Nope. There is no triune nature of god described in the Bible. Translation of certain verses has been manipulated or assumed to support man made doctrine.
The trinity is not the Word of God because Jesus is the Word of God.[/QUOTE]
Nope. The Word of God is the Word of God not Jesus. This is another manipulation of Jn 1:1-3. Please see Isa 55:11, Ps 33:6-9 and particularly 2 Sam 7:12. John has not come up with something out of the blue but referred to the Prophets. You can also see it in Jn 20:17, Re 1:1 and so on.
[/QUOTE]Yes, the doctrine of the Trinity, or the nature of the triune God, is first described in the book of Genesis chapters 1 and 2.[/QUOTE]
Nope. It is the story tellers product.
[/QUOTE]I don't know about the Athanasian Creed and will have to read this later, but yes like you say, the Father, the Word, and the Spirit are God, and this is in a boiled down sense the doctrine of the Trinity as the Bible details.[/QUOTE]
Nope. I didn't say that. I said that one of the Old Catholic Church Fathers said that the Father is God, the Son is God and that the HS is God.[/QUOTE]
Well it's not just a matter of translation. The narrative of the Bible and the nature of reality points to a triune God. That is to say there is the Father who is God, the Word of God which became flesh and is Jesus, and the Holy Spirit of God, the divine breath of God. This is shown in Genesis 1 and 2 and paralleled in the conception of Jesus. In Genesis God speaks creation into existence by his Word and his Spirit moves across the face of the deep. Compare this to the conception of Jesus in the Gospels where God's Spirit overshadows Mary and the Word of God, Jesus, is made flesh in the matrix of the virgin. The conception of Jesus is a parallel of the creation in Genesis.
The Gospel of John's first chapter also retells the creation account specifying that Jesus is the Word, by the Word all of creation made by God, and that the Word became flesh. This is not a manipulation of the scripture, but is what it actually says.
I like the scriptures you cite. They seem to me to simply confirm what I have written. I especially liked Psalm 33:6
Psalm 33:6
6 By the
word of
the Lord were the heavens made; and all the host of them by
the breath of his mouth.
Right there underlined is the trinity, or the triune nature of God; The Father, the Word, the Spirit - one God.
I see, my apologies, I did not grow up in a catholic family nor do I attend any catholic institution, so I did not understand at first you were referring to their teachings and thought you were merely making a statement.