- 99.9% of the people I talked with admitted that the only Christian doctrine of God was and is trinitarian. No: none of them used the phrase "Christian doctrine of God," but they (you?) all had that intent!
- But the same 99.9% also admitted some degree of confusion as to: why the Christian doctrine of God had to be trinitarian, or why the doctrine always seemed so impenetrable, or why the doctrine seemed irrelevant to discipleship (and I'd hazard a guess: irrelevant to worship and mission).
I do know that if you look at the IVCF Doctrinal Basis, you'll observe that it begins with a trinitarian depiction of God. In a conversation with a colleague last year, he informed me that he had initiated a reading group of young IVCF staff to discuss and learn together what it means to have faith in the triune God. While all of these staff had to sign a commitment to the above statement of faith, few had more than a slender understanding of what the doctrine meant and its implications for life and ministry.
These conversations reminded me of the Preface to Ted Peters' book on the Trinity, and I paraphrase here: "the Christian doctrine of God is the best-kept secret in the world."
What do you think are the implications for a lean understanding of the Trinity? Is this doctrine one that is so "academic" as to be useless for our season of humanity? Or is it a doctrine long overlooked but awaits some concentrated examination for our relationship with God, each other, and the world: and therefore become useful? And what would you mean for the word, "useful'?
1 comment:
So Mike, are you gonna be one of those people who was all excited about getting a blog and then I check it all the time and it's never updated? :) It's okay, I have several friends like that.
Just wanted to give you a hard time! :)
~E
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