the evolution of my views on the Trinity – part 9
This time, some questions that may occur to you about Clarke’s views on the Trinity.
This time, some questions that may occur to you about Clarke’s views on the Trinity.
This time, another great Christian thinker, who I discovered some time around 1998.
Dallas Willard’s The Divine Conspiracy – its effect on my thinking.
Last time, c. 1998-2001, I was a social trinitarian along the lines of Richard Swinburne. While I was on the job market in 1999-2000, my former professor Stephen T. Davis was kind enough to invite me and a friend to attend the Incarnation summit, a follow up to the earlier interdisciplinary Trinity Summit. This was a great privilege, and I pretty much just observed. But… Read More »the evolution of my views on the Trinity – part 6
Thinking about Trinity in grad school, reading Richard Swinburne’s The Christian God.
Just starting to think about the Trinity, as a Masters student.
In this series I’m going to get a bit more personal.
An interview about my background, Philosophy, the evolution of my views.
2015 was a good years for the trinities blog, even apart from the podcast. Below are some highlights, month by month. Also, I want to thank my friend and co-blogger Chad Macintosh for his good contributions this year! January: a new proof of God’s existence, with an assist from Dr. Bart Ehrman? February: Marcus Borg’s atheism March: the evolution of my views on the Trinity – part 9 April: the LORD… Read More »2015: the trinities blog in review
Do Genesis 48, 1 Samuel 3, and Jeremiah 1 refute biblical unitarian views on God and Jesus?
Trinitarian theology is not served by sophistry, cheerleading, or ignoring relevant work. In this episode, I discuss five more apologetics face-plants about the Trinity.
Did fourth century Christians come to a consensus about “the doctrine of the Trinity”?
A conversation on Dr. William Lane Craig’s unique take on the Trinity.
Why we don’t accept this sort of interpretation.
“For all its complexity, the biblical doctrine of the Trinity can be stated in seven simple propositions.”
Is the question absurd? Or does it make sense in light of New Testament teachings?
In this episode I respond to the interesting article “What about This View? How to Defend an Anti-Trinitarian Theology,” by evangelical apologist Dr. Robert M. Bowman Jr.
“The Gospel is Trinitarian.” What does this mean, and is it both true and non-trivial?