The Trinity is One God Not Three Gods by Boethius
Author:Boethius [Boethius]
Format: epub
Tags: All; Early Church; Theology, CCEL, Christian Classics Ethereal Library
Published: 0101-01-01T00:00:00+00:00
III.
III.
III.
Now God differs from God in no respect for there cannot lie divine essences distin-
guished either by accidents or by substantial differences belonging to a substrate. But where
there is no difference, there is no sort of plurality and accordingly no number; here, therefore,
is unity alone. For whereas we say God thrice when we name the Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit, these three unities do not produce a plurality of number in their own essences, if we
think of what we count instead of what we count with. For in the case of abstract number
a repetition of single items does produce plurality; but in the case of concrete number the
repetition and plural use of single items does not by any means produce numerical difference
in the objects counted. There are as a fact two kinds of number. There is the number with
which we count (abstract) and the number inherent in the things counted (concrete). "One"
is a thingâthe thing counted. Unity is that by which oneness is denoted. Again " two "belongs
to the class of things as men or stones; but not so duality; duality is merely that whereby
two men or two stones are denoted; and so on. Therefore a repetition of unities15 produces
plurality when it is a question of abstract, but not when it is a question of concrete things,
as, for example, if I say of one and the same thing, "one sword, one brand, one blade."16 It
is easy to see that each of these names denotes a sword; I am not numbering unities but
simply repeating one thing, and in saying "sword, brand, blade," I reiterate the one thing
and do not enumerate several different things any more than I produce three suns instead
of merely mentioning one thing thrice when I say "Sun, Sun, Sun."
So then if God be predicated thrice of Father, Sun, and Holy Spirit, the threefold predic-
ation does not result in plural number. The risk of that, as has been said, attends only on
those who distinguish Them according to merit. But Catholic Christians, allowing no differ-
ence of merit in God, assuming Him to be Pure Form and believing Him to he nothing else
than His own essence, rightly regard the statement "the Father is God, the Son is God the
Holy Spirit is God, and this Trinity is one God," not as an enumeration of different things
but as a reiteration of one and the same thing, like the statement, "blade and brand are one
sword" or "sun, sun, and sun are one sun."
Let this be enough for the present to establish my meaning and to show that not every
repetition of units produces number and plurality. Still in saying "Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit," we are not using Synonymous terms. "Brand and blade " are the same and identical,
but
"Father, Son, and Holy Spirit'' though the same, are not identical. This point deserves
a moment's consideration. When they ask, "Is the Father the same as the Son?" Catholics
15
e.g. if I say "one, one, one," I enounce three unities.
16
The same words are used to illustrate the same matter in the Comment.
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