DISCLAIMER: As mentioned on my other web sites and pages, I do not espouse to all of the beliefs expressed on the reciprocal links I have provided here. My web sites are a venture into the pros and cons of diverse aspects of religious beliefs. I leave it completely up to each individual to decide what is truth and what is not. I am also not responsible for any cost or donational purchases that are made through these links. These reciprocal links are purely for educational and research purpose only. Please view these links at your own discretion.
FEATURE LINKS Would you like to be a feature link at the top of this page? E-MAIL ME with your request and I will get back to you ASAP.
You can not hold membership in the World Council of Churches unless you confess God as a triune being. For an alphabetical list of all WCC member churches CLICK HERE.
Is the traditional trinitarian dogma actually found in the Bible? What about all the scriptures that trinitarians use to allegedly support their dogma?
Encarta Encyclopedia:
Trinity (theology), in Christian theology, doctrine that God exists as three persons-Father, Son, and Holy Spirit-who are united in one substance or being. The doctrine is not taught explicitly in the New Testament, where the word God almost invariably refers to the Father; but already Jesus Christ, the Son, is seen as standing in a unique relation to the Father, while the Holy Spirit is also emerging as a distinct divine person. "Trinity (theology)," Microsoft? Encarta? Encyclopedia 2000. ? 1993-1999 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
The New Catholic Encyclopedia 1967:
"The formulation 'one God in three persons' was not solidly established, certainly not fully assimilated into Christian life and its profession of faith, prior to the end of the 4th century."
Catholic Encyclopedia 1991:
"The term 'Trinity' does not appear in scripture"
"(The Doctrine of the Trinity) - hammered out over the course of three centuries of doctrinal controversy against modalism and subordinationism"
The HarperCollins Encyclopedia of Catholicism 1995:
". . . scholars generally agree that there is no doctrine of the trinity as such in either the Old Testament or the New Testament."
Doctrinal Disclaimer - I do not espouse to the "Holy Trinity", "Jesus Christ (Yahshua Messiah) is God (Yahweh)", "God the Son", God the Holy Spirit", Eternal Son", the "deity of Jesus Christ" or the "pre-existence of Yahshua (Jesus)" doctrines. As mentioned on my other web sites and pages, I do not espouse to all of the beliefs expressed on the reciprocal links I have provided here. My web sites are a venture into the pros and cons of diverse aspects of religious beliefs. I leave it completely up to each individual to decide what is truth and what is not. All reciprocal links are provided for educational and research purpose only. Please view these links at your own discretion.
When clicking on the following links and images below, click your back button to return to this page. If you have a problem with returning to a previous page by simply clicking on your back button, you can also right click on your back button and a list of sites will appear that you have previously visited that you can click on to return to. This does not alway work though because some webmasters enter a special code into their HTML editor to keep you from performing either of these tasks.
By Yoel Natan
CLICK HERE For More Trinity Paintings
"Jesus is God"? "Jesus Pre-existed"?
Father Yahweh Is NOT His Son Yahshua ... Whom He Anointed, Appointed As King, And Raised From The Dead. YAHWEH NISSI The Tertullian Project Legend has it that St. Patrick used the shamrock as a symbol to explain the Trinity to Unbelievers, i.e., how God is One God in Three Persons. Patrick would hold up a shamrock and challenge his hearers, "Is it one leaf or three?" "It is both one leaf and three," was their reply. "And so it is with God," he would conclude.
GUEST BOOK NOTE: You have the option of viewing and signing my Bravenet guest book which a has a questionaire or viewing and signing my Dreambook guest book or both.