Danieltwotwenty wrote:I get that God cannot be reduced to parts and I get why, the part I am having trouble understanding is how that relates to the Trinity. Now if the Father is not the Son and the Son is not the Spirit and the Spirit is not the Fatherand they all are of the same mind and will, doesn't this make a division between them if they are not the same and now can be broken into parts??
That's the typical Christian objection against the Trinity, but is one that I think is rooted in a misunderstanding of the Trinity, not of simplicity. Look at the definition of the Trinity:
- God is three Persons in one being (or substance).
Simplicity is nothing more than the doctrine that takes "in one being" seriously. If you really believe that God is "one being," then you have to accept simplicity, because the moment you start allowing divisions in God, you lose any and all principled ways to say that all three of the Persons are really the same substance. If I can make any distinctions in God (say, if God has a property called omnipotence and He also has a property called omniscience and these properties are really and distinct from each other--God is "made up" of those two properties (again, think of the egg and sugar in a cake)), then is just no principled was of saying that all of the Persons are the same substance.
The trick to all of this is to use "one being" as the controlling idea for governing our understanding in what sense God can be "three Persons"; we absolutely should NOT try to use the "three Persons" as the controlling idea for in what sense God is "one being." So bottom line: when you think of the Trinity, the first and most important thing you should grasp is NOT that God is three Persons. That is important, but the most important thing that you grasp is that He is ONE BEING.
Danieltwotwenty wrote:Ok I have been doing some more reading on divine simplicity, now please correct me if I am wrong on any of the parts that follow.
God is not a person, God just IS.
So it follows that God IS things and not God has things.
Correct.
For example God is the property of Omnipotent and not God has the property of Omnipotence.
Just to pick on your verbiage, God is not a property (that's Alvin Plantinga's supposed
coup de grace against the doctrine). There is a reason they are called "attributes" rather than "properties."
We attribute to God omniscience, and
we[/i] attribute to Him omnipotence. In our human mind, those ideas are the best way to represent God. When we think about Him in terms of "what He knows," we see He knows everything; so we say that is omniscience. And when we think about Him in terms of "what He can do," we see that He has all power to do everything (doable); so we say that is omnipotence. But the distinction between omniscience and omnipotence is really only in our own minds. In God Himself, there is no distinction between the two. He just is what He is.
So to touch up your language here, I would say, "For example God is Omnipotence; He does not have a property called omnipotence." That may be exactly what you meant, but the language, unfortunately, get's rather precise in all of this, and necessarily so.
So what I am understanding when it comes to the Trinity is that God is Jesus, God is Spirit, God is Father. So if I am understanding this correctly the Father, Son and Spirit are expressions of God or attributes of God. God is expressing himself in three ways to mankind or his attributes of the Father, Son and Spirit are viewed by us as his expression of himself.
So far this is my limited understanding, I am not saying it is correct as I am still trying to understand it myself.
No, the Persons are not expressions or attributes of God (that would be modalism, which would mean that they are not really Persons at all). All three of the Persons ARE omnipotence, and they ARE omniscience, and they ARE omnibenevolence, etc. All three of the Persons have the same attributes because all of them are God, and God (by nature) has all of the same attributes as Himself.
Think of it this way:
- Whatever is God is omniscient;
The Father is God;
The Son is God;
Therefore, the Father and the Son are omniscient
So that makes sense, but what if you imagine that the Persons are attributes or expressions of God. Then, by the same logic you would have:
- Whatever is God is the Holy Spirit;
The Father is God;
The Son is God;
Therefore that Father and the Son are the Holy Spirit
But that is not true. That, again, is modalism. The Father, Son, and Spirit are real distinctions in God--they are the only distinctions. Though that seems like it violates divine simplicity, it does not. I can walk you through the technical reasons, but I would just remind you before we do all of that, that if you affirm any version of the Trinity, you have to affirm that in SOME sense, three Persons are ONE being (not parts of one being!). So the Trinity, by definition (literally), no more contradicts simplicity than it does itself. That is, if the Trinity contradicts simplicity, then the Trinity is just self-refuting.
This brings me a new question about the hypostatic union, now if Jesus has a human side and a divine side does that mean his divine side being God is separated from his human side after the ascension? In heaven is there God with the attributes/expressions of Father, Son and Spirit and then there is Jesus the human? Is there now a separation of Jesus the human from Jesus the divine?
Dan
I'm not sure why there would be a separation after the ascension if there wasn't one before the ascension? Jesus has TWO natures--the human nature (which is not God) and the divine nature (which is God). We have to be carefully here and not say that Jesus' humanity is God. Jesus the man is God because He also has a fully divine nature. But Jesus' divine nature does not "have" a human nature.
Now, Jesus' human nature is not simple. It's just like yours and mine. Jesus, the man, is not simple. His divine nature (by which He is God) is simple. This is why we say that God took on flesh. He did not change. The divine nature is still exactly what it was--fully divine, fully simple. God simply exists along side the human nature in the person of Christ. That's what the hypostatic union says, that Jesus is 100% God and 100% man. He is not 50% God and 50% man. The two natures are not co-mingled into some hybrid nature. They are fully distinct, each remaining what they were, existing completely in the same person. Jesus' human nature was just subordinate at ALL times to His divine nature. That was the case in His life and is the case after the ascension.