In contrast to the depth of thought and honest insight in Paul's post, there was this rather mocking little item earlier:
AGuest wrote:
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Triune in fact has its meaning in its name, "tri" meaning three, and "une" meaning one.
Yes, dear Char (peace!), I get that. My point, which I think you missed... is the "'tri' meaning three" part. What three? Father loves Son... Son loves Father... Father plus Son equals two. Father and Son are in union and so one. So, the TWO are in union and together make one. The Father and the Son in One person. So, either way you slice it... BI-une (TWO in one), perhaps, but no way TRI-une. Else there's yet ANOTHER person, which does not seem to be what dear P (peace, luv!) stated... and so I asked, who is that "third" person? I will await his response, though, because your's still doesn't make sense... or add up.
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It means three in one and one in three. That's why, when Saint Patrick took Christianity to Ireland, he used the shamrock, the little plant with one leaf with three plants, to illustrate how a being can be one yet three at the same time.
OHHHHhhh! The
shamrock PROVES the "Trinity"! I truly did NOT know that! I don't think many others here did also. So what does, say, cannabais prove? Cause you've got FIVE leaves, there. How about the water lily? One leaf in one little plant...
Wait. Where, pray tell, did Christ say, "Look to the
shamrock!"?? No, I don't think he EVER told us to look to a shamrock to prove something as to him and the Father. I could be wrong, though, so I'm open to some supporting information.
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In that way, God is One and One in Three. Father, Son and Holy Spirit, One God in Three Persons, one Blessed and Holy Trinity.
So, I will ask you once more... although I KNOW you will "pretend" not to see and so not respond: what did PAUL... whose letters are in the Bible... mean when he said "The Lord
is the Spirit"? How about John... whose letters are in the Bible, when he said that
Christ was
the "Advocate/Helper/Comforter/Paraclete"? Please...
tell us what these two meant. THEN tell us where this "third" Person comes from.
Do that, and I will seriously consider considering that the shamrock proves the "Trinity"... per St. Patrick (whose writings aren't in the Bible, heck, who wasn't even around)... which is why he used IT to show the Irish how a trinity is possible... rather than have them look at Christ (oh, wait, though - that would have showed them that while possible... in plants... it was not the case with God and Christ! So... no, couldn't have them looking THERE!).
Bless you, Shelby! Is it so very difficult to understand when something is an illustration and when something is a proof? ( For the sake of Loz, who objected a week or so ago when I used the phrase "bless you", as though, improbably, she had never heard it before, "bless you" is in fact a benevolent expression, an abbreviation of the kindly short prayer "may God bless you", as if someone with a First Class degree wouldn't have known that anyway!) However, back to Shelby...
Rather naively perhaps, I supposed that you would understand what even infants here can grasp quite readily, that something can be used as an illustration and demonstration so that simple or uneducated minds can grasp a concept with which they are struggling, without anyone failing to see the difference between an illustration, or demonstration, and a proof. It never occurred to me that you wouldn't understand.
Is there anyone else out there who doesn't understand who Saint Patrick was? Are you sitting comfortably? Then I'll begin. Saint Patrick was not a Biblical character, as Shelby has, perhaps superfluously, pointed out. He is an historical person, who took the then very new Good News of Jesus Christ to the land of Ireland. He was famous for both the depth of his faith and his ability to explain to uneducated minds the reality of Christ's message and of the nature of God.
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Not if one can count to THREE. 'Cause only only has to count one (the Father) and two (the Son) and... oh, wait... WHO'S that "third" person, again? A "truinity" is not what's being asserted by the theory, dear one. It's just what folks want others to BELIEVE is being asserted. The reality is that the MATH... adds up to a BI-unity.
Thank you very much indeed, Shelby, for so very helpfully defining an important element in your belief system. You believe in Binitarianism! Your beliefs are Binitarian!
Excellent clarification. I'd never even heard of or encountered any instance whatsoever of Binitarian thinking before venturing onto this forum, quite rapidly revealing now its embryonic and transformational reality, so I hope you'll forgive my slowness in recognising it for what it is.
It remains to be seen whether it is caterpillar-like in its identity, or more at the chrysalis stage. I think caterpillar. I'd guess there's much more to come, but we now have the first clear doctrine. Binitarianism.
Oh, you asked me a question...where did Christ say "Look to the shamrock"?
*patiently*
Shelby, the shamrock grows only in Ireland. Did Jesus ever go to Ireland? I really don't think he did, you know.