Augustine used any of analogies to try to explain the
Trinity. I have chosen one of these analogies trying to identify how Augustine
was viewing the Trinity. Augustine lived times with a lot of difficulties and
theological changes. The theological environment of those times was living the
results of the Arian controversy, the Council of Nicaea and the Council of Constantinople
and Cappadocians. The teaching about Trinity had been one of theological controversies,
the church had been divided and Augustine had to defend the Catholic faith; I
said in that way because the church had been divided for the Donatists. So
Augustine stood as one of the defenders of the Catholic faith; also, today many
could call him the defender of the Christian faith.
I am Christian and I belief in the teaching of the Trinity.
We are a monotheist church and we belief in one God: one savior that is Jesus
Christ, and one Holy Spirit, the three of them are the Only One truly God. So
we belief in the trinity, we have the God Father, His son Jesus Christ and the
Holy Spirit, that are one in essence. However, I think, this topic of the
Trinity is one of the most controversial themes of the Christian faith, today
and in the past. In the Augustine times there were a lot of problems around
this topic because the Arian ideas were strong in that time. As Harmless said:
“In the 350s, there evolved various competing theologies that were not Arian,
but were anti-Nicene. Some anti-Nicene bishops were willing to speak of Christ
as God, but in some lesser, derived sense, and they envisioned an unequal hierarchy
within the God-head” (p. 276). The Nicene Creed supported the Trinity belief,
and the looser were the Arians. So Augustine had to be a strong defender of the
Trinity.
Augustine wrote a lot about Trinity: sermons, and his book
“On the Trinity”. He wrote many analogies trying to explain the Trinity. He
recognized that any of his analogies were very weak and are not a strong
support for the Trinity teaching. I chose the analogy of: Mind, Knowledge and
Love because Augustine mixed these three concepts very well. As Harmless said,
the first time you read this analogy you think that Augustine is playing with
words (p. 298), but that he is doing is giving support to his idea of Trinity.
Augustine used an analogy of mind, knowledge and love to
talk about Trinity, Augustine wrote about these three elements: “When the mind
knows itself and loves itself, a trinity remains: the mind, love, and
knowledge. And there is not confusion through any commingling, though each is a
substance in itself and all are found mutually in all… all are one” (p. 299). After
this, Augustine wrote about how these concepts are mixed and inter-related themselves,
each one with each other. “But they are mutually in each other in such a way
that the mind that loves is in the love, and the love is in the knowledge of
the one that loves, and knowledge is in the mind that knows” (p. 299). Also,
Augustine finish talking about this analogy saying: “These three, therefore,
are in a marvelous way inseparable from one another, and yet each of them is a
substance, and all together are one substance or essence, while the terms
themselves express a mutual relationship” (p. 299).
Greetings CesarMDG
ResponderEliminarOn the subject of the Trinity,
I recommend this video:
The Human Jesus
Take a couple of hours to watch it; and prayerfully it will aid you to reconsider "The Trinity"
Yours In Messiah
Adam Pastor
http://apologista.wordpress.com/category/trinidad-2/
Thanks for sharing this, it'is a wonderful video!
ResponderEliminar