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PROPHET JESUS (pbuh):
A PROPHET, NOT A SON, OF GOD
Belief in the Trinity Emerged Centuries after Prophet Jesus (pbuh)
Christians believe in the Holy Bible, which
consists of the Old Testament and the New Testament. Although these
texts have been corrupted, one can still find in them some facts about
Christianity, rules about how they are to live, and examples of
Christian moral values. However, no Biblical passage mentions belief in
the trinity, and neither this word nor one similar to it appears in the
New Testament. The New Catholic Encyclopedia states that the trinity was
unknown to the first Christians and only assumed this form in the
fourth century:
It is difficult, in the second
half of the 20th century, to offer a clear, objective, and
straightforward account of the revelation, … and the theological
elaboration of the mystery of the Trinity. Trinitarian discussion, Roman
Catholic as well as other, present a somewhat unsteady silhouette…
There is recognition on the part of exegetist and Biblical theologians,
including a constantly growing number of Roman Catholics, that one
should not speak of Trinitarianism in the New Testament without serious
qualification. There is also the closely parallel recognition - that
when one does speak of unqualified Trinitarianism, one has moved from
the period of Christian origins to say, the last quadrant of the 4th
century. It was only then that what might be called the definitive
Trinitarian dogma 'one God in three persons' became thoroughly
assimilated into Christian life and thought. 2

Saint Gregory of Nyssa. |
Trinitarianism only became Church dogma in the
fourth century. Before that time, there had been lengthy debates between
its proponents and its detractors. These debates came to a head at the
Council of Nicaea in 325.
The Council of Nicaea (325), the largest gathering
of Church officials until that time, brought together more than 300
clergy members from Rome, Asia Minor, Syria, Phoenicia, Palestine, and
Egypt. It was called by Roman Emperor Constantine I, who wanted to end
this divisive debate for the sake of Byzantium's future and security. At
this Council, the belief that constituted the basis of Christianity
would be defined for the security of the Empire, according to a decision
to be taken by human beings. Saint Gregory of Nyssa describes the
ensuing debates in these terms (Surely God is beyond the expressions
employed in this extract):
Every corner of Constantinople was
full of their discussions: the streets, the market place, the shops of
the money-changers, the victuallers. Ask a tradesman how many obols he
wants for some article in his shop, and he replies with the disquisition
on generated and ungenerated being. Ask the price of bread today and
the baker tells you: "The son is subordinate to the father." Ask your
servant if the bath is ready and he makes an answer: "The son arose out
of nothing." "Great is the only Begotten," declared the Catholics, and
the Arians rejoined: "But greater is He that begot."3
Constantine permitted the Empire's Christians
considerable freedom of belief and worship, despite the fact that he was
not a Christian and continued to protect Rome's traditional pagan
beliefs. In his quest to further the empire's interests, he worked for a
compromise between, or even a coming together of, all of its various
religions, particularly between the cult of Sol Invictus, based on Sun
worship, and Christianity. Concerned over how the Christians had
embarked on an internal theological debate just when he was trying to
bring the religions together, he convened this council. One side were
those who believed that Prophet Jesus (pbuh) was God made flesh on
Earth. (Surely God is beyond that!) The leader of this group was
Athanasius, bishop of Alexandria. On the other side was the celebrated
Egyptian priest Arius.
Arius was the son
of an Egyptian family of Libyan origins who grew up in Alexandria, one
of the most important cities of the time, and joined the Church,
becoming a priest in 312. Arius believed in God's oneness and preached
that the current Church view of Prophet Jesus (pbuh) as God was
mistaken. He said that the title the Son of God used to describe Prophet
Jesus (pbuh) was a metaphor and had nothing to do with his supposed
divinity. To prove this, he pointed to: Blessed are the peacemakers, for
they will be called sons of God (Matthew 5:9). He emphasized that this
title applied to everyone who behaved according to God's wishes, and
thus could not be limited to Prophet Jesus (pbuh). In one of his works,
Arius wrote: "We can all become the sons of God."4 He also pointed to the prayers of Prophet Jesus (pbuh) in the New
Testament, which began with "My God," and said that such prayers showed
that Prophet Jesus (pbuh) was devoted to God and, like other people, His
helpless servant. Arius also noted that in the New Testament Prophet
Jesus (pbuh) frequently referred to himself as the son of man, and
emphasized that this indicated Prophet Jesus' human nature.
As the priest in residence at Baucalis, a district
of Alexandria, Arius communicated these ideas to a wide audience. Due to
the consistence and convincing nature of what he said, and also to his
modest and simple lifestyle, those who listened to him easily accepted
his ideas. However Bishop Alexander of Alexandria, who was loyal to the
Church in Rome which regarded Prophet Jesus as the son of God, not in
the metaphorical sense, but as a true deity (Surely God is beyond that),
became uneasy with such ideas. After failing to convince Arius to alter
his opinions, he initiated a fierce assault against him. He described
this in his own writings:
This movement has spread ever
wider, to all of Egypt, Libya and Upper Thebes. At this, we too met
with the bishops of Egypt and Libya, and cursed this movement and all
its followers at an assembly of around a hundred people…5
The condemnation was not solely verbal. In 318,
Arius and his followers were excommunicated. Arius, his two closest
assistants (Bishop Theonas and Secundus), and 12 priests were exiled to
Palestine. Before going into exile in Palestine, Arius collected his
ideas in a lyrical book called Thalia.
However, here too Arius found sympathizers. And so
his movement, which strongly opposed many of the ideas of the Roman
Church, continued to spread. When reports of this reached Constantine,
who had taken the Church of Rome under his protection in order to build
religious unity, he realized that he was dealing with a major problem:
internal division of the Church. He therefore decided to re-establish
unity without further loss of time. This was why he convened the Council
of Nicaea, one of Christianity's major turning points.
The Council of Nicaea
Constantine first sought to resolve the conflict by
sending letters to both sides explaining that unity was more important
than anything else. When he saw that his letters were not having the
desired effect, he decided, at the suggestion of Bishop Hosius, to call a
World Church Council, or synod, at Nicaea to give an exact definition
of the trinity. Those who rejected this belief were declared heretics.
The Egyptian priest Arius, who opposed
belief in the trinity.
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Although the council members sought
to give the impression of a democratic forum, in reality the emperor
brought enormous pressure to bear on the participants. Not surprisingly,
the side that he supported, the Church of Rome, emerged victorious. Of
the 300 or so participating priests, only around 20 were close to Arius.
One reason that there were so few priests from the Arian-influenced
Eastern Church, was that the council was moved to Nicaea, instead of
held in Ankara as originally planned, which was further to the
north-west.6 In addition, the
council took place in the emperor's summer palace located in Nicaea. For
that reason, the emperor attended all of the council sessions, and his
authority was naturally reflected in the decisions taken.
The Nicene Creed, the clearest and most concrete
expression of the alleged deification of Prophet Jesus (pbuh), says:
(Surely God is beyond all the expressions follow!):
We believe… in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only
begotten of the Father, that is, of the substance [ek tes ousias] of the
Father, God of God, light of light, true God of true God, begotten not
made, of the same substance with the Father [homoousion to patri],
through whom all things were made both in heaven and on earth; who for
us men and our salvation descended, was incarnate, and was made man,
suffered and rose again the third day, ascended into heaven and cometh
to judge the living and the dead. And in the Holy Spirit.
Those who say: There was a time
when He was not, and He was not before He was begotten; and that He was
made out of nothing (ex ouk onton); or who maintain that He is of
another hypostasis or another substance [than the Father], or that the
Son of God is created, or mutable, or subject to change, [them] the
Catholic Church anathematizes.7

The Council of Nicaea ended in favor of the trinitarians after
Emperor Constantine threw his weight behind them. |
The first paragraph clearly denies Arianism. The
Church of Rome, which awarded itself the title of Catholic (Universal)
Church, declared the Arians and those who shared the same views to be
heretics.
From this time on, the Nicene Creed became the
basis of the Christian faith, and those who opposed it were considered
heretics. The Roman Catholic Church declared that "God has manifested
His will in this council" for which reason the Nicene Creed was regarded
as a sacred and infallible text, just like a revelation. But in
reality, this was nothing more than the Church of Rome asserting its
will.
Following the council, the Arianis
came under great pressure, and supporters of Arius who refused to sign
the Nicene Creed were anathematized. However, they held out for another
50 years or so, before gradually withdrawing from the stage of history
toward the end of the fourth century due to continued Church repression.
Yet objections to the official Nicene Creed continued, which meant that
more councils had to be held to debate the new ideas being put forward.
Despite all of the arguments, however, the superstitious belief in One
in Three and Three in One was never attacked. (This superstitious belief
referred to God having three different identities, all of which were
equal, infinite and in common.) During Constantine's reign, not only
were such beliefs as the Nicene Creed expanded, but the New Testament
also assumed its current form. No complete version of the New Testament
in our possession today is any older than the time of Constantine.8
Throughout the 50 years that
followed the Council of Nicaea, Athanasius defended and further
developed the Nicene formula, because the belief in the trinity had not
yet assumed its final form. The third member of the trinity, the Holy
Spirit, remained vague. In the fourth century, a second general council
chaired by Macedonius, Patriarch of Constantinople, met in the city
(modern-day Istanbul). At its conclusion, the council declared that the
Holy Spirit was the third member of the trinity, and that all three
members were equal in terms of greatness.9 (Surely God is beyond all that!) Therefore, trinitarianism assumed its
final form only four centuries after Prophet Jesus (pbuh) was raised to
God's presence. At this council, another belief not found in the Bible
was put forward: homoousion, that the trinity's three members had the
same essence and equal powers. (Surely God is beyond that!)
Another important matter is how belief in the
trinity was first put forward.
Among Christians, belief in the
trinity is generally seen as being difficult to comprehend and
impossible to understand, but one that must absolutely be accepted. The
reason for this is that the proponents of the trinity also claim to be
monotheists. Yet it is clear that no Christian has ever been able to
explain how trinitarianism and monotheism can exist together. The
questions arising in people's minds have not been satisfactorily
answered. Neither is it possible for them to be. Therefore, they
maintain that the trinity is an article of faith that does not need to
be thought about or understood, for it must be accepted as it stands.10 For hundreds of years, this has
prevented any serious discussion on this belief's clear errors and
inconsistencies. To summarize: Belief in the trinity is a matter of
blind faith concerning which any debate or discussion is prohibited.
Many Biblical scholars describe the period between
Prophet Jesus (pbuh) being raised to God's presence and the Council of
Constantinople as the deification of Prophet Jesus (pbuh), the messenger
of God. This theological concept went through a number of specific
stages, at the end of which it was assumed that Prophet Jesus (pbuh) was
divine. (Surely God is beyond that!) This process will be examined in
more detail in later chapters.
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2. The New Catholic
Encyclopedia, 14:295,
http://www.triumphpro.com/trinity_disproved_2(word6).htm.(emphasis added
by the author)
3. Muhammed Ata'ur Rahim and Ahmad Thomson, Jesus Prophet of Islam, rev.
ed. (London: Ta-Ha Publishers Ltd., 1996), 93.
4. Fazal Ahmad, "Arius: The Trinity Controversy in the Church," The
Review of Religions (London) (September 1996).
5. Athanas., Hist. Tr.; P. Johnson, History of Christianity (Pelican
Books: 1976), 89.
6. Ahmad, "Arius."
7. "The First Council of Nicaea," The Catholic Encyclopedia (The
Encyclopedia Press, Inc.: 1913); electronic version (New Advent: 1996),
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11044a.htm.
8. Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh, and Henry Lincoln, The Messianic
Legacy (London: Corgi Books, 1991), 66.
9. Mehmet Aydin, Muslumanlarin Hristiyanlara Karsi Yazdigi Reddiyeler ve
Tartisma Konulari (Refutations Written by Muslims against Christians,
and Subjects of Debate) (Ankara: Turkiye Diyanet Vakfi Yayinlari, 1998),
96; Bizans Imparatorlugu Tarihi, 1:100; Les Religions, 641.
10. Mahmut Aydin, Isa Tanri mi Insan mi?, Dinler Arasi Diyalog
Baglaminda Isa-Mesih'in Konumu Sorunu (Is Jesus God or Man? The Problem
of the Position of Jesus the Messiah in Connection with Inter-faith
Dialogue), Iz Yayincilik, 47.
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