Father, Son, and The Holy Spirit
Zechariah 2:7-8
“Listen, Zion! Escape, you who are living with Daughter Babylon.” For the Lord of Angel Armies says this: “In pursuit of his glory, he sent me against the nations plundering you for whoever touches you touches the pupil [apple] of my eye."
Yes...they've turned their backs on God.
Yes...they've turned towards the commercialization of their national spirit.
Yes...they've worked wickedness against the alien neighbors in Judah and throughout the greatly expanded boundaries of Jerusalem.
Yes...their teachers are mystics following after their own secret wisdoms.
Yes...the priests reject the Messiah.
Yes...they are pure in their own eyes, but they are filthy and unwashed.
But they are His people [God's] His elect and when Jesus returns he'll call them to himself from the four corners of the earth. And it is for Him to correct them along the way. Yes...they've rejected Yeshua during his earthly ministry, and still today many of God's people have not accepted The Son of God, but their idols are many and their faithfulness has been purchased by the prophets of Baal and false teachings. And they cannot accept the triune God although they know He is God almighty, Son and Spirit.
Proverbs 30:4-5
"Who but God goes up to heaven and comes back down?
Who holds the wind in his fists?
Who wraps up the oceans in his cloak?
Who has created the whole wide world?
What is his name—and his son’s name?
Tell me if you know!
Every word of God proves true.
He is a shield to all who come to him for protection."
The Christian doctrine of the Trinity expresses the mystery of God that is at the heart of all scriptural revelation. Their Holy scriptures seal the deal time and time again are revealing the triune nature of God. Probably because the Christian is viewing the Old Testament from a New Testament perspective, but Jesus Christ taught them to do just exactly that. Christian thinkers have long seen a witness to the Trinity in the “let us” of Genesis 1:26. Not some divine council or assembly of gods as we see in eastern cosmological mythology, but a singular God in three persons. Throughout the Old Testament Christ comes on the scene, he doesn't come as Messiah, but he comes as a silhouetted figure who has been active in the salvation and judgment of Israel’s history. And he is promised to come again in the last days. And he is God, the son of God, divine in nature and Holy. This is not disputed, even though the idea of a triune God is challenging for the people of God to accept.
The same can be said of the Spirit of God, which is both distinguished from and identified with God. He is manifested in the Shekinah glory. He is the visible invisible Spirit. He is the creative Spirit. He is recognized as God himself. He is transcendent, but his creation, and the heavenly realms as well, are all within the bounds and phenomena of creation itself. In fact His dwelling place is within creation, beyond the horizon of creation but within it.
The person of God transcends the singularity of human consciousness. Adonai is plural. Elohim is plural. The Angel of the Lord is identified as God. The Spirit of God is seen as God, “You also gave Your good Spirit to instruct them” (Nehemiah 9:20, NKJV). See also Isaiah 48:16 and Isaiah 63:10. This manifold nature of God is found throughout the scriptures.
“Then God said, ‘Let us make mankind in our image, in our likeness’” (Genesis 1:26)
“And the LORD God said, ‘The man has now become like one of us, knowing good and evil’” (Genesis 3:22)
In Psalm 110:1, David writes, “The LORD said to my Lord, ‘Sit at My right hand, Till I make Your enemies Your footstool’” (God Almighty speaking to Adonai?)
Jesus focuses on this psalm as evidence that Christ is more than David’s descendant—He is the pre-existent Lord and much greater than David.
(Matthew 22:41–45).
While the Pharisees were gathered together, Jesus asked them, “What do you think about the Messiah? Whose son is he?”
“The son of David,” they replied.
He said to them, “How is it then that David, speaking by the Spirit, calls him ‘Lord’? For he says,
“‘The Lord said to my Lord:
“Sit at my right hand
until I put your enemies
under your feet.”’
If then David calls him ‘Lord,’ how can he be his son?”
Good question.
The point is, scripture makes no bones about the multifaceted nature of God. The Hebrew language has multitudes of names for God to capture before their eyes and in their thoughts his triune personality. The Christian mind immediately sees the Messiah, The Son, as an amazing resource, not as a challenge against the One True God. But the Christian sees the person, not the thought or feeling. And they see Him in Yeshua.
And one day The Lord of Angel Armies will arrive (again) to plunder the wicked nations and draw to himself the remnant of his people (Matthew 24:31).
The Messianic promise:
In Psalm 45:6–7: “Your throne, O God, will last for ever and ever; a scepter of justice will be the scepter of your kingdom. You love righteousness and hate wickedness; therefore God, your God, has set you above your companions by anointing you with the oil of joy.”
"God [Father], your God [Son]...anointing...with the oil [Holy Spirit]."
Father, Son, and The Holy Spirit.
Three in One.
When he comes, he who endures in their faith in Jesus to the end shall be saved.
Praise the triune God!