(I am not trying to offend any christians. I am just challenging their beliefs. If I offend you, I apologize)
Respectful questions do not offend
1) Who is the "Father"? I have heard some people say it's god himself but isn't the trinity itself god? So doesn't that create a paradox?
The Father is God the Father, the creator, maker of all things... Each member of the Trinity is fully God, and together they are fully one divine being.
2) What is the "Holy Ghost" exactly? Is it the spirituality of the people? If so then why not call it spirit?
The Holy Spirit is another of the three personages of God. It is not the "spirituality of the people"... The Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father, and it is the Holy Spirit who speaks by way of prophets... the Holy Spirit is the comforter, teaches us, and brings us remembrance of that which Jesus said. Blasphemy against the Holy Spirit is the only unforgivable offense...
3) The New Testament doesn't really talk much about it, except in a few obscure excerpts. It is common knowledge that Jesus himself never really talked about it at all. Then why is it so heavily emphasized on in christianity?
The Trinity of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit is the answer to the question: Who/What is God.
eselam said:
is that 3 gods at one time or is that one god at 3 times?
It is one God in three persons at all times forever
they say god could not have created Jesus without a father
First of all, we say Jesus was not
created at all. He is eternally begotten. There was never a time when Jesus wasn't. There was never a thing
made without Jesus.
te said:
Nowhere in the Bible do one read that God the Father is Jesus
Nowhere in traditional Christianity do you read that either...
I've come to know that a lot of Christians is afraid to explain the trinity
The Trinity is three divine hypostases and one divine ousia. Roughly three persons one being.
It is not that we are afraid to explain what we know, but we, as far as I know, freely admit that which we do is not very much...
The story of St. Augustine on the beach comes to mind...
Augustine was walking on a beach, trying to wrap his head fully around the Trinity. As he walked he came upon a small boy pouring sea water with a shell into a hole he had dug in the sand. As Augustine looked on the child spoke to him telling him that just as the hole he had dug served so little to hold all the water of the sea, so too his reason held served so little to contain the mysteries of God.
There is a clear duality in the Bible, best illustrated in John 1:1 "the Word was with God, and the Word was God"... the trinity is implied...