Theology Q&A
By Dr. J. Rodman Williams
Theologian
Dr. J. Rodman Williams answers theological questions, exclusively on CBN.com.
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from Dr. J. Rodman Williams
3. God - the Holy Trinity
- I know the Bible says God
is omnipotent, but I was recently told that He is neither omniscient
nor omnipresent. I am interested in your view.
- You stated that you believe
that Jesus is God and shares the Godhead with God the Father, and God
the Holy Spirit. Then how can you say this is monotheistic?
- In Psalm 29:1 KJV says: "Give
unto the Lord, O ye mighty, give unto the Lord glory and strength."
How do we give God strength? Is the author referring to us worshipping
God?
- Was God lonely before He created
everything else?
- To me, some people (including
many clergy) misunderstand the mystery of the Trinity by thinking that
in heaven we shall only see one personality representing God and Jesus.
In my understanding, however, we shall see both God the Father and Jesus
Christ to whom the Father has given all power.
- God is omnipotent and omniscient.
Therefore, when He puts you through tribulations in life, does He know
that you will endure to the end or give up eventually?
- If God is the Alpha and
Omega, the First and Last, He knows who will do what, and before people
are born He will know who will go to heaven or hell. So if He knows
who's going to hell, then why create them?
- Does God need man's permission
before He can do anything on the earth?
- Is the "trinity"
theory contrary to the Bible?
- A friend told me that
the Trinity was started by the Catholic Church.
- Where did God come from?
- In Genesis 1:26, what is meant
by "Let us" and "in our"?
- Before creation what did God
do all by Himself?
- Why did God blind the Jews? (John
12:40)
- Whom should we address in
our prayers? Some Christians say The Lord's Prayer is our instruction
in this but...
- How can we absolve God of responsibility
when the facts are as we know them?
- If God is omnipotent how come
he can't do evil?
- If God is sovereign, but I must
choose His plan, who is in control of my destiny?
- Who created God?
- Each member of the Godhead has
significance; what's their relation to us and to each other?
- Does evil in the world preclude
the existence of God?
- Could you explain the term "begotten"?
- Does God's omnipresence include
hell and the lake of fire?
- Why does God let bad things happen?
- How does God's unchanging
nature and His repentance relate to each other?
- What is meant by "the glory
of God"?
- Explain John 14:28 when we believe
in the Trinity with all persons being God?
I know the Bible says God is omnipotent, but I was recently
told that He is neither omniscient nor omnipresent. I am interested in
your view.
To say that God is neither omniscient nor omnipresent is contrary to
the biblical witness. I suggest the careful and prayerful reading of Psalm
139 for vindication of the high view of God's knowledge and presence.
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You stated that you believe that Jesus is God and shares
the Godhead with God the Father, and God the Holy Spirit. Then how can
you say this is monotheistic?
This is a monotheistic statement because there is only one God. In the
one God there is a trinity of persons, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit who
exist in a mutual relationship of love. Whereas there is a distinction
of persons, there is no division so that all three are fully the one God.
There is mystery here, but Christian faith gladly proclaims in the words
of a familiar hymn, "God in three persons, blessed Trinity."
For more on this subject, see my book Renewal
Theology, 1: chapter 4, "The Holy Trinity."
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In Psalm 29:1 KJV says: "Give unto the Lord, O ye mighty,
give unto the Lord glory and strength." How do we give God strength? Is
the author referring to us worshipping God?
Yes, the Psalmist is referring to our worshipping God wherein we ascribe
(NASB) to Him glory and strength. In "ascribing" to God we recognize that
all glory and strength belong to Him. Read on to verse 2: "Ascribe to
the Lord the glory due to His name; Worship the Lord in holy array."
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I have been wondering how God can tolerate: always having
been in existence, not having anyone else around like Him (except the
Trinity, of course), not knowing where He came from, knowing that He is
the only one like Himself, knowing that there is no end and no beginning
to His existence? How can He stand not knowing where He came from, that
He will never end, and that nothing else is like Him?
I'm feeling sorry for God. What an awful position to be in! I
know our thoughts are not His thoughts, but it still seems pretty awful
to have no roots or to be the "One and only" of His kind in the universe.
You have raised a number of searching questions about the existence of
God. However, there is no need to feel sorry for God in that He is the
very essence of joy and beatitude. Always bear in mind that since God
is a Trinity of persons -- Father, Son, and Holy Spirit -- that He abides
in eternal fellowship with one another. Though God is God alone, He is
not a lonely God!
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My friend posed this question to me the other day. I would
like your response. Does God need help from us?
God has need of nothing. He is the All-Sufficient One. Thus He is our
helper in every situation and circumstance. This does not call for less
zeal on our part but living and acting with the assurance that God is
already there to help in whatever is needed. "God is a very present help,"
says the Psalmist (Psalm 46:1). What is there to fear?
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To me, some people (including many clergy) misunderstand
the mystery of the Trinity by thinking that in heaven we shall only see
one personality representing God and Jesus. In my understanding, however,
we shall see both God the Father and Jesus Christ to whom the Father has
given all power.
I would only add that we will also see God the Holy Spirit, the third
person of the Godhead. As one of our best known hymns puts it, "God in
three persons, blessed Trinity." The mystery of the Trinity is beyond
our understanding: not two persons but three. The Holy Spirit is a unique
person and hard to visualize, but He is as much God as the other two.
Praise God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit!
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God is omnipotent and omniscient. Therefore, when He puts
you through tribulations in life, does He know that you will endure to
the end or give up eventually?
Since God is both omnipotent and omniscient, He knows who will endure
to the end or give up. His knowledge and power does not, however, mean
that He is responsible for our actions. God sovereignly overrules our
destiny without coercing it.
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If God is the Alpha and Omega, the First and Last, He knows
who will do what, and before people are born He will know who will go
to heaven or hell. So if He knows who's going to hell, then why create
them?
Though God knows all things including our future, this does not determine
our destiny. We are free to make our own choices over which God's sovereignly
rules.
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Some people teach that "God needs permission" before He can
do anything on the earth. "God gave dominion to Adam," they say, "so God
can't do anything without man's permission." This seems to contradict
so many scriptures! Surely God's authority is not subordinate to man's
authority. God isn't on a leash, is He? Please, I would appreciate a candid,
clear answer to this question! Is this a false teaching?
A false teaching indeed. It undercuts the appreciation of God as almighty.
The fact that God gave dominion to Adam over the earth does not diminish
God's sovereignty. God does not need man's permission to do anything.
This would be tantamount to making man into God. Perish the thought!
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Throughout the OT and NT God has always been exalted as "one."
The "trinity" theory is contrary to the Bible. Many scriptures
such as 1 Timothy 3:16 declare one God. Did not the trinity theory come
about in the 2nd and 3rd centuries? The apostles didn't teach it, did
they?
The basic thing to realize is that the apostles experienced God as Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit in their lives and ministry. They came to recognize
God as Father in their daily contact with Jesus, God as Son in the presence
of Jesus, and God as Holy Spirit through the experience of Pentecost.
The Trinity is more than doctrine. It was and is to enter into a life-changing
experience. None of this diminishes the fact that God is one.
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I am a Christian and was stunned the other day when a friend
told me that there is not one scripture in the Bible that says there is
such a thing as the Trinity. She said the Trinity was started by the Catholic
Church many years ago. I've prayed and searched, but need your help to
find scripture validating my belief in the Trinity.
Let me give you two verses-and there are many others-that validate Christian
belief in the Trinity. First, there are Jesus' own words in Matthew 28:19:
"Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in
the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit." Second, there
are Paul's words in 2 Corinthians 13:14: "The grace of the Lord Jesus
Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit, be
with you all." Incidentally, the Catholic Church did not start the doctrine
of the Trinity.
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Where did God come from? We know so much about His characteristics
and how He wants us to live, but where did He come from?
God is the everlasting God. He is without beginning or ending. Human
beings are temporal creatures whose days on earth are limited in number.
With God there is no such limitation. Thus does God transcend everything
in His creation.
God is the great "I am." He speaks to Moses: "Say this to the people
of Israel, 'I AM has sent me to you'" (Exodus 3:14). God is the eternal
contemporary, the everlasting now.
For more on this, see my Renewal
Theology, 1: pages 56-58.
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In Genesis 1:26, it reads, "And God said, Let us make man
in our image, after our likeness." What is meant by "Let us" and "in our"?
To whom is "us" and "our" referring in this passage?
The "us" and the "our" points to a plurality within God. God is one as
the only God but exists as threefold: God the Father, God the Son, and
God the Holy Spirit. The mystery of the Trinity is strongly intimated
at this early stage in the Bible. Note that a plurality of persons is
also suggested in Genesis 3:22 and in Genesis 11:7. See Renewal
Theology, 1: chapter 4, "The Holy Trinity," for further elaboration.
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Even before He created heaven and earth or man and woman,
God has always been. My husband and I both have wondered before this creation
what God did all by Himself? We have always been curious but have never
gotten a good answer.
God was never alone even before His act of creation. In the mystery of
the Trinity, God always existed as three persons: God the Father, God
the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. As such, in the one God there is fellowship
eternally. In that sense, the one God is a society of persons. Yet each
person is the one and only God. Love is the very nature of God. Each person
of the Godhead eternally loves one another. This is all true long before
there was a creation.
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Why did God blind the Jews (John 12:40) and not enable them
to hear the word regarding His Son Jesus Christ?
The "blinding" of the Jews was not an arbitrary action on God's
part but rather the result of their turning from His revelation in Christ.
Jesus Himself gave them ample opportunity to receive the word but in general
they refused.
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Some Christians pray to God the Father, praying in the name of Jesus the
Son. Other Christians pray to Jesus. Whom should we address in our prayers?
Some Christians say that The Lord's Prayer is our instruction in this.
But Jesus was still with the apostles when He instructed them to pray
"Our Father..." He couldn't have told them to pray to Him when He was
still there. So this instruction doesn't seem to apply to Christians today.
Since God is Triune -- Father, Son, and Holy Spirit -- we may equally
well pray to any of the three. One helpful way is to pray to the Father
through the Son and in the Holy Spirit: to God as our Creator, our Redeemer,
and our Sanctifier.
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How can we absolve God of responsibility when the facts
are as we apparently know them to be?
We understand God to be all knowing, past, present and future,
as well as being the Creator. That being the case, God had to know in
advance what the result of creating man would be. I understand God's love
and man's free will, but how can we absolve God of responsibility when
the facts are as we apparently know them to be? It seems like if there
is an original sinner here, it would be God Himself. Don't you agree?
No, I do not agree. God truly knows in advance but is in no way responsible
for sin. Sin originates in the freedom God gave man and angels. God is
sovereign over the creatures' freedom but in no way coerces it. God knows
the past, present, and future in detail, but such knowledge is not the
same as responsibility for what happens.
For a fuller discussion of God's Omniscience, see Renewal
Theology, 1, pages 73-77.
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If God is omnipotent how come he can't do evil?
Because God is altogether holy; therefore, He will not do anything that
contradicts His character. God is totally without sin. God the Almighty
One is also God the All Holy One. In His omnipotence, He can do everything
consonant with His holy nature and nothing in contradiction.
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If God is sovereign, but I must choose His plan of
salvation, then who is in control of my destiny? God or me? If the answer
is me, then is God sovereign?
In answer to your question, you must bear in mind the paradox between
God's sovereignty and man's response. Both are included in a true understanding
of salvation. It is a paradox because it seems contradictory to speak
thus of a divine-human relationship. However, God and man are not on the
same level. God remains sovereign throughout. Man remains responsible
for his actions.
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Recently I had a non-Christian friend ask, "Who created
God?" I tried to explain to her the best I could, but I think she
left even more confused. How would you answer such a question?
In Isaiah 40:28 are the words about God where He is described as "the
Everlasting God, the Lord, the creator of the ends of the earth."
God as creator is everlasting. If the creator were not everlasting, there
would always remain the question, "Who created the Creator?"
God is the great "I AM" (Exodus 3:14), without beginning or
ending. There is mystery here to be sure, but unless God is everlasting
creation could not exist.
· We know God is a triune entity, can there be any intellectual
conceptualization of His nature or must we accept the Trinity on faith?
Intellectual conceptualization of God as triune-one being in three persons-is
limited because we are reaching beyond what the human mind can comprehend.
A material analogy, sometime drawn, is that of the one substance water
which exists in three forms as liquid, ice, and steam. However, God is
all three forms at the same time, and every form is a person. A frequent
human analogy is that of man as the union in one being of body, soul,
and spirit; however, God is both one being and three persons. Perhaps
a better analogy is that of a human family consisting of father, mother,
and child, thus three persons; however, the three persons are not one
being. All such analogies are inadequate. We must accordingly turn to
Scripture and Christian experience. Scripture bears witness both to God
as one (Deuteronomy. 6:4, Mark 12:29) and three persons (Mark 1:10-12,
Matt. 28:19). Further, in a full Christian experience, we are aware of
there being only one God but also three persons, Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit each of whom is wholly God. Thus it is not only a matter of accepting
the Trinity on faith, but also of Scripture witness and the confirmation
in Christian experience. See Renewal
Theology, 1: chapter 4, "The Holy Trinity."
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Each member of the Godhead has theological significance;
what is their relation to us and to each other?
In regard to the three members of the Godhead and their relation to us,
God the Father is the Creator, God the Son the Redeemer, God the Holy
Spirit the Sanctifier. In each case the other two persons are also active
(for example, the Father creates through the Son and by the Holy Spirit),
for God is one in being. We can say little about the inner relation of
the persons of the Trinity to one another. However, since God is love
(1 John 4:8), there must be the deepest possible relationship of love
uniting Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
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Does evil in the world preclude the existence of God? It
has been said that evil in the world precludes the existence of God, or
at least takes away from His divine nature. Is this reasoning flawed and
if so, why?
Evil in the world does not preclude the existence of God, but it might
seem to preclude the existence of a holy and righteous God. God, however,
is not the source of evil. It is the result of the sin of angels first,
then man, who in the freedom God gave them were disobedient to Him and
thereby brought evil into God's creation.
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Could you explain the term "begotten" found in
the Scriptures and in various creeds as applied to the Second Person of
the Trinity?
Jesus is described as "only begotten" (Greek, monogenes) in
John 1:14 and 18; 3:16 and 18; and in 1 John 4:9. Most familiar is John
3:16: "God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son,
that whoever believes in Him should not perish, but have eternal life."
The "begotten" refers to an eternal begetting: there was never
a time when the Son did not exist, for He is also God. In John 1:18 He
is described as "the only begotten God, who is in the bosom of the
Father." In the mystery of the Trinity, both Father and Son (and
the Holy Spirit) are the one and only God; however, along with this essential
identity there is a distinction of personhood; one God in three persons.
The Nicene Creed speaks of "the one Lord Jesus Christ, the only begotten
of the Father before all time
true God of true God, begotten not
created, of the same essence as the Father." As "only begotten,"
Christ is secondary to the Father, hence the Second Person of the Trinity;
but as "true God of true God" He is as fully God as the Father:
both are the one and only God. See Renewal Theology, 1: page 93, especially footnote 34.
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Does God's omnipresence include hell and the lake of fire?
Hell is sometimes described in the Bible as a place of "outer darkness"
(Matthew 8:11-12; 22:13, 25-30). It is therefore a place totally removed
from God who is light. Omnipresence does not include hell, which is wholly
the absence of God. The same thing is true of the lake of fire, which
represents the agony of separation from God.
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Why does God let bad things happen?
I have some friends who just lost their 3-week-old baby daughter
due to a heart defect. If God is sovereign why would he let this happen?
I know the Bible says so that His glory can be shown. It seems to me with
my limited human knowledge to be a rather cruel way to show His glory.
How can one keep from coming to the conclusion that they should blame
God for taking her away? I do not believe Satan took her. She was being
lifted up in prayer all over the world.
There is no simple answer to your question. God and His ways are often
mysterious. The words of Job may be helpful: "The Lord gave and the
Lord has taken away. Blessed be the name of the Lord." (Job 1:21).
" Through all this Job did not sin nor did he blame God" (verse
22). God in His power and love could have saved His own Son on the cross,
but in the mystery of His divine purpose He did not. Should we blame God
for allowing His Son to die? No, through an innocent death God fulfilled
His purpose. Likewise, we must trust God in an innocent baby's death to
be fulfilling His mysterious purpose. We may not know why, but we do trust
him.
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How does God's unchanging nature and His repentance relate
to each other?
God is One who does not change. The universe is constantly undergoing
a transition from one stage to another and human existence is marked by
continuing alteration. With God there is no such mutability. "For
I the LORD do not change" (Malachi 3:6). Thus does God transcend
everything in His creation.
God is the Rock. He does not fluctuate from one event to the next. There
is constancy and stability in all that He is and does. Hence, he is not
evolving from one stage to another. There is no movement from some "primordial"
nature to a "consequent" nature in any aspect of His being.
God is not a becoming God, a growing God. God does not change. He is "the
Father of lights with whom there is no variation or shadow due to change
[literally "with whom
change has no place"] (James 1:17).
Likewise, the New Testament declares that "Jesus Christ is the same
yesterday and today and for ever" (Hebrews 13:8). God, whether Father
or Son or Spirit, is One who changes not.
In God there is dependability and constancy in His being, acts, and purposes.
The Old Testament sometimes speaks of God as "repenting" or
changing His mind (e.g., Exodus 32:14). From the overall picture, the
outward "repentance" does not signify a change in God's activity,
but only His dependable response to man's behavior. God invariably acts
the same: when man is obedient, God blesses; when man disobeys, God punishes;
when man confesses his sin, God forgives. He "repents"; that
is, He turns in the other direction.
Hence, God's repentance is not really a change in God, but it is His bringing
to bear on the human situation some other aspect of His being and nature.
God remains the same throughout.
It is important not to view God changelessness as that of hard, impersonal
immobility. God is not like a statue, fixed and cold, but, quite the contrary,
He relates to people. He is not the "unmoved Mover" but constantly
moves upon and among men and nations. The flux and flow of life are not
far away and far beneath Him. Indeed, He freely involved Himself in the
life of a fickle and inconstant people to work out His purpose, and in
the Incarnation he plunged totally into the maelstrom of human events.
God in His own changelessness has experienced all the vicissitudes of
human existence. This is the God-far from immobile and distant-who does
not change.
See Renewal
Theology, 1: pages 58-59.
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What is meant by "the glory of God"?
The climactic word to be spoken about God is that He is the God of Glory.
The Scriptures abound with their declaration of the glory of God. In the
Psalms are found, for example, such expressions as these: His glory is
"above the heavens" (8:1); "the heavens declare the glory
of God" (19:1 KJV); "the LORD of hosts, he is the King of glory!"
(24:10); "be exalted, O God, above the heavens! Let thy glory be
over all the earth!" (57:5); "the LORD
will appear in his
glory" (102:16); "his glory is above earth and heaven"
(148:13). But this is only a beginning; God's glory is attested throughout
Scripture.
What then, is the glory of God? Perhaps the best answer is that the divine
glory is the radiant splendor and awesome majesty of God Himself. Glory
is not so much a particular attribute but the effulgence of splendor and
majesty that shines through in every aspect of God's being and action.
Man, it should now be added, finds his highest fulfillment in relation
to the divine glory. There is a deep desire in human nature to break through
the limitations of finitude and to behold God as He is in Himself. Moses
on one occasion cried out to God, "I pray thee, show me thy glory"
(Exodus 33:18). Despite all that Moses had seen of God, he yearned to
go yet higher and further. When Christ came to earth, says the fourth
Gospel, "we
beheld his glory, glory as of the only Son from
the Father" (John 1:14). Paul declared that God "has shone in
our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the
face of Christ" (2 Corinthians 4:6). So for the Christian there is
more than Moses was able to receive during his life. But even for those
who know Christ in this life, there is yet the consummation of glory in
the world to come. For there at long last, the profoundest yearning of
mankind to see God Himself will be gloriously fulfilled: "they shall
see his face" (Revelation 22:4) throughout eternity!
God is the God of glory. Let us ever live to the praise of that glory.
See Renewal
Theology, 1: chapter 3, "God."
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Explain John 14:28 when we believe in the Trinity with
all persons being God?
This was put to me recently and I couldn't explain it and wish to
understand it so I could explain it to others. It concerns Jesus' statement
in John 14:28, "If you loved me, you would be glad that I am going
to the Father, for the Father is greater than I." How is this to
be understood when we believe in the Trinity with all persons being God?
In order to answer, Jesus' words in John 14:28, "the Father is greater
than I," may be compared with His words in John 10:30, "I and
the Father are one." This second statement clearly affirms His oneness
in essence with the Father and that Jesus is also God. Note the following
accusation of the Jews against Jesus "for blasphemy" "because
You, being a man, make Yourself out to be God" (verse 33). Also,
the Jews wanted Jesus killed because He was "calling God His own
Father, making Himself equal with God" (John 5:18).
Does John 14:28 teach otherwise? Does Jesus' statement about the Father
being greater than He deny also His identity and equality with the Father?
Not at all. In the Trinity there is both oneness of being and distinctness
of persons. The Son is eternally subordinate to the Father, but the subordination
is not the essence of their being. To understand this, it is to be noted
that the relationship is one that inheres within the one divine reality.
In other words, the Son is subordinate to the Father not in essence but
in relationship. Both statements are true: "I and the Father are
one" and "the Father is greater than I."
Greatness does not mean that God the Father is more divine in the Trinity
than the Son, but that in personal relationship they exist in mutual reciprocity
of giving and receiving. This is not unlike the relationship of earthly
fathers and sons in which the priority belongs to the father rather than
the son.
Finally, we may rejoice in both statements of Jesus: "I and the
Father are one" and "the Father is greater than I." Both
are important to maintain in a truly biblical understanding of the Triune
God.
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