Triads and Trinity
By (Author) John Gwyn Griffiths
University of Wales Press
University of Wales Press
25th October 1996
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Theology
Nature and existence of God and of the Divine
231.044
Hardback
300
Width 140mm, Height 216mm
Was the idea of the Trinity-that One God exists in Three Persons and One Substance - influenced by pre-Christian traditions It is well known that the New Testament offers no such doctrine, and there is no evidence that Jesus of Nazareth regarded himself as a member of the Trinity. The doctrine was developed during the first four Christian centuries, culminating in the Council of Constantinople in AD 381. The world of the early Christian centuries in which the Trinity was developed as a tenet of belief included several religious and philosophical systems with similar beliefs. Triads and Trinity examines three possible areas of impact: Judaism, the religion of Egypt, and various Greek traditions. Whereas a pluralistic concept of God was inherited by Judaism, it eventually accepted a firm monotheism. In Egypt the concept of trinity was of ancient origin, but it flourished especially in the second century AD and afterwards, when the mystery cult of Isis reached its acme of popularity in a Graeco-Egyptian framework which found adherents in many countries of the Roman empire. This Graeco-Egyptian religious amalgam excercised a potent influence on early Christian thinkers, particularly in Alexandria. Using the methods of comparative religion, the distinguished Classicist and Egyptologist J. Gwyn Griffiths has examined the origins of the doctrine of the Trinity and has based his conclusions on a thorough analysis of the original sources in Greek, Latin, Egyptian, Coptic and Hebrew.
'Professor Griffiths's magnificent book provides a useful reminder that the history of Christianity cannot meaningfully be separated from that of the rest of the ancient world.' Logos '...prose which combines formidable scholarship with all the oratory of the Welsh chapels. A most intersting book.' Expository Times
John Gwyn Griffiths is Professor Emeritus of Classics and Egyptology at the University of Wales, Swansea.