THE SELF-GIVING
TRIUNE GOD,
THE IMAGO DEI
AN ONTOLOGY OF
J. Scott Horrell1
For many years in Western society,
the concept of a Holy Trinity has been one of
those doctrines which we affirm to be Christian yet which for many has
seemed largely irrelevant. German philosopher Immanuel Kant complained
that, “Taken literally, absolutely nothing worthwhile for the practical life
can be made out of the doctrine of the Trinity.2
Today, however, many Christian
thinkers are reaffirming the central importance of trinitarian theology for our daily lives. Stimulated in
part by Karl BarthÕs
Church Dogmatics, Catholic and Protestant
theologians have produced in the
last forty years a significant corpus on the subject. Especially notable are
works by Karl Rahner, Eberhard
JŸngel, Bernard Lonergan,
Bertrand de Margerie, JŸrgen Moltmann, Leonardo Boff, Colin Gunton, T. F. Torrance,
Catherine LaCugna and Millard Erickson.3
Nearly every theological movement has recently sought in some sense to reflect
upon and to reapply the doctrine of Nicea, and this
has produced a harvest of literature in bib-
1 J. Scott Horrell, Th.D., is professor of Systematic Theology at Dallas
Theological Seminary. He
is formerly the graduate chairman of Systematics at
the Faculdade Teol—gica Batista de S‹o Paulo and editor of Vox Scripturae: Revista Teol—gica Latino-Americana.
2 Immanuel Kant, Der Streit der FakultŠten,
PhB 252, in Ron ald J. Feenstra and Cornelius Plantinga, Jr., eds., Trinity,
Incarnation and Atonement: Philosophical and Theological Essays (Notre
Dame: Univ. of Notre Dame, 1989) 4.
3 Along with
2
lical, historical
and contemporary trinitarian studies. By the early
1990’s, many concurred with Wolfhart Pannenberg’s judgment
that the Trinity had become the
most important of subjects in current theological discussion.4
As in any faith, one’s understanding
of God should significantly define his worldview.
It is my belief that the doctrine of the Three-in-One provides a macro-structure
of reality that makes sense of life, one that gives a remarkable basis for
our perception of ourselves as persons, for our relationships in marriage,
family, the local church and community and, in point, the role of the local
church in mission.
Nevertheless, many still feel what
Kant expressed. At an ordination council in a
large evangelical church in S‹o Paulo,
In this
article, I wish to develop three points:
1. The
self-giving nature of the tri-personal God.
2. The
implications of a self -giving God for man as the image of God.
3. How
understanding the self-giving God should effect our
concept of the local church and its role in
the world.
In short, I
will argue that the ontology of the Godhead is the foundation for personal and
communitarian mission in the world.
TRINITY AS THE
ETERNALLY SELF-GIVING GOD Is the God of the Bible Selfish?
Tensions between Divine Glory and Love. Many suspect
that God is sel f- ish.
Most would never say that of course. But we understand that the purpose of all
existence is to glorify God. Even the French existentialist Jean Paul Sartre is said
to have commented that, if there is a God, the purpose of the universe would
be to glorify him. Christian creeds and catechisms such as the Westminster Confe ssion are equally clear:
God created the universe and man for his glory.
And that is true. As Creator, the entire universe was created centripetal to
his character and to his purposes. Everything finally exists for his glory.
3
But can the God of Scripture truly be love yet
also desire his own glory? Interestingly,
he Holy Spirit through Paul defines love in 1 Corinthians 13:4- 7 : love “is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it
does not boast, it is not proud, ... is not self-seeking ... it keeps no
record of wrongs.” Elsewhere we read “God is love” (1 Jn 4:8). Yet the God of the Bible does indeed
declare his own glory and does call
upon all creation to worship him. At first glance the God of the Bible does not turn the other cheek but
declares “vengeance is mine,” judging the living and the dead and condemning some to
everlasting punishment.
Whether such passages such as 1 Corinthians 13 can be directly related to God or not is, for many, somewhat
beside the point. According to skeptic John Stuart Mill, God does every day that for which he regularly
co n- demns man. For many others, whether Charles Baudelaire,
Mark Twain or Pablo
Picasso, God is the paradigm of selfishness.
Of course, the Almighty Creator of the Universe
would have every right to be selfish, for he is God. This is essentially how the Moslem
defends Allah. And many
Christians inadvertently do the same. Yet for the Christian there is a fundamental contradiction: while the Creator
may deserve all glory, how can the God of love covet his own glory? If Jesus Christ and the Holy
Spirit had not
revealed the true nature of the Godhead, and if God were only one person,
it would be difficult to avoid the conclusion that, in some sense, while we
are not to be selfish, God himself is absolutely selfish.
The God of the
Bible as Trinity. In
the Old Testament, already we see implications of a tri-personal God: (1) the passages where God seems to
speak of himself
as plural (“let us make man in our own image” Ge
4
Jews were well aware of the
mysterious diversity expressing the one true God.5
When coming into the New Testament we find Jesus
Christ, one who is presented as the Son of God — one who is God, yet God distinct from God
— and again God the Holy Spirit who,
like the Savior, is personal and manifests all the attributes of deity. In more than 40
passages of the New Testament, the Father, Son and Holy Spirit are spoken of together, yet each with
distinctive roles in their personal
relationships.6 As the Athanasian Creed
later clarifies,
the Father is God, the Son is God, the Holy Spirit is God, and yet there are not three Gods but one God. Nor are there three Fathers but one Father, not three Sons but one Son, not three Holy
Spirits but only one Holy Spirit.
Even more extraordinary, in the New Testament we
see the Father delighting
in and glorifying the Son,
giving all things to the beloved One. Yet the Son appears delighting in and
glorifying the Father. After conquering all things and reigning over his kingdom, the Son
lays all things at the feet of the Father. And we find that the Holy Spirit delights in glorifying not
himself but the Son
and again in revealing the glory of the Father. As Gruenler
re- marks in his thematic
commentary on John:
In Jesus’ disclosure of the divine
Family the theme that runs repeatedly through his
discourses is the generosity of the social God. The manner of Jesus’ speech
indicates his conviction that the persons of the divine Community inwardly enjoy
one another’s love, hospitality, generosity, and interpersonal communion, so
much so that they are one God, and being one God, express such love to
one another.7
In God’s own revelation, we encounter a Father, Son and
Holy Spirit each loving the other,
giving to the other, honoring the other, glorifying the other
— this without confusing the high order of the Godhead, the
roles that each divine person has fulfilled from
eternity past.8
5 See Aubrey R. Johnson, The One
and the Many in the Israelite Conception of God (2d ed., Cardiff: Univ. of Wales,
1961) 1-37; Larry Hurtado, One God One Lord: Early
Christian Devotion and Ancient Jewish Monotheism (London:
6
Biblical studies include: A. W. Wainwright, The Trinity in the New Testament
(London: SPCK, 1962) 237-247; G. A. F. Knight, A Biblical
Approach to the Doctrine of the Tri n- ity
(Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd, 1953); Peter Toon ,
Our Triune God: A Biblical Portrayal of the
Trinity (Wheaton: BridgePoint/Victor,
1996); Royce Gordon Gruenler, The Trinity in the Gospel
of John (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1986); Gordon D. Fee,
Paul, the Spirit, and the People of
God (Peabody: Hendrickson, 1996) 9 -46; and Erickson, God
in Three Persons, 159-210.
7 Gruenler,
The Trinity in the Gospel of John 121, cf.
89-140.
8 Two qualifying remarks are in
order. First, it must be admitted that there is not full biblical evidence of trinitarian mutuality in every respect — particularly
regarding the
5
Which returns us to the question: Is the God of
the Bible selfish? Quite the contrary. We discover that the three-personed
God of Scripture is profoundly and
infinitely self-giving. The God of Love in calling for glory is not necessarily selfish at all. His glory is a shared
glory, each delighting in the other.
Beyond
Self-Centeredness: Divine Inter-Relatedness as Primary
Placed before pagan and cultic concepts of deity,
God’s own revelation as Holy Trinity is remarkably unique: a holy and perfect God who in three
centers of consciousness manifes ts the deepest realities
of personhood, each member thinking, feeling and
choosing in relationship to one another in terms that far
surpass our deepest understanding of intimacy.
Unfortunately, in much of Roman Catholic and later
Protestant theolog i- cal development, the New Testament personal
dynamism of the Go dhead was largely ignored. Western Fathers, beginning
especially with Augustine and developing through Scholasticism, emphasized the unity of the
divine substance of God, at times
implicitly reducing God to a list of attributes or to an abstract Immovable Mover or to Pure Act. If Colin
Gunton is correct, Western notions of God — owing to this emphasis on the
oneness of the divine essence — became increasingly philosophic and remote, leading to a deism and
finally an
agnosticism in which God became completely unkno
wable.9
On the other hand,
the Cappadocian Fathers of the fourth century — Basil of Caesaria,
Gregory of Nazianzus and Gregory of Nyssa (the formulators of Eastern trinitarianism)
— envisioned God not so much as some divine essence in three subsistencies, but rather as
a divine family that could be spoken of as Adam, Eve and Seth, or
Peter, James and John. Whereas each member of the
Godhead was understood as possessing the same nature, the Eastern Church has continually stressed the
primacy of the relationships be- tween Father, Son and Holy Spirit.10 It was believed that if
Christ and the
Holy Spirit in relation to the
Father; the deduction is partially implicit and therefore made with caution. Second, concerning the accusation that the
NT and early church were not explicitly trinitarianism, Fee observes, “We tend to think that a
person is not a true trinitarian unless that person has a working
formula in response to this question [of how God exists as Trinity]. To put the question this
way, however, is to get ahead of Paul [and all the NT authors], not to mention to define trinitarianism by later standards É Paul affirms, asserts, and presupposes the Trinity in every way; and those
affirmations — that the one God known and
experienced as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, each distinct from the other, is
yet only one
God — are
precisely the reason the later church took up the question of how.” Paul, the Spirit, and the People of God 38.
9 Colin Gunton, “Augustine,
the Trinity and the Theological Crisis of the West,” Scottish Journal of Theology 43:1 (1990) 33-58; The
Promise of Trinitarian Theology 31-57; and The
One, the Three and the Many: God, Creation and the Culture of Modernity
(Cambridge: Cambridge Univ., 1993).
10 See
G. L. Prestige, God in Patristic Thought (2d ed.,
6
New Testament are God’s culminating
revelation, then our understanding of the Trinity
must center on the personal inter-relatedness witnessed so clearly in such texts
as John 14-17.
But if one stresses the three divine persons, how
then is the unity of the Godhead to be defined? For much of the Eastern Orthodox tradition, as
for an increasing
number of scholars in the West, the unity of the Trinity is to be found in perichoresis,
the inner habitation (or coinherence) of each divine
person in the other.11
That is, each member of the Godhead in some sense indwells the other, without diminishing the full
personhood of each. The essential unity of the Godhead, then, is found both in
their intrinsic equality of di- vine characteristics and also in the intensely
personal unity that comes from mutual indwelling.
Whereas Western theology tended to begin with the
unity and nature of God and then sought to explain the three persons, the East began with
the three persons
and then sought to resolve the nature of their unity. From the Eastern Orthodox perspective, therefore, it is
out of the Godhead’s personal relatedness that all else flows: the creation of angels, man in the
imago dei, and the great plan of redemption — all in order
that finite beings might enter into the joyous fellowship of the Holy Trinity. Put another way,
creation and salvation
begin and end with God’s sel f-givingness,
both internally (each to the other within the Godhead) and externally (the Triune God to all
creation). And so, in the most profound sense as Trinity — and finally only as
Trinity — God is love.
THE SELF-GIVING
GOD
If God exists as Holy Trinity, what
are the implications for man having been created in
the divine image? And what might this mean for the nature of the Christian
life? While scholars have debated the meaning of the imago dei for centuries,
certainly the fact that even the Holy Spirit is revealed with real personhood —
that he demonstrates intellect, chooses and guides the church and manifests
profound emotions — is instructive. 12
versy (Philadelphia: Fortress,
1980)149-179; and Basil Studer, Trinity and I ncarnation: The Faith of the
11
Cf. Jn 17:21. The Greek term perichoresis
is often referred to as circumincession (Latin).
See Michael O’Carroll, “Circumincession,” in Trinitas: A Theological Encyclopedia of the
Holy Trinity (Wilmington: Michael Glazier,
1987) 68-69; and Brian Hebblethwaite, “Perichoresis — Reflections on the Doctrine of the
Trinity,” Theology 80:676 (1977) 255-261.
12 See, Gordon D. Fee, God’s
Empowering Presence: The Holy Spirit in the Letters of Paul (Peabody: Hendrickson, 1994)
829-845.
7
Densified Personhood
A Word of
Testimony (or Why Theology Is Meaningful). At a point of crisis
in my life I found it difficult to sense any basis for my own personhood. There were no anchors for my (or any other) human
significance. The why was gone for simple personal actions like laughing or even talking. When I looked within to “find myself”— as so often suggested by psychologists
— all the more I
plunged into a bottomless pit with nothing to grasp or to secure the fall. The abyss left nothing to call me
and nothing to call man.
Not surprisingly, the Bible does not present a
single psychology or even a well-defined set of words for inner man. Terms such as soul,
heart, spirit and inward parts, for example, neither carry technical
definitions nor are necessarily used with the same definitions among the biblical authors.13
The implication is
that it is not in “finding ourselves” that we discover what it means to be human. Scripture repeatedly points us
to our Creator, the living God. When we focus upon him — looking upward not inward — then we begin to recover our humanity. As Barth put it, person means primarily what it signifies in relation to God 14; that
is, our definition of person must be finally situated in God himself. Although significant
differences exist between the infinite
and the finite, the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit provide the ontological framework for our own personhood as human
beings. 15
Ontology vs. Straw men. The world has a caricature of the
Christian.
For many a secular observer, the believer is a human
disaster. To become a Christian is
to abnegate life. No more laughter, no more days of
raucous shouting around a football game at
a tavern with a good beer. The gusto is gone. The
Christian convert has died. Too often, we must admit, this caricature is true.
Many Christians have died, not just to sin — which is right — but somehow
they have also died to their own humanity, which is wrong. Some have been
bound by guilt and legalism, owing to religious inhibitions of every kind. As
believers we can become forced, defensive, angry, afraid, isolated, morose,
mechanical or spiritually artificial.
13
Walter F. Taylor, Jr., “Humanity, NT View of” in ABD
14 Barth,
Church Dogmatics II/1, 272.
15 See
Alistair I. McFadyen, The Call to Personhood: A
Christian Theology of the Individual in Social Relationships
(Cambridge: Cambridge Univ., 1990); John Zizioulas,
Being As Communion. Studies in
Personhood and the Church (London: Darton,
Longman & Todd, 1985);
David Brown, “Trinitarian Personhood and Individuality,” in Feenstra
and Plantinga, eds.,
Trinity, Incarnation and Atonement 48-78.
8
Yet if our God is truly three persons in
infinitely meaningful relationship, then those who are redeemed and brought
into relationship with this God have every reason be the most fulfilled and authentic of all the human race. When inhabited by the Holy Spirit, as we walk with the Son, as we
take our place as
sons and daughters of the Father, our humanness should come alive. Indeed, the Christian’s humanity should
luster and glow. Our person-hood
should radiate because we are in loving relationship with the fount of all personal life. Christians should be the most
powerful, sensitive, transparent and truly human of all the people on earth.
One might ask, who was
the most extraordinary man that ever walked this earth? Even many atheists will declare that
it was Jesus of Nazareth. Our Savior’s humanity was not erased or diminished by his submission to
the Father.
Rather, our Lord’s humanity appears densified,
made more profound and real. Whether Anselm, Luther or Barth, the
Christian faith affirms that Jesus Christ did not only reveal true God to man, he also revealed true
man to man.16
He taught us how to become true human beings fulfilled in relationship with God.
In contrast to all atheism where human personeity exists as an arbitrary, meaningless instant in time and space, and in contrast to all panth e- ism
where human distinctives separate man from the all-inclusive, apersonal One (and thus it must be extinguished), Christianity affirms that
personhood is directly
grounded in the three-personed God. It is in God
himself that we find a basis for human reason and language, for our capacity to choose,
for our profound diversity of
emotions, for appreciation of beauty, for our propensity for creativity, for our sense of morality
and eternality, for our social nature
desiring relationship with others — all virtual enigmas for modern man who experiences these realities but has no
adequate final explanation. Thus mission and missions begins with understanding who the God of the Bible
is and what it means to be created in the divine image.
Perichoresis and the Imago Dei
When reconciled
with God, man and woman are infused with his personal
presence. In some sense, the capacity of each person of the Godhead to be indwelt (perichoresis) by the other while remaining fully an
individual is reflected in man as created in the
image of God (cf. Jn 14:8-11,20,23; 15:4 -7; 17:20-23,26).
Similar to how the Father indwells the Son and the Son indwells the
Father, and to how the Holy Spirit is also literally “the Spirit of Christ” and
“the Spirit of the Father,” so God has structured the human being so that he or
she can be indwelled by God himself, notably the Holy Spirit. While indwelled
by the divine Other, human beings are both conformed
to the divine character and simultaneously
strengthened in their unique individual‑
9
ity. Man’s
capacity for a kind of perichoresis is why
also, on the negative side, the human being
can be inhabited by demonic spirits. In such cases, of course,
malignant spirits typically enslave and deperso nalize their human abode.
Conversely, the Holy Spirit liberates the sinner, capacitates him to obey and conforms him to the image of Christ.
The Church Fathers nearly unanimously spoke of
God’s habitation in man in terms of theosis, that is, of
being divinized (God-infused) in character and person (cf. 2Pe 1:4). Unlike
pantheism, spiritism and New Age thought, it is not that man becomes God, who is infinite and
immutable in nature. Rather man becomes godly in charac ter, resplendent with the divine presence and in this sense God-like.17 Thus, the divinization of man is directly related to his innate capacity for perichoresis
through which God indwells his human creation. As such, the individual becomes alive, elevated and completed
as a unique human
individual through fellowship with the God of Life.
C. S. Lewis’ captures something of this reality in
The Great Divorce ,18
his parable of
the afterlife in heaven and hell. Lewis takes the reader on a fictitious bus to visit the musty grayness of hell,
where people are not so much suffering
as simply going about their normal business. Yet the appearance of the residents of hell, depending on when they
arrived, is increasingly translucent
and ghostlike. Preoccupied with their selfish lives, they become utterly light of substance and less and less persons at all.
In contrast, when the bus travels up to the outskirts of heaven, we discover the grass, flowers
and trees vibrant with
color and bigger and weightier than in earthly life. The residents of heaven, called the “Solid People,” are massive,
magnificent human beings. They reflect the grandeur and presence of their Sovereign. In their
devotion and obedience
to the King, they are innocent and free to care for others, and therefore free to be themselves.
Exactly the opposite of the caricature
the world portrays of the Chri s- tian , it is only in saving
relationship to the God of the Bible that we can truly become “solid
people” in the satisfying sense that we are designed to be. In short, through
man’s design for perichoresis, those who
experience God’s literal indwelling will be the most
personal, resplendent and godly of all human beings.
17 See Petro B. T. Bilaniuk, “The
Mystery of Theosis or Divinization,” in The
Heritage of
the Ear ly Church,
eds. David Neiman and Margaret Schatkin (Rome: Pontificus Institutum Studiorum Orientalium, 1973) 337
-359; Vladmir Lossky,
The Mystical Theology of the Eastern
Church, trans. Fellowship of St. Alban and St. Sergius (London: James Clarke, 1957) 67-134;
Lossky, The Image and Likeness of God 97-140;
and Dumitri Staniloae,
“Image, Likeness and Deification in the
Human Person,”Communio 13:1 (1986) 64-83. Not
all church fathers (nor all moderns) are
clear on the fundamental distinction between the divine nature and
the nature of the believer. But, in time, Eastern theologians clarified that
the believer partakes of (2Pe 1:4) what they
termed divine energies, but not the divine essence which, as we
have noted, was seen as mysteriously unique to God alone.
18 C. S. Lewis, The
Great Divorce (New York: Macmillan, 1946).
10
The Self-Giving
Nature of the Imago Dei
If right relationship with God is the foundation
for true personhood, how is the divine image increasingly formed in the Christian’s life? What is
the key to
becoming man like Jesus Christ? We are not three persons, but one person. We are not infinite or self-sufficient,
but finite and creaturely. Given that we are structured as persons in the imago dei,
how does the Lord God make alive and perfect his image in us?
Christian
Selfishness. From an historical and international
perspective, it has often
been said that Western Christianity has become increasingly self-serving. We offer Christianity because it will
help set us free from our problems,
make us feel good about ourselves, give us emotional ecstacy,
nurture better
marriages and happy families, lead us to physical health, psychological well-being and even success in business. Biblical
principles do indeed bring a practical (albeit partial) salvation to our daily lives. But for all
the helps available
for bettering the life of the believer, too often the quality of his Christian devotion actually deteriorates. He
becomes less interested in the Gospel and less still in sharing Christ with others. Too often we
inadvertently present a
Christian faith without its center.
Primary Themes of
Jesus. It hardly needs to be said that Jesus repeatedly set forth in one form or another two great
commandments: to love the Lord our God with all our heart, soul, mind and strength and to love
our neighbor as
our self (Mk
A second most repeated theme of
Jesus is that “whoever wishes to save his life will
lose it, but whoever loses his life [yuchv, soul] for me will
save it.” The statement is found in various
contexts in each Gospel (Mt
19 J. Ribaillier,
Richard de Saint-Victor, De Trinitate. Texte critique (
I.20.
20 George R. Beasley-Murray, John
(Waco: Word, 1987) 211, WBC; he notes “hates his life” sometimes carries the meaning of “love less” in
Hebrew idiom (Ge 29:30-31; Mt
11
fully by Jesus
giving his own life for the sins of the world. The Savior emphasizes the
principle of daily sacrifice of oneself in love and obedience to God — a continual
letting go of life that daily refills the believer with the life of God. Cuban
evangelist B. G. Lavastida put it this way: “There
are three paradoxes of the
Christian life: You must give in order to receive, you must
let go in or- der to possess, and you
must die in order to live.” Together with the commands to love
wholeheartedly the Lord God, our brothers in Christ and our fellow human
beings, the command to let go of self is one the most repeated of all the Savior’s
admonitions.
The Divine Example. The self -giving nature of each person of the Tri nity suggests that Jesus’ teaching on love and self-sacrifice relates to more
than our simply
being good. It seems to speak to the very nature of the imago dei of man. Self-sacrifice is not just an ethical extra for the pious.
Rather, part of our human constitution is that we must give of ourselves in order
to fulfill the way we are
designed. One rightly supposes that members of the Godhead freely give of themselves and are not under obligation by design. However,
the human being seems to be by very
ontology under a kind of free obligation to give of himself to
others. It may be that he can only enter more fully into the divine image, into full personhood, by giving
himself away. By placing others first — God and then fellow man — he is completed as a human being and made truly “Christ-like” and “God-like” as a
person. Thus, in understanding the self-givingness of the Triune God, we
discover that what Christ asks us to do in taking up our cross is what the Holy Trinity exemplifies
repeatedly in its own
self-revelation. Indeed, in a sense, Jesus asks nothing of us that the Father, Son and Holy Spirit do not practice a
million times over — without contradicting divine transcendence, sovereignty and glory.
Summarily, then, the key to human ontology is the
imago dei within a trinitarian framework: (1) in man’s personal nature
which, although fallen, reflects the personal aspects of the divine nature; (2) in his capacity
for divine indwelling, paralleling the intra-trinitarian
perichoresis; and (3) in his design for fulfullment through
self-giving, mirroring the disposition of the Godhead itself.
If vestiges and potentialities of the divine image are
found in the individual, then what might the imago dei
indicate for the local church?
THE
12
us to a final suggestion: God created
not only the individual person but also the local
church in the trinitarian self-giving image.21
A Collective
Image of God
Tertullian
once remarked, “Where the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit are, there too is the Church which is the body of the Three.”22
Put a little differently, the
expression of the Triune God is best reflected in the local church, the community of believers.
I pray also for those who will
believe in me through their message, that all of them may be one, Father, just as you
are in me and I am in you ... I have given them the glory that you gave
me, that they may be one as we are one. I in them and you in me. May they be brought to complete
unity to let the world know that you sent me and
have loved them even as you have loved me. [Jn
Among the many lessons of this
prayer, Jesus asks that the unity he has with the Father be
experienced in the unity of Christians — a uni ty with himself (and through
him with the Father) and again with one another.
But what is the nature of the Godhead’s unity? On
the one hand, as we have seen earlier, divine unity is not to be conceived as simply the
fellowship of three
independent deities — an idea made popular in the Social Theory of the Trinity. The unity of the Triune God is
unique and beyond what can be said of finite personal union. In the words of Colin Gunton:
[divine
unity’s] central concept is that of shared being: the persons do not simply enter
into relations with one another, but are constituted by one another in the
relations. Father, Son and Spirit are eternally what they are by virtue of what
they are from and to one another. Being and relation can be distinguished in thought but in no
way separated ontologically; they are rather part of the one ontological
dynamic ... not a blank unity, but a being in communion.23
Gunton is not
denying a divine essence. He is arguing that God’s being is best understood not
in classical Western terms of abstract substance (or essence) but of eternal
personal relatedness. That is, God is being in relationship, or personally
shared being. Therefore, in an ultimate sense, the unity of God is
21
Implications of the tri-personal God for marital and familial relations have
been developed by Margerie,
The Christian Trinity in History; Cornelius Plantinga,
Jr., “The Perfect Family,” Christianity Today (March 4,
1988) 24-27; Larry R. Thornton, “A Biblical Approach
to Establishing Marital Intimacy. Part 1: Intimacy and Trinity,”
22 Tertullian De baptismo VI,1; see Boff, Trinity and Society 106.
23 Gunton,
The One, the Three and the Many 214. See also Boff, Trinity and Society 123-154.
13
unique to the
Godhead. Both trinitarian unity and inter-relatedness
exist on a transcendent level outside human
understanding.
On the other hand, although divine
oneness surpasses human understanding, believers are called to
be “a finite echo or bodying forth of the divine personal
dynamics.” 24
Dear friends, let us love one
another, for love comes from God. Everyone who loves has been
born of God and knows God ... because God is love ...
This is love: not that we loved God, but
that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice
for our sins. Dear friend s, since God so loved us, we also ought to love one
another. No-one has ever seen God; but if we love one another, God lives in us and
his love is made
complete in us. We know that we live in him
and he in us, because he has given us
of his Spirit. [1 Jn 4:7-13]
Those elect and redeemed by the
Lord are called in a limited way to be a communal
expression of the Trinity. First, even though divine perichoresis goes beyond
human categories, the indwelling of the Holy Spirit in believers mirrors a similar
reality. As the Spirit inhabits a Christian community, he unites
believers to the Son and to the Father through the Godhead’s own coinherence in him. There
is fellowship with and the presence of the entire Trinity through
the mediation of the Spirit. Second, the responsive love that believers
share toward God is reflective of the reciprocal love experienced in the Godhead. In
Eastern Orthodoxy’s thinking, such love allows the believer to enter into
the beatific fellowship of the Trinity itself. Third, the love of God shown by
members toward one another reveals the nature of God and so serves as a
collective image of the Trinity. It might be suggested that, as man and woman
become one flesh in marriage, the act of sexuality becomes the closest
creaturely approachment to indwelling the other. So
in a spiritual sense, believers in the local
church who love and care for one another reflect a presence of
the others in their hearts. In any case, the personal unity and diversity of the
Triune God is reflected in the unity and plurality of the local church bound
together in the Holy Spirit and in the love of God.
True Koinonia
Rarely in Christian history,
however, has there been effort to conceive of the church as
a community reflective of the trinitarian
relationship. Instead, ecclesiology
has been more patterned by the socio-political structures predominant in
cultures where church organizations were formed. James Houston comments,
“the tendency of ecclesial structures has been
legal and essentially interpreted as political
institutions.”25 Church forms of government typically have been little more than
variations of monarchical (episcopal),
24 Gunton,
The Promise of Trinitarian Theology 74.
25 James Houston “Community and the Nature of God” (Chapel
lecture no. 2526 (tape),
14
federal
(representative) and democratic (congregational) systems. Interestingly, JŸrgen Moltmann suggests the
opposite, that Western political (and ecclesiastical)
systems from dictatorships to socialism have reflected poor theology —
specifically an inadequate trinitarian theology, thus
the loss of the freedom of the
individual. 26
Both organizationally and functionally, churches
have fallen considerably short of
reflecting trinitarian community. In
How might the local church reflect the triune
divine image? I would like to the initiate discussion with several directives:
(1) Mutuality. Just as
each member of the Holy Trinity is equally and completely God, so each believer in the local
church is equally a son and daughter of God, coheir of the promises of the cross. Against the
preacher-centered programs of many
churches, local church functions (including the “worship service”) can better manifest the triune
nature of God by involving, as much as possible, each member with spiritual activities. Believers
are to be given
real value and dignity by the local church, not left as anonymous spectators amidst professional performances.
Creative biblical and cultural ways to include members should be encouraged, remembering that every believer is important and necessary in the Body of
Christ. All members should be conscious of their responsibility of reciprocal submission and of
giving of themselves to
the other.
(2) Order. On the other
hand, just as there is a functional or economic order in all the Godhead does (each divine person
having distinct roles), so the New Testament defines a necessary order in the local church with
pastor/presbyters, deacons, etc.
Whether in the church, family or society, submission to another does not admit inferiority any more than the Son, by
his obedience, is inferior to the Father
(cf. 1 Pe
26 Moltmann, The Trinity and the Kingdom 191-222; see
also Charles Sherrard MacKenzie,
The Trinity and Culture (New York: P. Lang, 1987); Douglas M. Meeks, God
the Economist: The Doctrine of God
and Political Economy (Minneapolis: Fortress, 1989);
John Thompson, Modern Trinitarian
Perspectives 106-123; and Daniel L. Migliore,
“The Trinity and Human Liberty,” Theology
Today 36:4 (1980) 488 -497. On the other hand, one could hardly
argue that Eastern trinitarianism has contributed to
ecclesial and political balance in Eastern history.
15
love and
sensitivity on the part of the leader to those under his authority are important,
these do not exempt him from leading, making difficult decisions and
disciplining errant members. His love for God must outweigh his love of his brothers.
Yet if one’s gift and role as leader has been given by God, then he should
reflect the self-giving nature of God, even in the difficult task of discipline. Leadership itself would
do well always to function in interdependency with order before the Lord.
(3)
Deep friendships. If God exists as community,
then real community is to be reflected in all the life of the church. In the words of Gordon
Fee, “God is not just saving individuals and preparing them
for heaven; rather, he is creating a
people among whom he can live and who in their life together will reproduce
God’s life and character.”27 Just as the Holy Trinity lives and functions not on the basis of rules, regulations or
dogma but primarily on the ba- sis of loving interdependency, so the church while
standing for biblical truth is to nurture caring
relationships among its members. Not surprisingly, the largest percentage of
imperatives in the New Testament do not address the believer’s relationship directly to God, nor his relationship to the
world, but his
relationship to others in the local church. To imitate God, the local church must
seek to cultivate deep friendships.28 Although
doctrine is important, for it defines the
nature and the will of the God we worship, the Christian life is primarily relational. It is learning to love and to
respond to one another, in our limited ways, as do the Father, Son and Holy Spirit to one another.
By encouraging
deep friendships around love for the Lord, the local church is to prefigure
the blessed communion of heaven and of the Godhead itself.
(4)
Biblical ecumenicity. The same mutual caring is
not limited to believers in the
local church or single denomination. Sensitivity to the unity and diversity of the Body of Christ should extend our
care to other Christian churches as well — seen not as religious competition or as “errant
brethren” but as fellow congregations in the universal
Church of our Lord. The triune nature of the
Godhead reminds one of the value and beauty of traditional, cultural and ethnic diversity manifest in
sometimes radically diverse styles of worship and service. Often
local churches and denominations have failed to appreciate the pluralism of God’s people, a people nevertheless united
by “one Spirit É one
Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all” (Eph 4:4-5).
Self-Giving to
the World
The Question of Creation. Returning to
a larger perspective, one of the greatest of all
questions is, Why is there something instead of
nothing? Or
27 Fee,
Paul, the Spirit and the People of God 66.
28
Houston, “Community and the Nature of God” (tape). See also Gunton,
The Promise of Trinitarian Theology 81-85;
John J. O’Donnell, “The Trinity as Divine Community,” Gregorianum 69:1
(1988) 5-34; and Plantinga, “The Perfect Family”
24-27.
16
why does anything
exist at all? If God were selfish, it would be hard to understand why he
would create something outside himself. Perhaps a God who is only one person
would create in order to satisfy his own desire (or need) for glory, for relationship or so that he might exercise his sovereignty. But in an eternal
Trinity where each member glorifies the other, where profound interpersonal
relationships already exist and where God is completely self-sufficient,
what would be the motive for the creation? As has been alluded to earlier,
various scholars conclude that the Triune God created the vast realm of heaven —
with its diversity of angelic beings — and our immense universe and tiny earth
— with its vast diversity of plants, animals and people — as a overflow of the
life and creative love of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. This divine
overflow is not in pantheistic or deterministic senses, but rather God’s creative
artistry that gives being to the other while maintaining God’s own freedom and
independence. If such a deduction is true, then all creation exists as the
result of God’s own self-giving beyond the internal personal relations of the
Godhead.
If earth’s very existence owes itself to divine
self-giving, then the local church created in the divine image would seem called to give itself to
the world as well. Believers are
called to manifest the saving presence of Jesus Christ through their own collective sacrifice
among a hurting and hopeless humanity.
Selfish Churches. Just as an
individual Christian focused upon himself becomes less Christ-like (and so less human), so
a local church when it becomes
centered on its own well-being will become a hollow shell of what it is intended
to be. Too often churches, whether traditional or contemporary, have become content to orient nearly everything to their own members:
programs, finances and even prayer
concentrate repeatedly on themselves, their own preferences, patterns and goals. Not that
members of a church should not nurture and care for one another. As we have seen, the imperative
to love one another
in the church — as the Father, Son and Holy Spirit love one another — is very important. Yet the local church
cannot remain absorbed in itself.
Just as the persons of the Trinity did not confine themselves to loving themselves but rather created the worlds and
entered redemptively into our existence, so the local church is called to give of itself to an
alienated world.
A Missionary Image. In a sense, we might think of God
the Father as
the Sender, and both God the Son and God the Spirit as
the divine missionaries. In Ireneaus’
well-worn terms, both are the ministering hands of God to bring mankind
to salvation and into the family of God.29 In this sense, then, the Holy
Trinity is the archetype of the local church and mission. As the Triune God came to
a lost world in both the Son and the Holy Spirit, so this
29 Irineaus,
Adversus Haereses
5.6.1.
17
same God has
structured the local body of Christians in such a way that in order to be
fulfilled it too must collectively give of itself.
Among multiple examples of unselfish sacrifice,
the Assembly of God in
In the words of Alistair McGrath, “Evangelism is
something intrinsic to the identity
of the Church — not an optional extra, but something part and parcel of its very being.” 30 We know this to be true experientially, but often we fail to ask why it is so? It is because, as
the individual, so the local church is created in the imago dei.
Self-giving to a lost world is intrinsic not only for its own reflection of God, but also for its
ontological fulfillment. The local community is divinely designed to give itself away. There is no other
way. As Emil Brunner
observes, “The church lives by mission as a fire lives by burn- ing.”31 Our Lord’s imperative is to,
“Go and make disciples of all nations” (Mt 28:19). Because of our right
relationship with the Godhead, reasons Paul, “We are
therefore ambassadors” with the message “Be reconciled to God” (2 Co
CONCLUSION
We have seen that, first, far from
being selfish, the tri-personal God of the Bible
reveals the most profound de pths of self-giving.
Each member of the Godhead freely
gives of himself to the other, delighting in glorifying the
30 Alistair McGrath,
Christianity Today (
31 Emil
Brunner, cited in op. cit.
18
other. God is love.
Second, the key to human ontology is the imago dei
within a trinitarian
framework. The divine image is reflected not only in man’s innate personal
nature but also through divine indwelling (a finite perichoresis) and the
ontological obligation to give of oneself to God and to others. Thirdly, it is
suggested that the local church also should reflect the trinitarian
image, both in its internal and external
relationships.
How unfortunate that the doctrine of the Trinity,
with its implications for all of life, has lost its centrality in defining our worldview. Not
only have we
often not adequately understood the doctrine of th e Godhead but, when understanding it, our tendency has been to
separate theology from practice. We have done little to consciously express trinitarian
belief in our daily lives and in the community of the church.
Yet, as James Houston puts it, “God’s very being
is expressive of our own being.”32 The Triune God is committed to us by his own
self-giving nature. The Christian is created and redeemed to respond in like manner, giving himself to God and to fellow human beings. And so
is the local church.
In the end, is the doctrine of the
Holy Trinity irrelevant, Immanuel Kant? To the contrary, the
revelation of God as Father, Son and Holy Spirit is the center
and absolute of all human reality.
32 Houston, “Community and the Nature
of God” (tape).