PAPER 104
- GROWTH OF THE TRINITY CONCEPT
The Trinity concept of
revealed religion must not be confused with the triad
beliefs of evolutionary religions. The ideas of triads arose
from many suggestive relationships but chiefly because of
the three joints of the fingers, because three legs were the
fewest which could stabilize a stool, because three support
points could keep up a tent; furthermore, primitive man, for
a long time, could not count beyond three.
Aside from certain natural
couplets, such as past and present, day and night, hot and
cold, and male and female, man generally tends to think in
triads: yesterday, today, and tomorrow; sunrise, noon, and
sunset; father, mother, and child. Three cheers are given
the victor. The dead are buried on the third day, and the
ghost is placated by three ablutions of water.
As a consequence of these
natural associations in human experience, the triad made its
appearance in religion, and this long before the Paradise
Trinity of Deities, or even any of their representatives,
had been revealed to mankind. Later on, the Persians,
Hindus, Greeks, Egyptians, Babylonians, Romans, and
Scandinavians all had triad gods, but these were still not
true trinities. Triad deities all had a natural origin and
have appeared at one time or another among most of the
intelligent peoples of Urantia. Sometimes the concept of an
evolutionary triad has become mixed with that of a revealed
Trinity; in these instances it is often impossible to
distinguish one from the other.
1. URANTIAN
TRINITY CONCEPTS
The first Urantian
revelation leading to the comprehension of the Paradise
Trinity was made by the staff of Prince Caligastia about
one-half million years ago. This earliest Trinity concept
was lost to the world in the unsettled times following the
planetary rebellion.
The second presentation of
the Trinity was made by Adam and Eve in the first and second
gardens. These teachings had not been wholly obliterated
even in the times of Machiventa Melchizedek about
thirty-five thousand years later, for the Trinity concept of
the Sethites persisted in both Mesopotamia and Egypt but
more especially in India, where it was long perpetuated in
Agni, the Vedic three-headed fire god.
The third presentation of
the Trinity was made by Machiventa Melchizedek, and this
doctrine was symbolized by the three concentric circles
which the sage of Salem wore on his breast plate. But
Machiventa found it very difficult to teach the Palestinian
Bedouins about the Universal Father, the Eternal Son, and
the Infinite Spirit. Most of his disciples thought that the
Trinity consisted of the three Most Highs of Norlatiadek; a
few conceived of the Trinity as the
Page 1144
System Sovereign, the
Constellation Father, and the local universe Creator Deity;
still fewer even remotely grasped the idea of the Paradise
association of the Father, Son, and Spirit.
Through the activities of
the Salem missionaries the Melchizedek teachings of the
Trinity gradually spread throughout much of Eurasia and
northern Africa. It is often difficult to distinguish
between the triads and the trinities in the later Andite and
the post-Melchizedek ages, when both concepts to a certain
extent intermingled and coalesced.
Among the Hindus the
trinitarian concept took root as Being, Intelligence, and
Joy. (A later Indian conception was Brahma, Siva, and
Vishnu.) While the earlier Trinity portrayals were brought
to India by the Sethite priests, the later ideas of the
Trinity were imported by the Salem missionaries and were
developed by the native intellects of India through a
compounding of these doctrines with the evolutionary triad
conceptions.
The Buddhist faith
developed two doctrines of a trinitarian nature: The earlier
was Teacher, Law, and Brotherhood; that was the presentation
made by Gautama Siddhartha. The later idea, developing among
the northern branch of the followers of Buddha, embraced
Supreme Lord, Holy Spirit, and Incarnate Savior.
And these ideas of the
Hindus and Buddhists were real trinitarian postulates, that
is, the idea of a threefold manifestation of a monotheistic
God. A true trinity conception is not just a grouping
together of three separate gods.
The Hebrews knew about the
Trinity from the Kenite traditions of the days of
Melchizedek, but their monotheistic zeal for the one God,
Yahweh, so eclipsed all such teachings that by the time of
Jesus' appearance the Elohim doctrine had been practically
eradicated from Jewish theology. The Hebrew mind could not
reconcile the trinitarian concept with the monotheistic
belief in the One Lord, the God of Israel.
The followers of the
Islamic faith likewise failed to grasp the idea of the
Trinity. It is always difficult for an emerging monotheism
to tolerate trinitarianism when confronted by polytheism.
The trinity idea takes best hold of those religions which
have a firm monotheistic tradition coupled with doctrinal
elasticity. The great monotheists, the Hebrews and
Mohammedans, found it difficult to distinguish between
worshiping three gods, polytheism, and trinitarianism, the
worship of one Deity existing in a triune manifestation of
divinity and personality.
Jesus taught his apostles
the truth regarding the persons of the Paradise Trinity, but
they thought he spoke figuratively and symbolically. Having
been nurtured in Hebraic monotheism, they found it difficult
to entertain any belief that seemed to conflict with their
dominating concept of Yahweh. And the early Christians
inherited the Hebraic prejudice against the Trinity concept.
The first Trinity of
Christianity was proclaimed at Antioch and consisted of God,
his Word, and his Wisdom. Paul knew of the Paradise Trinity
of Father, Son, and Spirit, but he seldom preached about it
and made mention thereof in only a few of his letters to the
newly forming churches. Even then, as did his fellow
apostles, Paul confused Jesus, the Creator Son of the local
universe, with the Second Person of Deity, the Eternal Son
of Paradise.
The Christian concept of
the Trinity, which began to gain recognition near the close
of the first century after Christ, was comprised of the
Universal Father,
Page 1145
the Creator Son of Nebadon,
and the Divine Minister of Salvington--Mother Spirit of the
local universe and creative consort of the Creator Son.
Not since the times of
Jesus has the factual identity of the Paradise Trinity been
known on Urantia (except by a few individuals to whom it was
especially revealed) until its presentation in these
revelatory disclosures. But though the Christian concept of
the Trinity erred in fact, it was practically true with
respect to spiritual relationships. Only in its philosophic
implications and cosmological consequences did this concept
suffer embarrassment: It has been difficult for many who are
cosmic minded to believe that the Second Person of Deity,
the second member of an infinite Trinity, once dwelt on
Urantia; and while in spirit this is true, in actuality it
is not a fact. The Michael Creators fully embody the
divinity of the Eternal Son, but they are not the absolute
personality.
2. TRINITY UNITY
AND DEITY PLURALITY
Monotheism arose as a
philosophic protest against the inconsistency of polytheism.
It developed first through pantheon organizations with the
departmentalization of supernatural activities, then through
the henotheistic exaltation of one god above the many, and
finally through the exclusion of all but the One God of
final value.
Trinitarianism grows out
of the experiential protest against the impossibility of
conceiving the oneness of a deanthropomorphized solitary
Deity of unrelated universe significance. Given a sufficient
time, philosophy tends to abstract the personal qualities
from the Deity concept of pure monotheism, thus reducing
this idea of an unrelated God to the status of a pantheistic
Absolute. It has always been difficult to understand the
personal nature of a God who has no personal relationships
in equality with other and co-ordinate personal beings.
Personality in Deity demands that such Deity exist in
relation to other and equal personal Deity.
Through the recognition of
the Trinity concept the mind of man can hope to grasp
something of the interrelationship of love and law in the
time-space creations. Through spiritual faith man gains
insight into the love of God but soon discovers that this
spiritual faith has no influence on the ordained laws of the
material universe. Irrespective of the firmness of man's
belief in God as his Paradise Father, expanding cosmic
horizons demand that he also give recognition to the reality
of Paradise Deity as universal law, that he recognize the
Trinity sovereignty extending outward from Paradise and
overshadowing even the evolving local universes of the
Creator Sons and Creative Daughters of the three eternal
persons whose deity union is the fact and reality and
eternal indivisibility of the Paradise Trinity.
And this selfsame Paradise
Trinity is a real entity--not a personality but nonetheless
a true and absolute reality; not a personality but
nonetheless compatible with coexistent personalities--the
personalities of the Father, the Son, and the Spirit. The
Trinity is a supersummative Deity reality eventuating out of
the conjoining of the three Paradise Deities. The qualities,
characteristics, and functions of the Trinity are not the
simple sum of the attributes of the three Paradise Deities;
Trinity functions are something unique, original, and not
wholly predictable from an analysis of the attributes of
Father, Son, and Spirit.
Page 1146
For example: The Master, when
on earth, admonished his followers that justice is never a
personal act; it is always a group function.
Neither do the Gods, as persons, administer justice. But
they perform this very function as a collective whole, as
the Paradise Trinity.
The conceptual grasp of
the Trinity association of Father, Son, and Spirit prepares
the human mind for the further presentation of certain other
threefold relationships. Theological reason may be fully
satisfied by the concept of the Paradise Trinity, but
philosophical and cosmological reason demand the recognition
of the other triune associations of the First Source and
Center, those triunities in which the Infinite functions in
various non-Father capacities of universal
manifestation--the relationships of the God of force,
energy, power, causation, reaction, potentiality, actuality,
gravity, tension, pattern, principle, and unity.
3. TRINITIES AND
TRIUNITIES
While mankind has
sometimes grasped at an understanding of the Trinity of the
three persons of Deity, consistency demands that the human
intellect perceive that there are certain relationships
between all seven Absolutes. But all that which is true of
the Paradise Trinity is not necessarily true of a
triunity, for a triunity is something other than a
trinity. In certain functional aspects a triunity may be
analogous to a trinity, but it is never homologous in nature
with a trinity.
Mortal man is passing
through a great age of expanding horizons and enlarging
concepts on Urantia, and his cosmic philosophy must
accelerate in evolution to keep pace with the expansion of
the intellectual arena of human thought. As the cosmic
consciousness of mortal man expands, he perceives the
interrelatedness of all that he finds in his material
science, intellectual philosophy, and spiritual insight.
Still, with all this belief in the unity of the cosmos, man
perceives the diversity of all existence. In spite of all
concepts concerning the immutability of Deity, man perceives
that he lives in a universe of constant change and
experiential growth. Regardless of the realization of the
survival of spiritual values, man has ever to reckon with
the mathematics and premathematics of force, energy, and
power.
In some manner the eternal
repleteness of infinity must be reconciled with the
time-growth of the evolving universes and with the
incompleteness of the experiential inhabitants thereof. In
some way the conception of total infinitude must be so
segmented and qualified that the mortal intellect and the
morontia soul can grasp this concept of final value and
spiritualizing significance.
While reason demands a
monotheistic unity of cosmic reality, finite experience
requires the postulate of plural Absolutes and of their
co-ordination in cosmic relationships. Without co-ordinate
existences there is no possibility for the appearance of
diversity of absolute relationships, no chance for the
operation of differentials, variables, modifiers,
attenuators, qualifiers, or diminishers.
In these papers total
reality (infinity) has been presented as it exists in the
seven Absolutes:
1. The Universal Father.
2. The Eternal Son.
3. The Infinite Spirit.
Page 1147
4. The Isle of Paradise.
5. The Deity Absolute.
6. The Universal Absolute.
7. The Unqualified
Absolute.
The First Source and
Center, who is Father to the Eternal Son, is also Pattern to
the Paradise Isle. He is personality unqualified in the Son
but personality potentialized in the Deity Absolute. The
Father is energy revealed in Paradise-Havona and at the same
time energy concealed in the Unqualified Absolute. The
Infinite is ever disclosed in the ceaseless acts of the
Conjoint Actor while he is eternally functioning in the
compensating but enshrouded activities of the Universal
Absolute. Thus is the Father related to the six co-ordinate
Absolutes, and thus do all seven encompass the circle of
infinity throughout the endless cycles of eternity.
It would seem that
triunity of absolute relationships is inevitable.
Personality seeks other personality association on absolute
as well as on all other levels. And the association of the
three Paradise personalities eternalizes the first triunity,
the personality union of the Father, the Son, and the
Spirit. For when these three persons, as persons,
conjoin for united function, they thereby constitute a
triunity of functional unity, not a trinity--an organic
entity--but nonetheless a triunity, a threefold functional
aggregate unanimity.
The Paradise Trinity is
not a triunity; it is not a functional unanimity; rather is
it undivided and indivisible Deity. The Father, Son, and
Spirit (as persons) can sustain a relationship to the
Paradise Trinity, for the Trinity is their undivided
Deity. The Father, Son, and Spirit sustain no such personal
relationship to the first triunity, for that is their
functional union as three persons. Only as the Trinity--as
undivided Deity--do they collectively sustain an external
relationship to the triunity of their personal aggregation.
Thus does the Paradise
Trinity stand unique among absolute relationships, there are
several existential triunities but only one existential
Trinity. A triunity is not an entity. It is
functional rather than organic. Its members are partners
rather than corporative. The components of the triunities
may be entities, but a triunity itself is an association.
There is, however, one
point of comparison between trinity and triunity: Both
eventuate in functions that are something other than the
discernible sum of the attributes of the component members.
But while they are thus comparable from a functional
standpoint, they otherwise exhibit no categorical
relationship. They are roughly related as the relation of
function to structure. But the function of the triunity
association is not the function of the trinity structure or
entity.
The triunities are
nonetheless real; they are very real. In them is total
reality functionalized, and through them does the Universal
Father exercise immediate and personal control over the
master functions of infinity.
4. THE SEVEN
TRIUNITIES
In attempting the
description of seven triunities, attention is directed to
the fact that the Universal Father is the primal member of
each. He is, was, and ever will be: the First Universal
Father-Source, Absolute Center, Primal
Page 1148
Cause, Universal Controller,
Limitless Energizer, Original Unity, Unqualified Upholder,
First Person of Deity, Primal Cosmic Pattern, and Essence of
Infinity. The Universal Father is the personal cause of the
Absolutes; he is the absolute of Absolutes.
The nature and meaning of
the seven triunities may be suggested as:
The First Triunity--the
personal-purposive triunity. This is the grouping of the
three Deity personalities:
1. The Universal Father.
2. The Eternal Son.
3. The Infinite Spirit.
This is the threefold
union of love, mercy, and ministry--the purposive and
personal association of the three eternal Paradise
personalities. This is the divinely fraternal,
creature-loving, fatherly-acting, and ascension-promoting
association. The divine personalities of this first triunity
are personality-bequeathing, spirit-bestowing, and
mind-endowing Gods.
This is the triunity of
infinite volition; it acts throughout the eternal present
and in all of the past-present-future flow of time. This
association yields volitional infinity and provides the
mechanisms whereby personal Deity becomes self-revelatory to
the creatures of the evolving cosmos.
The Second
Triunity--the power-pattern triunity. Whether it be a
tiny ultimaton, a blazing star, or a whirling nebula, even
the central or superuniverses, from the smallest to the
largest material organizations, always is the physical
pattern--the cosmic configuration--derived from the function
of this triunity. This association consists of:
1. The Father-Son.
2. The Paradise Isle.
3. The Conjoint Actor.
Energy is organized by the
cosmic agents of the Third Source and Center; energy is
fashioned after the pattern of Paradise, the absolute
materialization; but behind all of this ceaseless
manipulation is the presence of the Father-Son, whose union
first activated the Paradise pattern in the appearance of
Havona concomitant with the birth of the Infinite Spirit,
the Conjoint Actor.
In religious experience,
creatures make contact with the God who is love, but such
spiritual insight must never eclipse the intelligent
recognition of the universe fact of the pattern which is
Paradise. The Paradise personalities enlist the freewill
adoration of all creatures by the compelling power of divine
love and lead all such spirit-born personalities into the
supernal delights of the unending service of the finaliter
sons of God. The second triunity is the architect of the
space stage whereon these transactions unfold; it determines
the patterns of cosmic configuration.
Love may characterize the
divinity of the first triunity, but pattern is the galactic
manifestation of the second triunity. What the first
triunity is to evolving personalities, the second triunity
is to the evolving universes. Pattern and personality are
two of the great manifestations of the acts of the First
Source and Center; and no matter how difficult it may be to
comprehend, it
Page 1149
is nonetheless true that the
power-pattern and the loving person are one and the same
universal reality; the Paradise Isle and the Eternal Son are
co-ordinate but antipodal revelations of the unfathomable
nature of the Universal Father-Force.
The Third Triunity--the
spirit-evolutional triunity. The entirety of spiritual
manifestation has its beginning and end in this association,
consisting of:
1. The Universal Father.
2. The Son-Spirit.
3. The Deity Absolute.
From spirit potency to
Paradise spirit, all spirit finds reality expression in this
triune association of the pure spirit essence of the Father,
the active spirit values of the Son-Spirit, and the
unlimited spirit potentials of the Deity Absolute. The
existential values of spirit have their primordial genesis,
complete manifestation, and final destiny in this triunity.
The Father exists before
spirit; the Son-Spirit functions as active creative spirit;
the Deity Absolute exists as all-encompassing spirit, even
beyond spirit.
The Fourth
Triunity--the triunity of energy infinity. Within this
triunity there eternalizes the beginnings and the endings of
all energy reality, from space potency to monota. This
grouping embraces the following:
1. The Father-Spirit.
2. The Paradise Isle.
3. The Unqualified
Absolute.
Paradise is the center of
the force-energy activation of the cosmos--the universe
position of the First Source and Center, the cosmic focal
point of the Unqualified Absolute, and the source of all
energy. Existentially present within this triunity is the
energy potential of the cosmos-infinite, of which the grand
universe and the master universe are only partial
manifestations.
The fourth triunity
absolutely controls the fundamental units of cosmic energy
and releases them from the grasp of the Unqualified Absolute
in direct proportion to the appearance in the experiential
Deities of subabsolute capacity to control and stabilize the
metamorphosing cosmos.
This triunity is
force and energy. The endless possibilities of the
Unqualified Absolute are centered around the absolutum of
the Isle of Paradise, whence emanate the unimaginable
agitations of the otherwise static quiescence of the
Unqualified. And the endless throbbing of the material
Paradise heart of the infinite cosmos beats in harmony with
the unfathomable pattern and the unsearchable plan of the
Infinite Energizer, the First Source and Center.
The Fifth Triunity--the
triunity of reactive infinity. This association consists
of:
1. The Universal Father.
2. The Universal Absolute.
3. The Unqualified
Absolute.
This grouping yields the
eternalization of the functional infinity realization of all
that is actualizable within the domains of nondeity reality.
This triunity
Page 1150
manifests unlimited reactive
capacity to the volitional, causative, tensional, and
patternal actions and presences of the other triunities.
The Sixth Triunity--the
triunity of cosmic-associated Deity. This grouping
consists of:
1. The Universal Father.
2. The Deity Absolute.
3. The Universal Absolute.
This is the association of
Deity-in-the-cosmos, the immanence of Deity in conjunction
with the transcendence of Deity. This is the last outreach
of divinity on the levels of infinity toward those realities
which lie outside the domain of deified reality.
The Seventh
Triunity--the triunity of infinite unity. This is the
unity of infinity functionally manifest in time and
eternity, the co-ordinate unification of actuals and
potentials. This group consists of:
1. The Universal Father.
2. The Conjoint Actor.
3. The Universal Absolute.
The Conjoint Actor
universally integrates the varying functional aspects of all
actualized reality on all levels of manifestation, from
finites through transcendentals and on to absolutes. The
Universal Absolute perfectly compensates the differentials
inherent in the varying aspects of all incomplete reality,
from the limitless potentialities of active-volitional and
causative Deity reality to the boundless possibilities of
static, reactive, nondeity reality in the incomprehensible
domains of the Unqualified Absolute.
As they function in this
triunity, the Conjoint Actor and the Universal Absolute are
alike responsive to Deity and to nondeity presences, as also
is the First Source and Center, who in this relationship is
to all intents and purposes conceptually indistinguishable
from the I AM.
These approximations are
sufficient to elucidate the concept of the triunities. Not
knowing the ultimate level of the triunities, you cannot
fully comprehend the first seven. While we do not deem it
wise to attempt any further elaboration, we may state that
there are fifteen triune associations of the First Source
and Center, eight of which are unrevealed in these papers.
These unrevealed associations are concerned with realities,
actualities, and potentialities which are beyond the
experiential level of supremacy.
The triunities are the
functional balance wheel of infinity, the unification of the
uniqueness of the Seven Infinity Absolutes. It is the
existential presence of the triunities that enables the
Father-I AM to experience functional infinity unity despite
the diversification of infinity into seven Absolutes. The
First Source and Center is the unifying member of all
triunities; in him all things have their unqualified
beginnings, eternal existences, and infinite destinies--"in
him all things consist."
Although these
associations cannot augment the infinity of the Father-I AM,
they do appear to make possible the subinfinite and
subabsolute manifestations of his reality. The seven
triunities multiply versatility, eternalize
Page 1151
new depths, deitize new
values, disclose new potentialities, reveal new meanings;
and all these diversified manifestations in time and space
and in the eternal cosmos are existent in the hypothetical
stasis of the original infinity of the I AM.
5. TRIODITIES
There are certain other
triune relationships which are non-Father in constitution,
but they are not real triunities, and they are always
distinguished from the Father triunities. They are called
variously, associate triunities, co-ordinate triunities, and
triodities. They are consequential to the existence
of the triunities. Two of these associations are constituted
as follows:
The Triodity of
Actuality. This triodity consists in the
interrelationship of the three absolute actuals:
1. The Eternal Son.
2. The Paradise Isle.
3. The Conjoint Actor.
The Eternal Son is the
absolute of spirit reality, the absolute personality. The
Paradise Isle is the absolute of cosmic reality, the
absolute pattern. The Conjoint Actor is the absolute of mind
reality, the co-ordinate of absolute spirit reality, and the
existential Deity synthesis of personality and power. This
triune association eventuates the co-ordination of the sum
total of actualized reality--spirit, cosmic, or mindal. It
is unqualified in actuality.
The Triodity of
Potentiality. This triodity consists in the association
of the three Absolutes of potentiality:
1. The Deity Absolute.
2. The Universal Absolute.
3. The Unqualified
Absolute.
Thus are interassociated
the infinity reservoirs of all latent energy
reality--spirit, mindal, or cosmic. This association yields
the integration of all latent energy reality. It is infinite
in potential.
As the triunities are
primarily concerned with the functional unification of
infinity, so are triodities involved in the cosmic
appearance of experiential Deities. The triunities are
indirectly concerned, but the triodities are directly
concerned, in the experiential Deities--Supreme, Ultimate,
and Absolute. They appear in the emerging power-personality
synthesis of the Supreme Being. And to the time creatures of
space the Supreme Being is a revelation of the unity of the
I AM.
[Presented by a
Melchizedek of Nebadon.] |