Saturday 31 July 2021

Singular anarthrous predicate nouns occurring before the verb.

 Jn 1: 1 God was the Word. N.W.T. the word was “a god”. 


From a discussion with a Trinitarian from the old BBC religious discussion forum (now closed down)

Hello TW, 

Here is a story we are all familiar with, the account of Barabbas. 

John 18:40 KJV “Then cried they all again, saying, Not this man, but Barabbas. Now Barabbas was *a robber.” 

Numbers 35:31 KJV “Moreover ye shall take no satisfaction for the life of *a murderer, which is guilty of death: but he shall be surely put to death” 

Acts 3:14 (Young's Literal Translation) “and ye the Holy and Righteous One did deny, and desired *a man -- *a murderer -- to be granted to you” Even you should understand that, there being no indefinite article in Greek We wouldn’t translate John 18:40 as “Now Barabbas was robber.” We wouldn’t translate Numbers 35:31 as “…the life of murderer…” We wouldn’t translate Acts 3:14 as “…and desired man -- murderer -- to be granted to you” Why the above? It shows that Barabbas belongs to the category or class of “murderer” or belongs to the category or class of “man”. 

Here is an illustration that even you will possibly comprehend! "Charles is a Prince". 

To use a count noun in a generic sense (e.g. "I am *man") draws attention to the ‘class’ "man". Or, to use Slatten's (1918) classic example "Charles is *a prince" could mean that Charles is the son of a monarch or that Charles is not the son of a monarch but has the qualities of the class "prince." (There are other in-between possibilities but these are the two examples that best clarify the issue). 

A Class has Definite and (sometimes) Indefinite Members: The generic use of a noun points to a class. Here is the point: This class is instantiated by *members* of the class. 

For example, *(keep Barabbas in mind). "I am man” *(I am robber) draws attention to class "Man." But when I am an instantiated member of class "Man," I am *a* man. I am *a member of* class "Man". As such, I am a separate and distinct instantiation of another instance of class "Man". In the second example of "Charles is a prince", Charles has the qualities and characteristics of class "Prince." This use highlights that there is a class "Prince" and it consists of princes. Those princes *in general* display certain qualities that Charles also displays. Apply this same instantiation to Barabbas. Barabbas likewise, belongs to the class ‘Robbers’. So, again, and likewise, those ‘robbers’ *in general* display certain qualities that ‘Barabbas’ also displays. The point is that a generic use points to the class AND REFERENCES TO MEMBERS OF THAT CLASS MUST BE DEFINITE OR INDEFINITE. 

John 1:1- theos instantiated twice: (Again keep Barabbas in mind). So, in the John 1:1 expression "Jesus is [a] theos, many modern Trinitarians assert that the ‘theos’ here is "qualitative" (this is also mislabelled since ‘theos’ is not in fact a quality, i.e. qualitative). What they are trying to do is to spin the word "qualitative" to mean as a lump all quality, substance, non-count, generic use, etc., nouns. The net effect is that you lose precision on what they mean when they use the term "qualitative." But even here in John 1:1, the ‘theos’ class is instantiated twice. Both THE God (ho-theos) and the one who is with him ((a) theos). The fact that there are two instantiations argues that the second one is indefinite. One can correctly argue to what extent the LOGOS as indefinite ‘theos’ possesses the qualities of the definite ho-theos as a member of class ‘theos’, but it is still an indefinite use, grammatically speaking. In the Greek text there are many cases of a singular anarthrous predicate noun preceding the verb, such as in Mark 6:49; 11:32; John 4:19; 6:70; 8:44; 9:17; 10:1, 13, 33; 12:6 

Jesus is God and the Piece is Cheese: 

What Trinitarians are trying to do is to use the word ‘theos’ as if it were a substance (or other noncount noun or count noun in a noncount sense). For example, if I took a slice of cheese from a block of cheese and placed the it next to the block of cheese, I could say "The bit of cheese was with the block of cheese and the the bit was the block." Since cheese is a mass noun, this works grammatically. However, there are two instantiations here of class "Cheese". You can convert a mass noun to a count noun but adding quantifiers. Here you have "a slice of" cheese and "a block of" cheese. 

Thus, instantiations of class "cheese" are indefinite or definite depending on its reference in context. Since ‘theos’ is not a substance or other kind of mass noun, the expression "the LOGOS was God" does not work grammatically. And even if some argue that it is a count noun used in a noncount sense in "Jesus is God", take them to the next step and ask them if Jesus is a definite QEOS or an indefinite one. Since they reject definiteness as heresy, where does that lead them? 

Conclusion: Thus, the literal translation "and the Word was a god" is really the best literal translation. 

NB, Following is a list of instances in the gospels of Mark and John where various translators have rendered singular anarthrous predicate nouns occurring before the verb with an indefinite article to denote the indefinite and qualitative status of the subject nouns.

Scripture Text New World Translation King James Version An American Translation New International Version Revised Standard Version Today’s English Version 

Mark 6:49 an apparition a spirit a ghost a ghost a ghost a ghost 11:32 a prophet a prophet a prophet a prophet a real prophet a prophet 

John 4:19 a prophet a prophet a prophet a prophet a prophet a prophet 6:70 a slanderer a devil an informer a devil a devil a devil 8:44 a manslayer a murderer a murderer a murderer a murderer a murderer 8:44 a liar a liar a liar a liar a liar a liar 9:17 a prophet a prophet a prophet a prophet a prophet a prophet 10:1 a thief a thief a thief a thief a thief a thief 10:13 a hired man an hireling a hired man a hired hand a hireling a hired man 10:33 a man a man a mere man a mere man a man a man 12:6 a thief a thief a thief a thief a thief a thief -  John1:1 is the exact same grammatical construction to the above examples and I have given you many examples. John 1:1 is no exception to the above examples. So, why do you insist that it means something else? The Trinitarian translators above show that they understand exactly the situation with singular anarthrous predicate nouns occurring before the verb with an indefinite article to denote the indefinite and qualitative status of the subject nouns. 

But, theological bias prevents them from obeying the rules. They will selectively apply it to NT verses, but not to John 1:1 and yet that exact same rule applies. 

Do you understand now TW? 


letusreason

In the beginning was the Cross-but whose?

 The Cross of Christendom.


What does Archaeology say? What do Historians and Scholars say?

Is it originally Christian or, is it originally Pagan?

When it is said, originally pagan, does it mean that the cross, whatever form/shape it comes in, is not of true Christian origin, but, eventually permitted, absorbed into Christianity, by later Church leaders who came after Christ and his Apostles?

It is the aim of this archaeological survey, to determine, if the cross (in whatever form/shape it came in) whether, is truly of pagan origin (and what this pagan origin means) or truly Christian ( and what this Christian origin means?).

What does the living Archaeological evidence produce?

Egypt and Assyria.


Babylon, Persia and Greece... have a similar track record.





EGYPT









Ra-Harakhte and Ament (above)


Ra-Harakhte and Ament, goddess of the West. The god is falconheaded and wears the 'SOLAR" disk encircled by a serpent on his head while the goddess wears her emblem, the hawk.

Notice what is in the right hand of Ra-Harakhte the 'cross' in the shape of the 'ankh', also you will notice above Ra-Harakhte's left hand wrist in the hieroglyph another appearance of the 'ankh' cross.

This is a fresco from the tomb of Nefertari. 19th Dynasty. 1375 BCE to 1202 BCE.



Notice the 'Solar' disk, it become prominent in association with the 'cross'.

Biblical Christianity is yet centuries away, but this freco shows the existence of this of the cross in the form of the 'ankh cross' (fresco 1375 BCE to 1202 BCE)!



The god Atum







Atum is usually identified with the sun god Ra under the name Atum-Ra, he was identified with the rising and setting of the sun (solar disk).

Again, notice the cross in his left hand (ankh cross).

Bas-releif on a stone stele from Karnak, c 1400 BCE.

Biblical Christianity is yet centuries away!



The god Sebek







Sebek, was the crocodile god. Bas-relief on the small south-western outer wall of the court of the temple of Kom Ombo where his Trinity (trias) was worshipped.


"Sebek may have been associated with fertility or death and burial before becoming a major deity and patron of kings in the Middle Kingdom (c. 1938–c. 1600? BC). He was merged with Re, the sun god, to constitute a crocodile form of that deity known as Sebek-Re. The worship of Sebek continued in Ptolemaic and Roman times." Ency Btitannica.

Again the cross (ankh cross) is to be seen in the god's left hand.


Biblical Christianity is centuries away.



The goddess Taueret






Scene from the papyrus of 'Ani'.

On the right is the goddess Hathor in the form of a cow, in the middle is the hippopotamus goddess Taueret and on the left is the hawk headed god Seker.
This is a papyrus painting. 19th Dynasty, 1375 BCE to 1202 BCE.

Again, notice what is in the left hand of the goddess Taueret (the hippopotamus goddess) a cross (ankh cross). Also to be noticed is the solar disk on the heads of the two goddesses Hathor and Taueret, cupped by horns on each of their heads.

The solar disk and the cross (what ever its form) were to play an important part in the religions of Assyria, babylon, Persia, Greece, Rome and professed "Christianity".


Biblical Christianity is still far off!



Akhenaton and Nefertiti






Akhenaton and Nefertiti, accompanied by one of their daughters, to their god Aten they offer a gift. Aten is represented by the 'Solar disk' the rays terminating in hands.

Stela of 18th Dynasty, 1580 BCE to 1350 BCE. Cairo Museum.

Notice the crosses (ankh crosses) above the noses of Akhenaton and Nefertiti and the daughter holding the cross in her elevated right hand.

The solar disk is very prominent in this scene. Notice that the rays are prominent.

Biblical Christianity is yet centuries off!


Crosses, symbols of Egypt - Artefacts








The above are just some examples to prove that the cross existed and was used as a sacred and religious object/symbol in Egypt!

But this should suffice to show that Egyptian artefacts and monuments etc exhibit the cross in the form of the 'ankh cross'. Its meaning will be brought out later.


True Biblical Christianity is yet centuries away.

Please see-'Manners and customs of the ancient Egyptians: Including Their Private Life ... By John Gardner Wilkinson'



The Cross in Assyria



The Assyrian Cross (bottom right of picture-left) and the sacred tree (center). Notice the lion griffin to the left of the tree and the ibex to the right of the tree. c, *1300 BCE to 1155 BCE (British museum).



Expanded (zoomed) view of Assyrian cross.


*Some scholars suggest an earlier period, c, 1200 BCE.




This particular seal has more Assyrian characteristics than Babylonian. This is characteristic of Kassite seals, especially in later periods.

We have now moved from the Egyptian world power to the Assyrian world power.

Biblical Christianity is still centuries away, and it has been proved archaeologically that the Egyptians used a cross (ankh cross) as well as the solar disk (the solar disk would eventually used by the Greeks for the god Apollo, one of his symbols being the 'Nimbus' (halo) derived from the solar disk.


Assyrian angel



Bas relief of an Assyrian angel 8th century B.C.E.





Ancient Assyrian Cross (notice the 3-pointed tips that are derived from the lotus flower or the pomegranate bud that was used by ancient Assyrians).

It must be noted that, this style in known in the Middle East as Salib-Siryani (Slibo-Suryoyo or the Assyrian-Cross).

Notice its origin as displayed on the top of the crown (3 pointed tips making the Assyrian-Cross), worn by an Assyrian Angel, from an ancient Assyrian sculpture 8th cent. B.C.E.


Angels directed towards the cross-Angels directed towards the tree.


Note the similarity between the Syrian Orthodox Church Cross (left hand picture) and the ancient Assyrian sculpture (right hand picture) and the bas relief of the Assyrian tree of life (8th cent. B.C.E.) On the left hand picture are angels directed towards the ‘cross’. On the right hand picture we have (Assyrian) angels directed toward the tree of life (cross).

Biblical Christianity is still hundreds of years away.





King of Assyria wearing an identical cross around his neck.





The seal is a hint at and start of the forthcoming Assyrian culture. Note the cross on the kings chest. The symbol of the “Maltese” cross becomes very prominent during the Assyrian time period.

Assyrian kings are often found wearing divine symbols strung about their necks on a necklace. Often, the pendant of the king of Assyria was that of the Maltese or “radiated” cross.

The 'radiated' cross (another form of the cross, like the 'ankh' cross, is very interesting, as will be shown later!




The restoration of the Sun-god's image and temple. The British Museum




Left is a tablet from the early 9th century B.C. which depicts the Babylonian sun-god Shamash seated on the right, holding emblems of his authority, a staff and ring, and the king with two attendants on the left. In the center, on an altar, is a large 4-point sun image, with additional small wavy rays between the points.


In Hebrew, the word for sun is:

shemesh, sheh'-mesh; from an unused root meaning to be brilliant; the sun; by implication the east; fig. a ray, i.e. (arch.) a notched battlement:-- + east side (-ward), sun ([rising]), + west (-ward), window. See also H1053 in Strong's Hebrew Dictionary. Again, notice the wavy (sun) rays from the solar disk with the cross in the center. Each part of the cross ending in a tapered point!

Biblical Christianity afar off yet!


Hazor Baal


On the left is an artifact unearthed in the holy of holies of the pagan temple in the Canaanite city of Hazor / Hatzor, in northern Israel, that dates to 1400 years before the time of Christ. It is described as follows:
"a basalt offering table, pillar-shaped, with a carved symbol of the storm god Baal on its side. That symbol was a circle with a cross in the center".


Again, notice the circle of the solar disk (without rays) with the cross inside of the circle.


This very small sample of the archaeological evidence is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the 'cross'.




What I would like to do now is to show some more evidence of the various types of crosses, some of which people may have come across before.




That which is called the 'Christian' cross was originally the mystic, the sacred initial 'Tau' 'T' (Tammuz) of the Chaldeans and Egyptians. The 'T' (Tau) in ancient Hebrew is basically the same as the ancient Chaldean as found on coins of the age (The Tau Cross, is also known as the Crux Commissa). (See cross 1 below).



The true original 'T'. 'Tau":







Chaldean and Egyptian.Cross 1.


This woodcut is from 'Kitto's" Biblical Cyclopaedia, vol.1. p. 495.






Cross 2 and 3.

Etrurian and Coptic

Etrurian (left hand cross) Sir W. Betham's Etruria, vol. 1.p. 54. Coptic cross (right hand cross) Bunsen, vol. 1. p. 450.



Cross 4. The sacred Tau 'T'(cross) with the 'solar disk'.

Tammus was identified with the sun-the solar disk and therefore at times the 'T' (Tau) was inserted within the 'sun-disk' (solar disk) (cross 4 ending up, something like cross 5).




Cross 5. Solar disk with inserted cross.

The sacred 'T' (Tau) inserted within the 'solar disk'.



Extract drawing from:
Manners and customs of the ancient Egyptians: Including Their Private Life ... By John Gardner Wilkinson.
See if you can spot cross (right hand colum) No 4 on the right hand colum?




Please click on the link, "Manner and customs..." (below).





Manners and customs of the ancient Egyptians: Including Their Private Life ... By John Gardner Wilkinson: "No Text"

NB. On the right hand colum you will see part of a statue of the Pharaoh. Directly to the right of his left elbow you will see the 'T' (Tau) with the symbol of the 'solar disk' on top of it, as in cross 4 above. (Click link for a more detailed view)







When initiates were baptised into the mysteries, they were marked on their foreheads with the mark of the sacred 'T' (Tau) and was used in many ways as the most sacred symbol. In identifying 'Tammuz' the 'T' (Tau) was sometimes joined to the circle of the sun-solar disk (See cross 5).







Cross in Pre-Christian Times.







Another proof of the cross's pagan origin is found on a coin of Ptolemeus III from the year 247 - 222 BCE A well-known encyclopaedia describes the Labarum (Chi-Rho) as, "The labarum was also an emblem of the Chaldean (Babylonian) sky-god and in Christianity it was adopted..."Emperor Constantine adopted this Labarum as the imperial ensign and thereby succeeded in "uniting both divisions of his troops, pagans and Christians, in a common worship ... according to Suicer the word (labarum) came into use in the reign of Hadrian, and was probably adopted from one of the nations conquered by the Romans. "It must be remembered that Hadrian reigned in the years 76 - 138, that he was a pagan emperor, worshipped the Sun-deity Serapis when he visited Alexandria, and was vehemently anti-Judaistic, being responsible for the final near-destruction of Jerusalem in the year 130.





The Chi-Rho, as a symbol(see above), was in use long before Biblical Christianity entered the scene. The 'X' (Chi) represented the Great Fire or Sun and the P (Rho) was for Patah or Pater (Father). Also what I found of interest was the the "Labarum", because it is a composition of X and P (Chi and Rho), which means 'Sun' or 'Fire' and 'Father', rendering, 'Father Sun' or 'Great Father Sun'.











In ancient Rome the Vestal Virgins would wear the 'T' (Tau) hung from their necklaces, Nuns in the R/C church do the same today**. The Egyptians did likewise, also countless nations that had contact with the Egyptians, as the ancient Egyptian mounuments testify.

** PERE LAFITAN, Moeure des Sauvages Ameriquains, vol, I. p. 442.





The Egyptians and Chaldeans.


In order to identify the god 'T'ammuz with the sun (see cross 4 and 5) the sacred 'T' (Tau) and the 'solar disk' were used together. For example, the symbol of the 'sun' (the solar disk) was placed on top of the sacred 'T' (Tau). (See cross 4). it was also inserted within the symbol of the 'sun' (the solar disk). (See cross *5).

The cross known as the Maltese cross is an express symbol of the sun. The archaeological ruins and monuments of Egypt and ancient Chaldea bare this out. Please see pictures and other evidences in this blog.

* John Lloyd Stephens (November 28, 1805–October 13, 1852) Central America, vol II. p 344, Plate 2.

I find interesting the comments of the late Sir John Gardner Wilkinson (1797-1875). This man was well travelled and a most outstanding pioneer Egyptologist.

"The girdle was sometimes highly ornamented; men as well as women wore earrings; and they frequently had a small cross suspended to a necklace, or to the collor of their dress. The adoption of this last was not peculiar to them; it was also appended to, or figured upon, the robes of the Rot-n-no; and traces of it may be seen in the fancy ornaments of the Rebo, showing that it was already in use as early as the fifthteenth century BCE before the Christian era" # (See Cross in Pre-Christian Times, first picture-above left).

The cross was worshipped everywhere before the existence of Biblical Christianity and was worshipped as a pagan religious symbol. The Greeks called "Tammuz" "Bacchus". The "cross" was the symbol of "Tammuz" (Chaldean) or "Bacchus" (Greek). Bacchus was the Babylonian Messiah and was at times represented wearing a head band. What was peculiar about this head band, was that it was full of crosses! (
See picture (woodcut) opposite and above-right).

Although the cross is not an object of worship amongst the Buddhists, it is though an emblem amongst them. And what I found interesting, is that, the Buddhist cross is exactly the same cross that the 'Manicheans' used; it had leaves with flowers springing out of the cross. This cross would leaf, flower and sometimes bear fruit.
It was also called the sacred or divine tree (See Assyrian tree above), the tree belonging to the 'gods', the 'tree of life and knowledge'.

Here is an eye opener for Christendom's faithful:






What language does The Roman Catholic Church (and by extention the Protestant Churches) apply to the cross?

In the office of the cross, it is called the "tree of life" and the faithful are instructed to address it (the tree of life):

"Hail, O cross triumphant wood, true salvation of the world, among trees there is none like thee in leaf, flower and bud...) Cross our only hope, increase righteousnes to the godly and pardon the offences of the guilty." ****


****Review of the Epistle of Dr. Gentianus Harvet of Louvaine, p. 251, A.

In the pictures just above (5 crosses in all), The first two (top), they are of East pagan origin. The cross in the centre of the 4 crosses ids the pagan Egyprian 'ankh' cross, the two crosses at the bottom are Budhist crosses.

All of these crosses existed before Biblical Christenaty.

It would seem that the 'cross' crept into the Egyptian 'Churches' in Egypt and then into the 'African' Churches. By the middle of the 3rd century for example, the Carthaginian Church in Egypt was infected by apostasy, by way of adoption and variance of the pagan cross.

























Mexico

The cross was worshipped in Mexico for a long time well before Catholic missionaries set foot in the place. The missionaries were astonished to find the cross there and thought that a previous mission had contacted these people in times past. But not so! It was erected to the god of ***rain (Chaac) originally the Yucatec name of the Maya rain deity.!

***William Hickling Prescott 1796-1859 Conquest of Mexico, vol I. p. 49.

See web: http://xroads.virginia.edu/~HYPER/PRESCOTT/toc.html (copy link to we browser)

Notice the crosses hanging from the necklaces of the two men and notice how the garment of the right hand man is covered in crosses (his ear also has a cross, but a bit small to see-I had to use a magnifying glass, because of the rersolution of the print). See first picture above, right hand man.

# Wilkinson, vol. I. p. 376.








The Tau cross


The Cross of Tau; also called the Tau Cross, St. Anthony's Cross, the Old Testament Cross, the Anticipatory Cross, the Cross Commissee, the Egyptian Cross, the Advent Cross, "Saint Francis's Cross" or the Crux Commissa Hence, this cross is often used during the Advent season.

As with Christianity, other ancient societies who used the "Tau" symbol also evolved its use to represent life, resurrection, reincarnation, and blood sacrifice. These crosses are rare, and only a few are left in the world, the most well known being the cross on Tory Island in County Donegal, Ireland.

The Tau Cross in christianity dates back since the latter's beginings. Today, it’s most common use is in reference to Saint Francis, who proclaimed to his fellow friars in his hometown of Assisi (Italy) that their monastic habit was the Tau Cross.



Buddhism and Hinduism existed for centuries before the existence of Biblical Christianity







In the past it was used by: the Ashanti in Africa, far removed from the Adolf's 'master' white race. The symbols are found in remains from the European Bronze Age, especially at Hissarlik (Troy). It has been found in apostate ancient Jewish synagogues, used by the Basques, French, Greeks, Swiss and Irish, the Tlingit of Alaska and the Cuna in Panama.

It is found in: China, Tibet, Japan, ancient Persia, Pakistan, and in India, where both Jains and Buddhists still use it as a religious symbol. The Mexicans, Aztecs and Indian tribes of Central and South America have used it, as have the Navajo and the Hopi tribes of the North.


In religion, it has very profound meanings for:


Northern European pagans - In Scandinavia, it was the symbol of the hammer of the god Thor.

"Christians" - A Roman pagan symbol of the four elements, four directions, and the recycling of life and death. By extension this meant life, regeneration, resurrection and everlasting life.

This pagan symbol appeared on Roman coins and also on tombs.

Early "Christians" carved it on their tombs as a symbol of everlasting life. It wasn't until the 4th century, when the Christianity of the 4th century, far removed from primitive biblical Christianity became the state religion of the Roman Empire, that "Christians" started to use the Latin Cross as a tomb sign for everlasting life.


Hindus - use both the swastika and the suavastika to represent:

night, magic, and the destructive goddess Kali. It also represents Brahma.

The swastika represents Nirvritti, introspection and the involution of the universe, and the bliss, delight and peace of Nirvana. It is also a symbol of good fortune and blessing (Sanskrit 'su' = 'auspicious', 'astika' = 'to be'). The suavastika represents Paravritti - the expansion of the universe (Sanskrit 'para' = 'beyond', 'vritti' = 'vortex').


Jains - their seventh saint, the Jaina four-footed cross croix cramponnee and the four levels of existence.

Falun Gong - the Wheel of the Dharma.

Masons - the Mystic Cross founded by Fohi 3,000 years ago.

Esoteric philosophers - a mystical and ancient symbol.

Buddhists - resignation, the Wheel Of The Law and also a Heart Seal symbol stamped on Buddha's heart. Monks often have this symbol placed on their chest when they die.

The Suavastika Cross, also known as a Buddhist Cross, is frequently seen on temple gates and entrances, and used as a general-purpose Buddhist identifier. I found this of interest:

Ency. Britannica 2007.

"a structure, usually an upright bearing a horizontal beam. The cross was common to most cultures from prehistoric times. It is used primarily as a religious symbol, and is the principal symbol of Christianity. The cross recalls the Crucifixion of Jesus and the redeeming benefits of his Passion and death. It is thus a sign both of Jesus and of the faith of Christians. A crucifix is a representation of Jesus on the cross.

Before the Christian Era, crosses were used as religious or other symbolsa variation, the swastika, was marked on many early Christian tombs as a veiled symbol of the cross.

In the 4th century, after Emperor Constantine converted to Christianity, the cross became popular in Christian art and funerary monuments. In the 20th century Roman Catholicism began emphasizing the use of crucifixes in liturgical settings. Protestant churches use the cross ornamentally and ceremonially to varying degrees. The crucifix is usually confined to private devotional use; making a sign of the cross can be an act of profession of faith, a prayer, a dedication, or a benediction. see also in index St. Andrew's Cross."

What is interesting is that the Britannica let its readers know that:

"The cross was common to most cultures from prehistoric times".

"It is used primarily as a religious symbol..."

"Before the Christian Era, crosses were used as religious or other symbols; a variation, the swastika, was marked on many early Christian tombs as a veiled symbol of the cross".

"In the 4th century, after Emperor Constantine converted to Christianity, the cross became popular in Christian art and funerary monuments".

Remember that the Buddhists and others, used the 'cross' (swastika-with variation) also, the Egyptians, Assyrians, long before the emergence of Biblical Christianity, but here we have, "...a variation, the swastika, was marked on many early Christian tombs...".
Ency. Britannica 2007 (under cross).

Some sites with interesting information on the cross:

http://www.aloha.net/~mikesch/verita.htm

http://www.aloha.net/~mikesch/wheel.htm

http://www.aloha.net/~mikesch/monstr.htm

http://www.aloha.net/~mikesch/sunburst.htm

http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11080b.htm



Andrew Graham (aka - letusreason)






Platonism and Neo-Platonism with Christendom.

The Development of Platonism & Neo-Platonism within Christendom. 


Origins of the Trinity. (from my research papers)

"This paper traces the development of the Neo-Platonist trinitarian system from Greek philosophy into the post-Christian synthesis. It shows the origin of the Cappadocian system using both ancient philosophy and modern Catholic theology in admission of the origin of the doctrine. The Development of Neo-Platonism. The concept of God as three hypostases of the superior entity is developed from Greek thought. It has nothing to do with the Bible. Plato developed the concept of forms in his works. Plato uses the philosopher Parmenides as his model. Parmenides was the first of the Greek Monists. He was not Monotheist. The concepts were further developed by those who followed Plato. 

Plotinus developed a relatively simple metaphysical scheme providing for just three hypostases - One, Intellect, and Soul - [this scheme] seems to have suffered elaboration already at the hands of his senior pupil Amelius (who had a special weakness for triads), but from the perspective of the Athenian School it is Iamblichus (c. 245-325) who began the major system of scholastic elaboration which is the mark of later Neoplatonism (Proclus' Commentary on Plato's Parmenides, General Introduction, p. xv, Morrow and Dillon, Princeton University Press, 1987). 

Thus the Trinity is prefigured as the One, the Wisdom or Intellect and the Soul becoming the One as Father, Word equated with Wisdom and the Spirit as functional Soul. 

This Spirit as functional Soul is held to be capable of individuation yet remains complete as an entity separate to and equal with the other two hypostases. Proclus developed the concept of an Unparticipated Divine Soul. Dillon says of this: Once again the psychic realm must have its proper monad (or henad), Unparticipated Divine Soul, which itself participates in Nous and presides transcendently over its own realm. 

In the Elements of Theology, when Proclus comes to discuss Soul (props. 184-211), we find no mention of such an entity, only of souls in the plural, but it is plainly presupposed, and is in fact mentioned earlier, in prop. 164. There we learn that the Unparticipated Soul 'presides primarily over the cosmos' [prootoos huper tou kosmou esti], but does so transcendently and so is distinct from the immanent World Soul, as well as from individual souls. Proclus holds that all monads (unities or single units, henads in Platonic philosophy) in and above the cosmos, intelligible and intellectual are attached to their own monads and ordered with respect to one another, with the One as the leader of secondary monads. 

Similarly, the One is the source and basis of the triad. Proclus holds: Parmenides abides in the transcendent One, Zeno projects the many as the One, and Socrates turns back even these many to the Parmenidean One, since the first member in the every triad is an analogue of rest, the second of procession and the third of reversion, and the reversion rounds out a kind of circular path connecting the end with the beginning . The concepts of the three begin to emerge but the first step is necessarily that of the dyad (a unit of two parts) but the dyad is a copy of the Unity. Thus the second is inferior to the One of Parmenides which is termed by Zeno himself as logos or discourse. 

The One is greater than plurality and the paradigm superior to the copy. Thus the logos concept of Greek philosophy is attributed to the One rather than the second. This is contrary to the Bible but the origin of the concept is thus evident. The important concept of the Greeks was to show, as Proclus did by improving on Zeno's arguments, that plurality devoid of unity is impossible. Thus the Godhead was logically required to be a unified plurality but the early Greeks had no concept of Agape. Agape is a transliteration of the Hebrew term ’ahabah from the Song of Songs in the Septuagint. Thus the concept of the love of God by dispensation is limited among the early Greeks. The consequent sharing of godliness they thus regarded, where accidentally acquired, as divine theft having no real concept of a plan of salvation as was present in the Hebrew. The theory of Ideas existed as early as the Pythagoreans and was taken up by Plato in the Sophist (248a). 

Socrates posits the existence of the itself by itself which is taken to be the unmixed simplicity and purity of the Ideas. 

The Hebrew combines this concept as being present with God (Prov. 8:22). Wisdom was created by God as the beginning of His way, the first of His acts of old. This led the rabbis to assume that the law was the wisdom referred to as it established order instead of chaos. The Ideas were distinguished from attributes predicated of particular things. Thus, for the Greeks, the logos as expression of ideas was taken to be appropriated to the prime cause rather than an attribute of the cause. 

Hence the logic of the denial of a subordinate logos. From this also came the concept that God is pure thought. It is worth noting that from Acts 7:29 logos is merely an utterance or saying. See also logoi of God translating dabar Yahovah or oracle(s) of God in the LXX and New Testament. Plato gave Orpheus to say (In Tim. I, 312.26 ff., and 324.14 ff., cf. Proclus ibid., p. 168). ...that all things came to be in Zeus, after the swallowing of Phanes, because, although the causes of all things in the cosmos appeared primarily and in a unified form in him (sc. Phanes), they appear secondarily and in a distinct form in the Demiurge. 

The sun, the moon, the heaven itself, the elements, and Eros the unifier - all came into being as a unity 'mixed together in the belly of Zeus' (Orph. fr. 167b.7 Kern). The Demiurgic forms gave rise to the order and arrangement of sensible things (ibid.). All things stemming from the Father thus gave rise to animism, where the nature of the deity was immanent in all matter. 

The Greeks, from Parmenides, turned the concept to Monism, making the One immanent. But Proclus shows that these concepts, particularly the Ideas which stemmed from the Will of the Father, have their origin in the Chaldean Oracles (fr. 37 Des Places). The Intellect of the Father whirred, conceiving with his unwearying will Ideas of every form; and they leapt out in flight from this single source For this was the Father's counsel and achievement. But they were divided by the fire of intelligence and distributed among other intelligent beings. For their lord had placed Before this multiform cosmos an eternal intelligible model; And the cosmos strove modestly to follow its traces, And appeared in the form it has and graced with all sorts of Ideas. 

Of these there was one source, but as they burst forth innumerable others were broken off and scattered Through the bodies of the cosmos, swarming like bees About the mighty hollows of the world, And whirling about in various directions - These intelligent Ideas, issued from the paternal source, Laying hold on the mighty bloom of fire. At the prime moment of unsleeping time This primary and self sufficient source of the Father Has spouted forth these primally-generative Ideas. Proclus comments thus: In these words the gods have clearly revealed where the Ideas have their foundation, in what god their single source is contained, how their plurality proceeds from this source, and how the cosmos is constituted in accordance with them; and also that they are moving agents in all the cosmic systems, all intelligent in essence and exceedingly diverse in their properties (op. cit., p. 169). The concept of the Father as creator which is the biblical model is clearly understood in the Chaldean systems and in the original Greek texts. The application of the functions of God, however, become misapplied by them. However, the ancient concepts of the Father as supreme God was understood by all nations. It was the Neo-Platonists who perverted it. The Introduction to Book III of Proclus' Commentary holds that the summary (831.25 ff.) shows Proclus to specify: three basic attributes of Forms - Goodness, Essentiality, Eternity, deriving respectively from the One (the First Cause), the One Being and Aeon. 

All paradigmatic Forms derive their being from these three (p. 155). The requirement thus emerges of the three attributes of Goodness, Essentiality and Eternity being predicated to the Triune system. The Greeks thus had to assert that Christ was co-eternal with God in spite of the fact that the Bible clearly says he is not and that only God is immortal (1Tim. 6:16). The aspect of Christ as the Angel of YHVH also was required to be of the primary three, in view of the perceived requirements of the adequacy of the reconciliation of men to God through Christ. The Greeks were themselves limited by their concepts of love to the primary relationships of filial and erotic love, hence they could not understand the biblical paradigms. The concept of omniscience being applied to Christ, contrary to Scripture (e.g. Rev. 1:1), follows from the requirements of the attributes especially Essentiality. Proclus develops the argument from Book IV.1047, op. cit., p. 406. In dealing with knowledge as single or multiple, Proclus shows that it must be single therefore the Neo-Platonists had to assert omniscience to Christ to ensure the other attributes of the divine nature. Such assertion was, of itself, biblically absurd. 

If, however, we are to state the single principle of knowledge, we must fix upon the One, which generates Intellect and all the knowledge both within it and what is seen on the secondary levels of being. For this, transcending the Many as it does, is the first principle of knowledge for them, and is not the same as them, as is Sameness in the intelligible realm. This is co-ordinate with its Otherness and inferior to Being. The One, on the other hand, is beyond intellectual Being and grants coherence to it, and for this reason the One is God and so is Intellect, but not by reason of Sameness nor Being. And in general Intellect is not god qua Intellect; for even the particular intellect is an intellect but is not a god. Also it is the proper role of Intellect to contemplate and intelligise and judge true being; but of God to unify, to generate, to exercise providence and suchlike. By virtue of that aspect of itself which is not intellect, the Intellect is God; and by virtue of that aspect of itself which is not God, the god in it is Intellect. 

The divine Intellect, as a whole, is an intellectual essence along with its own summit and its proper unity, knowing itself in so far as it is intellectual, but being 'intoxicated on nectar,' as has been said, and generating the whole of cognition, in so far as it is the 'flower' of the Intellect and a supra-essential henad. So once again, in seeking the first principle of knowledge, we have ascended to the One. Similarly, the first principle was held to be the One (ibid.) and Socrates (Phaedrus 245d) says the first principle is ungenerated. 

Here, Trinitarianism becomes confused because it holds Christ to be a generation of the Father. The newer Process Theologians hold the transcendent unity of the Godhead where there was an essential ungenerate co-eternal oneness which regards individuation as illusory. It is properly Monism and not Monotheism, hence it is properly a form of liberation theology akin to Buddhism and Hinduism rather than Christianity. Logically it is popular with Mysticism. Indeed the recent developments of Trinitarianism seek to make God immanent as pure thought, present in matter, e.g. stone, wood, glass etc. This is not only not Christian it is not even transcendental Monotheism. It is Monism. The logical requirements of the Greek philosophical form of reasoning have to assert equal divinity with Christ in order to predicate unconditional ascent to the One. This objective of ascent to God by individual determination rather than by God's allocation is the underlying motive of Cappadocian Trinitarianism. 

The conclusion is verified from an examination of the history. C M LaCugna (God For Us, Harper, San Francisco, 1973) states that the Cappadocians, despite the fact that they infrequently used the terms oikonomia and theologia, had considerably altered the concepts and their meaning became firmly set. Theology is the science of 'God in Godself'; the economy is the sphere of God's condescension to flesh. The doctrine of the Trinity is Theology strictly speaking. In later Greek Patristic theology, usage will remain generally the same. The biblical concept of oikonomia [economy] as the gradual unfolding of the hidden mystery of God in the plan of salvation, is gradually constricted to mean the human nature of Christ, or the Incarnation. Theologia, not a biblical concept at all, acquires in Athanasius and the Cappadocians the meaning of God's inner being beyond the historical manifestation of the Word incarnate. Theologia in this sense now specifies the hypostases in God, but not the manner of their self revelation ad extra. If Christian theology had let go the insistence on God's impassibility and affirmed that God suffers in Christ, it could have kept together, against Arianism, the essential unity and identity between the being of God and the being of Christ (p. 43). 

We are thus now at the illogical position which the process of Greek philosophy had led the theologians. They had to develop theology apart from soteriology (see ibid.). In other words, they considered theology apart from and without reference to the plan of salvation, which was fatal for Christianity. The theologians cut theology adrift from the Bible and, hence, it achieved even greater levels of incoherence. More particularly, the requirement for God to have suffered in Christ is not a biblical requirement; it is a requirement of Greek philosophy, which places improper limitations upon the adequacy of a subordinate sacrifice. The early Christian Church writers were all subordinationist. None of the early theologians ever claimed that Christ was God in the sense that God the Father was God. This was a late invention of Greek philosophy imported into Christianity. LaCugna says that: The Cappadocians were highly competent speculative theologians. They brilliantly synthesized elements of Neo-Platonism and Stoicism, biblical revelation, and pastoral concerns to argue against both Arius and Eunomius. Their central concern remained soteriological. They saw as their task to clarify how God's relationship to us in Christ and the Spirit in the economy of Incarnation and deification reveals the essential unity and equality of Father, Son, and Spirit. In the process Basil and the Gregorys produced a sophisticated ‘metaphysics of the economy of salvation’. 

Unfortunately that was not, in fact, the aim of Basil and the two Gregorys as Gregg had demonstrated from the texts in his Consolation Philosophy etc., Philadelphia Patristic Foundation Ltd, 1975. Basil was attempting to separate from the world altogether in the one escape (Basil EP., 2 tr. Defarrari, I, 11, Gregg, p. 224). The passions were to be removed from the soul. The soul must be perfected for separation from the flesh. God Himself becomes visible to those who have seen the Son, His image. Illuminated by the Spirit, souls become themselves spiritual [psuchai pneumatikai] and are initiated into life in which the future is known, mysteries come clear, and all the benefits of heavenly citizenship are enjoyed. The climax, Basil writes is: ...joy without end, abiding in God, being made like to God [he pros Theon homoioosis], and highest of all, being made God [Theon genesthai] (Basil 9.23. trans from NPNF, V, 16) Gregg adds (fn3) Much of the thought of Basil's Spir. 9 was taken from Plotinus, as P Henry demonstrated in his Les etats de texte de Plotin (Brussels; n.p., 1938, p. 160). Jaeger argues that the ideas were borrowed from Basil by Gregory of Nyssa in his De Institutio Christiano, in Two Rediscovered works of Ancient Christian Literature: Gregory of Nyssa and Macarius (Leiden: E J Brill, 1954, pp. 100-103). LaCugna noted that the Cappadocians oriented theology in a direction which further contributed to the separation of economy and theology. This trajectory led to the: via negativa of Pseudo-Dionysius and, finally, to the theology of Gregory of Palamas (Chapter 6). In the Latin West, in the period immediately following Nicaea, theologians such as Hilary of Poitiers and, perhaps to an extreme degree, Marcellus of Ancyra, retained the connection between the divine hypostases and the economy of salvation. Augustine inaugurated an entirely new approach. 

His starting point was no longer the monarchy of the Father but the divine substance shared equally by the three persons. Instead of inquiring into the nature of theologia as it is revealed in the Incarnation of Christ and deification by the Spirit, Augustine would inquire into the traces of the Trinity to be found in the soul of each human being. Augustine's pursuit of a 'psychological' analogy for the intratrinitarian relations would mean that trinitarian doctrine thereafter would be concerned with the relations 'internal' to the godhead, disjoined from what we know of God through Christ in the Spirit (LaCugna, p. 44). 

The Medieval Latin theology followed Augustine and the separation of theology from economy or soteriology. The entire structure became embroiled in neo-Platonism and Mysticism. The important notations of LaCugna are that from Augustine the Monarchy of the Father was no longer paramount. The Trinity assumed co-equality. This was the second step following on from the false assertion of co-eternality. The correct premise was the concept of the manifestation of the Godhead in each individual, namely the operation of the Father by means of the Holy Spirit which emanated from Him through Jesus Christ. This direction through Jesus Christ enabled Christ to monitor and direct the individual in accordance with the will of God who lived in each of the elect. Christ was not the origin of the Holy Spirit. He was its intermediary monitor. He acted for God as he had always acted for and in accordance with the will of God. But he was not the God. The Trinitarians lost sight of this fact, if indeed they ever really understood the matter. As LaCugna says the: Theology of the triune God appeared to be added on to consideration of the one God (p. 44). This affected fundamentally the way Christians prayed. That is, they no longer prayed to the Father alone in the name of the Son as the Bible directs (from Mat. 6:6,9; Lk. 11:12) worshipping the Father (Jn. 4:23), but to the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Further, the scholastics developed a metaphysics of theology itself. But the entire edifice was built in disregard to, or manipulation of, the Bible. That is why Trinitarians never address all Bible texts on a subject and mistranslate and misquote other key texts ignoring the ones they cannot alter. But their system is based on Mysticism and Platonism. LaCugna states that: The Cappadocians (and also Augustine) went considerably beyond the scriptural understanding of economy by locating God's relationship to the Son (and the Spirit) at the 'intradivine' level (p. 54). 

The One God existed as ousia in three distinct hypostases. We have seen (in the paper) that the Platonic term ousia and the Stoic term hypostases mean essentially the same thing. The theology of Basil of Caesarea and Gregory of Nyssa, his brother, and Gregory of Nazianzus: was formulated largely in response to the theology of Eunomius. Eunomius was also a Cappadocian, and for a brief time, bishop of Cyzicus. He was a neo-Arian, a rationalist who like Aetius believed in the radical subordination of Son to Father (heterousios). For Eunomius, as for Arius, God is a unique and simple essence. But Eunomius drew further consequences for this essentially Arian premise. According to Eunomius, God is supremely arelational, God cannot communicate the divine nature, God cannot beget anything from the divine essence. Since the Son is begotten or generated (gennetos) by an energy, the Son cannot be of the same substance as the Father. Thus there is no sense, not even a derivative sense, in which the divinity of the Son could be maintained. Second, Arius had believed that while God is incomprehensible, the divine Son makes the incomprehensible God comprehensible. Eunomius believed human reason is capable of apprehending the very essence of God. His name for God is Agennesia: Ungenerateness, or Unbegottenness (LaCugna, p. 56). 

Here we come to the issue. The Cappadocians repeatedly asserted that God can never be fully comprehended by human reason or language. Gregory of Nazianzus in his Theological Orations (hence the title Theologian) held that purity of heart and the leisure of contemplation are preconditions for the knowledge of God. Even this personal interaction does not enable the knowledge of God's ousia. Only God's works and acts (energeiai) can be known, that which constitutes the hinder parts of God exposed to Moses between the gaps in the cliff in Exodus 33:23.Thus, Christ showed by this example that only an (as yet) imperfect knowledge of the Godhead was available to him. LaCugna states: The Cappadocian response to Arianism* and Eunomianism must be understood against the backdrop to mystical theology. The threads of the mystical theology of the Cappadocians are found already in their predecessors and in Middle Platonism. The centrality of mysticism in the theology of Gregory of Nyssa, combined with his intellectual acumen, produced a powerful refutation of the Eunomian position that God is knowable, and the Arian position that the Son is created (genetos). Both Gregorys worked out a theology of divine relations in the process. But they were emphatic that even if we are able to explain what divine paternity means, words like begotten and unbegotten, generate and ungenerate, do not express the substance (ousia) of God but the characteristics of the divine hypostases, of how God is toward us. The title 'Father', for example, does not give any information on the nature or qualities of divine fatherhood but indicates God's relation to the Son (LaCugna, p. 57). * Arianism is applied generally to encompass subordinationists who all believed that Christ was a creation of the Father. This included Irenaeus, Polycarp, Paul, the apostles and even Christ himself. Thus, early theologians are often termed Arians or early Arians even though they wrote centuries before Arius was born. It helps Trinitarians assert a spurious relativity to their position. The correct term is Subordinationist Unitarianism – or simply Unitarianism. 

Trinitarians do not see or understand the universal relationship of the Sons of God to the Father. The important aspect, which emerges from the above summary by LaCugna, is that we are able to see the non-biblical premises from which the Cappadocians attempt to reason. For example, Christ clearly states that God is knowable. Christ knows and is known by the elect as he knows the Father and the Father knows him (Jn. 10:14). This knowledge was given to Christ by the Father as he was given power to lay down his life (Jn. 10:18). The Son of God came and gave understanding to the elect to know him who is true and the elect are in him who is true and in His Son Jesus Christ. This is the true God and eternal life (1Jn. 5:20). Thus the true God is He who is true and the Son is Jesus Christ. The Son is not the true God, he is the Son through whom the elect are to know God. Thus the elect know God, where they did not formerly know God (Gal. 4:8), but came to know Him through the Father's willing self-revelation in the Son. For what is known of God is manifested by God (Rom. 1:19 see Marshall's Interlinear), namely His invisible nature, His eternal power and deity (Rom. 1:20). It is a source of shame to the elect that some do not have a knowledge of God (1Cor. 15:34). 

The knowledge is hence conditional and relative. It is revealed through the Spirit, which searches everything, even the depths of God (1Cor. 2:10). The Cappadocians are thus wrong. Further, their insistence that the Son is ungenerate or unbegotten, is not only contrary to Scripture but also contrary to logic and that is why they had to resort to Mysticism – because the logic of subordinationism, whether or not it is incorrectly labelled Arianism, is compelling. Christ is an image or eikõn of the God, the first begotten (prõtotokos) of all creation (see Marshall's Interlinear Col. 1:15). Hence, Christ is the beginning of the creation of God (Rev. 3:14). Christ said this to the Laodicean Church because it is in that Church that the apostasy became evident as it does in the last days with the man of lawlessness. It is the Gentiles who do not know God (1Thes. 4:5) and who reap God's vengeance (2Thes. 1:8) as the Cappadocians so amply demonstrate from their mystical cosmology. You cannot be punished for not knowing God if that knowledge is unobtainable. God would be an unjust judge and thus unrighteous and hence not God. 

The second point of error of the Cappadocians was that the divine paternity was not confined to Jesus Christ as we see from Job 1:6; 2:1; 38:7. Satan was also a Son of God before his rebellion typified by Genesis 6:4 and Jude 6. We are all to become Sons of God (Jn. 1:12; Rom. 8:14; 1Jn. 3:1,2) and hence co-heirs with Christ (Rom. 8:17; Gal. 3:29; Titus 3:7; Heb. 1:14; 6:17; 11:9; Jas. 2:5; 1Pet. 3:7). Because we are Sons, God has sent the spirit of His Son into our hearts (Gal. 4:6). 

Thus the Spirit is extended through the Son to the Sons of God in Christ. Paul's writings are subordinationist but confusing to Gentiles unfamiliar with the allocation of name by authority. For example, in Titus 1:3 he refers to God as the saviour of us. In Titus 1:4, he distinguishes from God the Father and Christ and refers to Christ as the saviour of us. Thus, Trinitarians assert that the function of God as saviour is here asserted as the aspect known as Son. This is incorrect. The authority of the Son is derived from the Father as we have seen in John 10:18. The adequacy of the sacrifice was determined by the Father, as it was to reconcile man to the Father that it was required to be made. God determines the adequacy of the sacrifice as it was to Him that the debt was owed. There is no question that Paul makes clear distinction between God and Christ. Paul is an absolute and incontestable subordinationist. 

No apostle was a Trinitarian – not because they did not need to develop the theory but because it is blasphemy. Those who profess to know God must demonstrate their knowledge by their deeds (Titus 1:16). Thus the law is kept from a knowledge of and love of God. The law must be kept because sin is the transgression of the law (1Jn. 3:4) and, if we sin deliberately after receiving the knowledge of truth, there no longer remains a sacrifice for sin (Heb. 10:26). Those sins are carried to judgment as a profanation of the blood of the covenant by which we are sanctified (Heb. 10:29). 

The elect understand that Christ is a subordinate God. Further, that they will be co-heirs with Christ as subordinate theoi or elohim. They do not think that they can be equal to the God. 2Thessalonians 1:5-8 This is the evidence of the righteous judgement of God, that you may be made worthy of the kingdom of God, for which you are suffering - since indeed God deems it just to repay with affliction those who afflict you, and to grant rest with us to you who are afflicted, when the Lord Jesus is revealed from heaven with his mighty angels in flaming fire, inflicting vengeance upon those who do not know God and upon those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus. The punishment is meted out upon those who do not know God and on those who do not obey the gospel of Christ. 

There is no doubt that Paul distinguishes God from Christ in this text from 2Thessalonians 1:12: 2Thessalonians 1:12 so that the name of our Lord Jesus may be glorified in you, and you in him, according to the grace of our God and the Lord Jesus. More particularly, the apostasy (apostasia) must come first before the coming of Christ when the Man of Sin or Lawlessness is revealed taking his seat in the shrine or the naos of God (2Thes. 2:4), the holy of holies of which we are. Thus the Man of Sin is found amongst us as one of the elect. He sits in the naos of ton Theon, the Eloah or Elohim, placing himself above everything being called God declaring himself to be the God. Thus he is not one of the elect as subordinate theoi or elohim. He declares himself in equality to God as Basil sought to do by the introduction of trinitarian Mysticism. The next development of Trinitarianism was by Augustine where the linear representation of the Cappadocians from Father to Son to the Holy Spirit was altered to an interrelationship which came to be represented as a triangle with each of the entities equally placed. 

His work De Trinitate is the most sustained treatment of his theology. Written over the period 399-419 it was fundamentally influenced and probably altered by his reading of Gregory of Nazianzus' Theological Orations around 413 (LaCugna, p. 82, noting also Chevalier). 

Augustine sought to explain that: the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit constitute a divine unity of one and the same substance in an indivisible equality (LaCugna, p. 82, quoting De Trinitate 1.4.7 PL 42,824). Augustine's schema sought to return to God whom the soul images through contemplation (LaCugna, p. 83). Thus, he also was concerned with mystical contemplation. The understanding of all the apologists of the second century, not to mention the first century, Church thought that the Son and Spirit had appeared in the Old Testament theophanies – for example, that the Son alone appeared to the Patriarchs (Novatian Treatise on the Trinity quoted also by LaCugna, p. 83. The modern position is that all three as Father, Son and Holy Spirit appeared at Sinai because, in fact, God is pure thought and is expressed through the Son as logos. 

This misapprehends the nature of the Holy Spirit and the way in which it acts in the Son and, in fact, confers Godhood on the Son. LaCugna argues that Arians interpreted the texts differently arguing that, if the Son appeared without the Father, this must indicate a difference in their natures (p. 83). We will assume that she is referring generically to Unitarians as the term Arian limits the nature of the inquiry. The arguments of early theologians were quite clear and specific. Christ was a creation of the Father, in fact the primary act of the creation and hence its beginning. This is the position of the Bible. It was the Athanasians and the later Cappadocians who altered the structure contrary to the Bible. Consequently, that is why the Cappadocian apologists in churches with a Bible foundation are caught up in this absurd position of denying the literal intent of the Bible. The Process Theologians and neo-Buddhists in Christianity are attempting to assert a monist structure where the Godhead is an immanent non-divisive blob. Thus is Christendom! (Many thanks to my friends for this contribution) 

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