Council of Jerusalem 292–93 ■ Salvation Through Faith 301

ACTS, EPISTLES, AND REVELATION


Jesus is God (John 5:22–23), and
the Holy Spirit is God (Matthew
12:32). Christians have therefore
concluded that the Bible teaches
its readers that, while there is only
one divine being, there are three
divine persons within that being.
Reinforcing this idea are texts in
which each Person is present but
distinct, such as in the baptismal
formula in Matthew 28:19; and the
“confessions” of faith in Ephesians
4:4–6 and 1 Peter 1:1–2.

The Nicene Creed
In 325 ce, centuries after Paul’s
death, Church leaders met at
Nicaea (modern Iznik, Turkey) to
address the teachings of Arius. His
followers defended the uniqueness
of God and the personal distinction
between the Father and Son by
denying the godhood of Jesus,
arguing that the Son merely had
a nature “similar” to the Father’s.
The Council of Nicaea developed
the ideas essential to the doctrine
of the Trinity: the uniqueness of
God, the divinity of the Father and
Son, and the personal distinction
between them. Christians argued
over these concepts extensively,

but most eventually agreed that
to deny the deity of Jesus was to
render dependence upon Jesus
for salvation and that worship of
Him was a form of idolatry. While
Arians affirmed that Jesus had
a nature that was homoiousios
(similar) to that of God the Father,
defenders of the Nicene Creed
insisted that Jesus’s nature was
homoousious (same). In English,
the latter idea is expressed by the
word “consubstantial” or “being of
one substance with the Father.” ■

The Father Jesus Christ^
(The Son)
God

The Holy Spirit

Council of Nicaea


Constantine the Great’s
Council of Nicaea was the first
of seven ecumenical councils
held between 325 and 787 ce.
The purpose of each of these
meetings was to address
some of the heresies that
were arising within the
Church and answer difficult
questions raised by Christian
skeptics. Constantine realized
that by establishing universal
doctrines that could be widely
shared and promulgated,
the Church, and his empire,
would strengthen and expand.
Prior to the Council of Nicaea,
doctrine had been decided at
the local level, such as at the
Council of Jerusalem in 50 ce.
Constantine himself
presided over the council
meeting, even though he
was a Catechumen (the
name given to an adherent
of Christianity who had not
been baptized). The rest of
the council was made up of
representatives drawn from
across Christendom.

Constantine the Great presides
at the Council of Nicaea, in 325 ce,
in a 12th-century fresco in the
Bachkovo Monastery in Bulgaria.
The figure below him is Arius.

Holy Trinity


The Trinity
refers to the
existence of
God as three
consubstantial
persons. These
three persons
are distinct—
The Father,
Christ, and Holy
Spirit—yet share
one nature.

I believe in the Holy Spirit,
the Lord, the giver of life,
who proceeds from the
Father and the Son, who
with the Father and the Son
is adored and glorified.
The Nicene Creed

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