Exploring the Foundations of the Ethiopian
Orthodox Tewahedo Church’s Faith
The Mystery of the
Trinity: Part 4
The
mystery of the Holy Trinity stands at the heart of the Orthodox Christian
faith—acknowledged by the Church, yet surpassing human comprehension. Since
this divine mystery cannot be grasped directly through created realities, the
Fathers and scholars (ሊቃውንት) employed carefully chosen illustrations to guide the
faithful toward an understanding of the mystery of the Holy Trinity. Though limited
and incomplete, these illustrations serve as pedagogical tools through
which the Church expresses both the oneness and the Threeness of God. This
essay explores these illustrative approaches used by the Fathers to articulate
the mystery of the Holy Trinity, while acknowledging their inherent
limitations.
Illustrations
of the Mystery of the Trinity (የምስጢረ ሥላሴ አስረጂ ምሳሌዎች)
In the
teaching of the scholars (ሊቃውንት), the mystery of the Trinity is expressed in a manner
consistent with what has been discussed in the previous sections: the Father is
the begetter (ወላዲ), the Son is begotten (ተወላዲ), and
the Holy Spirit proceeds (ሠራፂ). These terms—begetter (ወላዲ), begotten (ተወላዲ), and proceeds (ሠራፂ)—are the names by which the three persons are known
distinctly. Within the faith of the Fathers (በሃይማኖተ አበው), the scholars present illustrative examples to explain this
mystery. However, they consistently describe it as an incomplete example (ምሳሌ ዘይሐጽጽ /ጎደሎ ምሳሌ/), since no created example can fully express the mystery of
the Trinity. Although every example is always less than what it represents,
such illustrations remain useful for teaching, and through them the Church
explains her belief. In light of this, the apostles clearly proclaimed the
oneness and Threeness of the Trinity through the following examples, which
they received from our Lord Jesus Christ and handed down to us according to
apostolic Tradition.
The
oneness and Threeness of the Trinity are illustrated through the example of the
human soul. A human soul possesses threeness within itself, listed as being
a heart (ልብነት), being a word (ቃልነት), and being a life (ሕይወትነት). Accordingly, the Father is illustrated by the soul’s
heart (ልብነት), the Son by the soul’s
word (ቃልነት), and the Holy Spirit by
the soul’s life (ሕይወትነት). Similar to the
Trinity, the soul derives its heart, word, and life from itself. Because the
human being is like God’s soul in this respect, God said, “ሰውን በመልካችን እንደ ምሳሌአችን እንፍጠር።” (Gen. 1:26). Therefore, we confess that the Father is God,
the Son is God, and the Holy Spirit is God; yet they are not called three gods,
but one God (አብ አምላክ ነው፣ ወልድም አምላክ ነው፣ መንፈስ ቅዱስም አምላክ ነው ነገር ግን ሦስት አማልክት አይባሉም፣ አንድ አምላክ እንጂ)።
The
oneness and Threeness of the Trinity are illustrated by the sun.
Although the sun is one, it also possesses threeness: its circle (ክበቡ), its light (ብርሃኑ), and its heat (ሙቀቱ). Accordingly, the Father is illustrated by the sun’s
circle (በክበቡ), the Son by its light (በብርሃኑ), and the Holy Spirit by its heat (በሙቀቱ). For this reason, Aba Hiryiakos, in the Liturgy of St.
Mary, says: “The Father is the sun, the Son is the sun, the Holy Spirit is the
sun, above all one true Sun” (አብ ፀሐይ ነው፣ ወልድ ፀሐይ ነው፣ መንፈስ ቅዱስ ፀሐይ ነው፣ ከሁሉ በላይ የሚሆን አንድ የእውነት ጸሐይ ነው።). The coexistence of these three natures of the sun does not
imply three suns, but one sun. Just as the circle (ክበብ), light (ብርሃን), and heat (ሙቀት) of the sun are inseparable, so the Son was begotten of the
Father and the Holy Spirit proceeded from the Father, without succession (ያለመቀዳደም).
Likewise, just as only the light (ብርሃን) of the sun is united with our eyes, so from the Trinity
the Son, Jesus Christ—who is called the true light (እውነተኛ ብርሃን)—united human nature.
The
oneness and Threeness of the Holy Trinity are illustrated by fire.
Although fire is one, it is known through three inseparable realities: its body
(አካሉ), its light (ብርሃኑ), and its heat (ዋዕዩ / ሙቀቱ). The Father is illustrated in the body of the fire (በአካሉ); the
Son is illustrated in the light of the fire (በብርሃኑ); and the Holy Spirit is illustrated in the heat of the
fire (በዋዕዩ / በሙቀቱ). For this reason, Aba
Hiryiakos, in the Liturgy of the Holy Virgin Mary, declares: “The Father is
fire, the Son is fire, and the Holy Spirit is fire, one fire of life who is in
the Highest.” “አብ እሳት ነው ፣ ወልድ እሳት ነው ፣ መንፈስ ቅዱስ እሳት ነው፣ በልዕልና ያለ አንድ የሕይወት እሳት ነው።” Scripture also affirms
this truth, saying, “አምላክህ እግዚአብሔር የሚበላ እሳት ቀናተኛም አምላክ ነውና።” (Deut. 4:24). Our Lord
Jesus Christ Himself taught the apostles that the mystery of the Trinity is
illustrated by the sun and by fire, saying, “ I, my Father, and the Holy
Spirit, are fire (እሳት), flame (ነበልባል), and flamed charcoal (ፍሕም).” The apostles likewise recorded this teaching in the book
called Clement (see The Liturgy of Selestu Meit ( The Liturgy of the Nicene
Fathers), Verse 48 (ቅዳሴ ዘሠለስቱ ምእት ቁጥር 48).
The
oneness and Threeness of the Holy Trinity are illustrated by the sea.
Though the sea is one in essence (በባሕርይው), it is manifested in three ways: its sphere (ስፍሐት/ ስፋት), its moisture (ርጥበት), and its movement or tide (እንቅስቃሴ/ ማዕበል). The Father is illustrated by the sphere (በስፍሐቱ), the Son by the moisture (በርጥበቱ), and the Holy Spirit by the movement (በእንቅስቃሴው). When a person enters and swims in the sea, moisture (ርጥበት) covers the body, yet neither the sphere (ስፍሐት) nor the movement (እንቅስቃሴ). Likewise, although the Son alone took a human body, He was
never separated from the Father and the Holy Spirit in His divinity. He
remained one with them in essence (በባሕርይ). Therefore, even though the Son became man, it was not
necessary for the Father and the Holy Spirit to take a human body.
The
illustrations discussed above are spoken of as one soul (አንድ ነፍስ), one sun (አንድ ፀሐይ), one fire (አንድ እሳት), and one sea (አንድ ባሕር), and not as three souls, three suns, three fires, or
three seas. In the same way, although the Holy Trinity is spoken of as
three in person (በአካል), in name (በስም), and in work (በግብር), the Trinity is one in nature (በባሕርይ), in existence (በሕልውና), in will (በፈቃድ), and
in divinity (በመለኮት). Therefore, the Father,
the Son, and the Holy Spirit are not called different gods (አማልክት), but one God in three persons. Saint Basil of
Caesarea expresses this mystery by saying that the Father, the Son, and the
Holy Spirit, while they are one, are also three, and while they are three, are
also one; three in person, yet one in divinity (አብ ወልድ መንፈስ ቅዱስ አንድ ሲሆኑ ሦስት ሦስት ሲሆኑ አንድ ናቸው፣ በአካል ሦስት ሲሆኑ በመለኮት አንድ ናቸው።). All the illustrations presented above are intended solely
to help human understanding, as no example drawn from creation can fully
capture the mystery of the Trinity. While they are useful for explanation,
these illustrations remain incomplete and are therefore called (ሕጹጽ / ጎደሎ / ሙሉ ያልሆነ ምሳሌ).
Conclusion
The illustrations of the soul, the sun, fire, and the sea presented above all point to one fundamental truth: the Holy Trinity is one God in essence and three in persons. These illustrations help the human mind to understand the mystery of the Trinity, but they can not explain it fully, since no created image can fully express the uncreated God. The Church employs such illustrations not as exact representations, but as incomplete guides. By helping believers understand the mystery of the Trinity through such teaching methods, the Church safeguards the true confession of faith—proclaiming, without confusion or division, that the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit are one in divinity (በመለኮት) and undivided in essence (በባሕርይ).
May God grant us understanding of this resource and enable us to continue in the next part.
.jpeg)