– Chapter 3 –
The Road Ahead for Biblical Monotheism
A theological awakening
Anew openness to God’s word is sweeping through the world in a way not seen before. It moves with quiet power, breaching religious and denominational barriers.
It is summed up in one word, freedom, specifically the freedom to read God’s word without being controlled by dogmatic traditions. At long last, after two thousand years, that freedom has arrived, thanks to the Internet and other transformational changes in society.
But hasn’t that freedom always been with us for 2,000 years? The answer is “yes” for some, but “no” for the vast majority who have lived in the world, even the Christian world. That is because great and formidable obstacles have for centuries stood in the way of those who hunger and thirst for the pure word of God. These barriers have had to be dismantled one by one, brick by brick, until the final and greatest barrier was overcome (partially) in the 21st century.
The first barrier was the dire lack of Bibles even among church leaders in the centuries before the arrival of the printing press. Today more copies of the Bible are produced in one month than in the first 1,400 years of church history. Constantine’s edict of AD 331 to produce copies of the Bible for Constantinople involved the production of only fifty handwritten copies (my iPad alone has 30 Bibles). But even after the printing press had been invented, the church had at times brutally suppressed the translation of the Bible into the common languages of the people.
The second barrier was general illiteracy in the early church. Widely quoted studies have suggested a literacy rate of 10-15% in classical Athens and a lower rate in the Roman Empire of the first century. In those days, one could be counted as literate if he or she could sign his or her own name or write the letters of an alphabet. Wikipedia article Literacy explains how literacy in Europe increased rapidly in the past five centuries; in earlier times, general illiteracy was the norm in much of Europe.
The third barrier was the non-specialist’s lack of access to the original languages of the Bible even up to the 19th century. The phrase “lost in translation” may sound tired but it reminds us that mistranslation can happen even between modern languages. The problem is greater when it comes to translating the Bible, not only because its original languages are ancient (Hebrew, Aramaic, Greek) but also because there is a real danger of doctrinal bias in Bible translation. The good news is that today we can study the Bible in its original languages if we are willing to invest the time and effort to learn them, and the money to acquire a small library of books and references.
The final barrier, overcome partially, is the trinitarian suppression of non-trinitarian teaching. The barrier was erected at the Council of Nicaea (325) where an anathema was cast on all dissenters in the entire Christian world, and also later at the Council of Constantinople (381). The barrier stands to this day, as seen in tragic episodes of history such as the burning at the stake of Michael Servetus.
In the 1970s and 1980s, the only places in Canada where I could buy good Christian books were the Christian bookstores located in the major cities. The problem was that the selection of books was censored by the doctrinal leanings of the bookstores and/or their parent organizations. The censorship was not total, however, for the stores were willing to stock books that were liberal, atheistic, or even hostile to Christianity. But they would never stock a Christian book with a non-trinitarian perspective even if it is based on the Bible because such a book, all the more so if it has solid biblical support, would be viewed by the church as being deadlier than atheistic books. A book may be rooted in the Bible and adhere to sola Scriptura, yet is viewed as anathema for not falling in line with trinitarian dogma.
The power to suppress a biblically-based book merely for not adhering to trinitarian dogma will inevitably shape our interpretation of the Bible. I have experienced this kind of power first hand. Because the bookstores had no books that deviated from trinitarian dogma, for years I literally equated trinitarianism with the Christian faith.
Another example of the trinitarian suppression of non-trinitarian doctrine is seen in the case of the Evangelical Theological Society which, at its founding in 1949, had only one doctrinal requirement for society membership: acceptance of biblical inerrancy. So far so good. But 41 years later, in 1990, a new requirement was added: adherence to trinitarianism. But if trinitarianism is really rooted in Scripture as trinitarians say it is, why was it necessary for them to add the second requirement when the first would have safeguarded the doctrine (assuming that it was biblically based in the first place)? What happened to the bold confidence in sola Scriptura — Scripture alone? ETS started as a biblical society but ended as a doctrinal society.
Ironically, the two requirements for ETS membership — accepting the inerrancy of the Bible and accepting trinitarianism — are incongruous because the word “trinity” is not even found in the Bible.
Finally, the supreme example of trinitarian control is seen in the fact that most Bibles today are translated with a trinitarian bias. But that is a topic for another day.
The final barrier is being eroded
But things had changed by 2009, the year I moved back to Canada after being away two decades. The formerly largest Christian bookstores in Montreal are now smaller than what they used to be. Collectively they have a reduced and aging inventory of books amid a plethora of bookmarks, greetings cards, and Bible cases. (I still show my support to these bookstores, having bought many books from them in the past eleven years.) Christian bookstores in other cities may fare better but none can stop a global development that is neutralizing any effort to suppress non-trinitarian titles.
Today you can order Christian books of any theological persuasion from Amazon.com, making it impossible for any church to silence a writer who speaks the truth about God. Every book now has a distribution channel to a global audience.
Today you can Google for monotheistic resources and expositions of God’s word which in an earlier era would be suppressed by the bastions of dogma. With every passing year, we see new websites and blogs and books that uphold biblical monotheism.
Today’s churchgoers are less likely to blindly accept doctrines from the church, and are trained to search the Internet for alternative interpretations that may have stronger biblical support.
Despite the openness of the Internet, the final barrier — doctrinal suppression — still stands to some extent. But in practice, this has been neutralized for those who seek the truth. For the one who is open minded, there is now a clear channel to the truth of God’s word that is free of doctrinal control. The Internet is a two-edged sword that can used for promulgating the truth or for spreading lies. But with prayer and God’s help (John 7:17; James 1:5), the seeker of the truth is now empowered to arrive at the truth, and to experience God in a deeper way on account of his or her deeper understanding of the only true God.
Ultimately the key to the successful promulgation of biblical monotheism will be God’s help and the fact that trinitarianism finds weak support in God’s word.
(c) 2021 Christian Disciples Church