.:YES, YOU SHOULD BELIEVE IN
THE TRINITY!!!
—A Page-by-Page Response To The Watchtower
Society’s Brochure: “Should
You Believe in the Trinity?”
View the Yes, You Should Believe in the Trinity Book
Table of Contents
INTRODUCTION: WHY YOU SHOULD
BELIEVE IN IT
“Do YOU believe in the Trinity?
Most people in Christendom do. After all, it has been
the central doctrine of the churches for centuries. ...Why
should a subject like this be of any more than passing
interest? Because Jesus himself said: ‘Eternal life
is this: to know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ
whom you have sent.’ So our entire future hinges
on our knowing the true nature of God, and that means
getting to the root of the Trinity controversy.”
—Should You Believe in the Trinity?, 1989,
p. 3 |
It has often been said that every theological
heresy begins with a misconception of the nature of God. Therefore,
it is of utmost importance that we have a clear and accurate understanding
of the nature of God and the identity of Jesus Christ, for Scripture
declares:
“But I am afraid, lest as the serpent
deceived Eve by his craftiness, your minds should
be led astray from the simplicity and purity of devotion
to Christ. For if one comes and preaches another Jesus
whom we have not preached, or you receive a different
spirit which you have not received, or a different
gospel which you have not accepted, you bear this
beautifully.” —2 Corinthians 11:3-4
“For no man can lay a foundation other
than the one which is laid, which is Jesus Christ.”—1
Corinthians 3:11
“I said therefore to you, that you shall
die in your sins; for unless you believe that I am He, you shall
die in your sins.”—John 8:24
At John 8:24, Jesus proclaims the seriousness
of not believing He is who He claimed to be. He states: “…unless
you believe that I am He, you shall die in your sins.” The
reason the word “He” is italicized in the statement
“I am He” is due to the fact that it is not found
in the Greek text from which our English translations are derived.
Thus, Jesus is literally proclaiming that He is the “I AM”
of Exodus 3:14: “And God said to Moses, ‘I AM WHO
I AM;…Thus you shall say to the sons of Israel, I AM has
sent me to you.’” This is significant when we consider
the fact that Scripture also proclaims that we must call on the
name of Jesus in order to “wash away” our sins:
“And now why do you delay? ‘Arise,
and be baptized, and wash away your sins, calling upon His name.…to
those who have been sanctified in Christ Jesus, saints by calling,
with all who in every place call upon the name of our Lord Jesus
Christ, their Lord and ours.”—Acts 22:16; 1 Corinthians
1:2
What does it mean to “call upon the name
of Jehovah” (Romans 10:13, NWT)? Every Jehovah’s Witness
would testify that when Scripture states that we are to call upon
the name of Jehovah, we are addressing our prayers directly to
Jehovah God. In the same way, if someone states that he is “calling
upon the devil,” he is proclaiming that he is praying to
Satan. Thus, when Scripture states that we must “call upon
the name of our Lord Jesus Christ” in order to have our
sins pardoned, it is literally compelling us to address our prayers
directly to Jesus, asking Him to be our Lord and Savior (Romans
10:9).
What brings one into a true relationship with
Christ is not just “taking in knowledge” about the
Father and Jesus. John 17:3 states, “And this is eternal
life, that they may know Thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ
whom Thou hast sent.” Vine’s Complete Expository
Dictionary of Old And New Testament Words notes that the
Greek word translated “know” (ginosko) in
this passage “frequently indicates a relation between the
person ‘knowing’ and the object known; in this respect,
what is ‘known’ is of value or importance to the one
who knows, and hence the establishment of the relationship.…such
‘knowledge’ is obtained, not by mere intellectual
activity, but by operation of the Holy Spirit consequent upon
acceptance of Christ.”1.
This is illustrated by the following true story:
One day in 1860, a huge crowd of people gathered
to watch the famous tightrope walker, Blondin, cross Niagara
Falls. It was a 1,000-foot trip, 160 feet above the raging water.
The crowd followed every movement tensely. Step by step he moved
forward. The people on the shore reacted nervously to every
sharp motion of the balancing pole. But their fears and forebodings
were unnecessary; the great Blondin not only went across safely
but returned as well—to the great relief and admiration
of the people.
Turning to the audience, he now made a sensational
offer. He would cross the falls again, this time with someone
on his back! Who was willing to go? No one rushed forward to
accept the offer. Picking out a man at random, Blondin asked,
“Do you believe that I am able to carry you across?”
“Yes, sir,” came the unhesitating reply. “Well,
then, let’s go,” Blondin urged. “Not on your
life!”—and the man withdrew into the crowd.
And so it went. One after another expressed
great confidence in the tightrope walker, but they would not
agree to let him take them across. Finally a young fellow moved
toward the front of the crowd. Blondin repeated his question:
“Do you believe I can carry you across safely?”
“Yes, I do.” “Are you willing to let me?”
“As a matter of fact, I am.”
The young man climbed onto the expert’s
back. Blondin stepped onto the rope, paused momentarily, then
moved across the falls without difficulty. There were many in
the crowd who believed that Blondin could do it. But there was
only one who was willing to trust him to do it.
It is one thing to believe a number of facts
about a person; it is quite another thing to trust yourself to
that person. For instance, there are many who believe the basic
facts about the Lord Jesus Christ: He is the eternal Son of God,
lived a perfect, sinless life, paid the price not only for Adamic
sin, but for all of our own personal sins (1 Peter 2:24), resurrected
and returned to Heaven. Many believe that Jesus offers us the
“free gift” of eternal life (Romans 6:23), and that
He offers us His perfection in exchange for all our own personal
sins (Colossians 3:3), yet they have never gone directly to Jesus
and asked Him to be righteousness for them (Acts 22:16). Many
believe Jesus can save them, but they do not let Him do it. Every
person needs to come to the place where he is willing to “lay
on the back of Jesus” and let Jesus carry him across the
cavern of sin into the presence of the Father being clothed in
Christ’s righteousness alone.
“Then he showed me Joshua the high priest
standing before the angel of the LORD, and Satan standing at
his right hand to accuse him. And the LORD said to Satan, ‘The
LORD rebuke you, Satan!’…Now Joshua was clothed
with filthy garments and standing before the angel. And he spoke
and said to those who were standing before him saying, ‘Remove
the filthy garments from him.’ Again he said to him, ‘See,
I have taken your iniquity away from you and will clothe you
with festal robes.’ ”—Zechariah 3:1-4
Belief in facts about the Father and Jesus, regular
attendance at meetings and field service2.
does not bring a person into a proper relationship with Jehovah
God anymore than being in a garage makes a person an automobile.
To come into a proper relationship with Christ, one must first
acknowledge that he is under a double condemnation of death not
only due to Adamic sin, but due to all his own personal sins and
that there is nothing he can do to earn Jehovah God’s eternal
life (Ephesians 2:8-9), for “all our righteous deeds are
like a filthy garment” in Jehovah’s sight (Isaiah
64:6). Then, he must transfer his trust to Christ.
Just like the man who crossed the rope with Blondin
had to lay his full weight on Blondin’s back and let him
carry him across, we must place our full trust in Christ alone.
If the man who crossed the rope with Blondin insisted on “doing
his part” by walking behind Blondin instead of letting Blondin
carry him, he surely would have fallen.
In the same way, we must trust Christ alone or
we will “fall from grace” (Galatians 5:4), for we
“stumble in many ways” (James 3:2). “For all
have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (Romans
3:23). Only the people who have gone directly to Jesus, asking
Him to impart to them His righteousness in exchange for their
sins (Hebrews 10:10, 14) are the ones who have transferred their
complete trust to Him and as a result have come into a personal
relationship with Christ. It is my prayer that as you read this
book, you will not only grow in your knowledge of God, but that
your relationship with Christ will deepen as a result of a greater
understanding of “our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ”
(Titus 2:13).
This book is written to provide a detailed Biblical
and scholarly response to the Watchtower Society’s arguments
against the Trinity set forth in their brochure, Should You
Believe in the Trinity? As the chapters of this book correspond
with the major sections in the Society’s brochure, what
follows is a page-by-page analysis of the Society’s claims
along with supporting documentation which demonstrate the Society’s
deceptive misrepresentation of many facts concerning the doctrine
of the Trinity.
NEXT CHAPTER
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1.
Vine’s Complete Expository Dictionary of Old And New
Testament Words, 1985, (Thomas Nelson Publishers), p. 346
2. “Field
service” is the Watchtower term for going door-to-door. |