A call for a Trinitarian missional alliance
The Bible is primarily, exclusively, and essentially about the work of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Christianity, by extension, is a religion of this Triune God. Sadly, the Trinitarian doctrine that helped to unify Christians in the early church has lost its appeal as a point of alliance for Christians today. Thankfully, Philip Ryken and Micheal LeFebvre have provided what I consider to be a way forward in unifying Christians to see that church fulfills her calling in Our Triune God: Living in the Love of the Three-in-One.
The authors remind readers that to know God is to know the Creator as Triune: “We praise the Father, Son, and the Holy Spirit for having equal, divine majesty, while at the same time honoring each Person’s unique personality.” The first chapter explains that the plan of salvation requires the active engagement of every Person of the Trinity (Ephesians 1:3-14). Many Christians forget that no one comes to Christ without the active intervention of the Holy Spirit to respond the good news about God the Father and Son (1 Corinthians 12:3). Moreover, it is the Triune God who sanctifies and perseveres believers to the end.
In chapter two, readers are reminded that the Trinity is a mystery like many of the truths of Christianity. God’s Triune nature is beyond the comprehension limits of created and finite human beings and has puzzled Christians from the beginning. But the entire Bible bears witness to God’s Triune nature.
Chapter three encourages Christians to employ Trinitarian thinking in practical day-to-day spirituality. The saints are loved and cared for by all three persons of the Trinity and all three can be prayed to and worshiped daily.
The fourth chapter rightly exalts the Triune God as the source of Christian joy, worship, celebration, and mission. The Christian life is one of joyous gratitude for the work of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
If there is going to be another Great Awakening in America it will only happen through a Christianity united in mission around the work of the Triune God. Currently there is no place for Bible-believing, gospel-centered, Christ-exalting, mission-driven churches to partner locally or nationally for the movement of the Kingdom.
Gospel-focused American Christianity remains divided: The Neo-Calvinist and Reformed churches rally around groups like The Gospel Coalition, Together for the Gospel, and Acts 29; gospel-centered Lutherans mostly remain among themselves in denominations like the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod and the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod; traditional Wesleyans remain clustered in denominations like The Wesleyan Church and the Church of God (Holiness); Pentecostals flourish in denominations like the Assemblies of God and the Church of God in Christ; and Southern and National Baptist conventions are worlds unto themselves. And the list goes on. The church in America needs something that puts Jesus’ prayer for unity in John 17 on display before the nations for the sake of Kingdom mission.
Christians of all stripes would do well to rally around the Trinity because it encourages each communion to bring forth its strengths, and challenges each tradition to be humble about the mysteries of faith that divide us yet do not constrain the greatest commandment of all Christians to love God and to love their neighbors (Matthew 22:36-40). Moreover, a Trinitarian center would be multi-ethnic, economically diverse, geographically dispersed, and truly represent the possibilities of Revelation 7:9.
Evangelism, social justice, apologetics, charity, and the like are held in good tension when centered on the Trinity. The Trinity keeps us from extremes. The possibilities are endless. Ultimately, there would be nothing more honoring to the Triune God than to have the people of God in an alliance around all three Persons. The Ryken-LeFrebvre book is good place for this alliance to begin.

















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back to top15 Comments to “A call for a Trinitarian missional alliance”
Missional is a term that needs to be shunned.
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Thank you, Anthony, for these reconciling thoughts and for letting us know about this book worthy of reading.
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Pastor Von, I agree. The emergent or emerging church has adopted the term for something that has little to nothing to do with Christian missions.
I would like to point out that I find it silly that these authors think that Christians have to read another book about the Trinity. We know the doctrine of the Trinity and understand the biblical teachings on the Triune God. I do not think that “many” Christians forget these things. I don’t see the groups that Bradley listed denying the Trinity or arguing among themselves about God’s Triune nature.
Furthermore, I am not that hung-up on unity. All followers of Christ are one in Him. It is a fact that we are in unity. It doesn’t mean that we all have to agree. Even if we all acknowledge that we all believe in the Trinity, we will still disagree about things like baptism and spiritual gifts. That doesn’t mean that we are not united. As I said, we are united by our faith in Christ.
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We seem to love labels. But labeling things rarely does more than foster divisions. It seems to me that what we need more than labels is actual interaction with The Fullness of God by individuals in local churches. Actually, I think that is happening more than is acknowledged by those simply looking for ways to categorize religion in the world.
I think Anthony’s comment:
“Currently there is no place for Bible-believing, gospel-centered, Christ-exalting, mission-driven churches to partner locally or nationally for the movement of the Kingdom.”
overlooks the fact that there is movement of the Kingdom in those very churches he mentioned even if there are no official, widely accepted labels used to categorize them.
Jesus used the simple label “My Church”, and He is still building it. And even though Hell is doing its best to prevail against God’s Church, it is still failing, and God is still building. Thanks, not to our labels, but to the Powerful Grace of The Triune God.
I do believe focusing on God is Anthony’s main point.
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While I am familiar with the authors, I have not read the specific book Anthony recommends. I assume that it is not simply a theological discussion of the doctrine of the Trinity, but a challenge to realize more intentionally the dynamically relational nature of Christ’s Church. That is a topic worth continued study and growth.
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Dittos to #2. Thank you Sir!!
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I two agree with Kyle. I disagree that Southern Baptist, the only one on that list I know about, are not a world unto themselves. Teaching and preaching God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit are central in the churchis I’ve attended.
As a Baptist, I find myself in theological disagreement with many people I love and respect. Including many on this blog.
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Trinity = three gods
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I wonder why atheists refuse Biblical definitions of terms and expect believers to accept their definitions. Their fascination with things they insist are non-existent is fascinating.
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Actually, Atheist-Jew, it doesn’t. If that’s what we meant, we surely would’ve told you.
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“There is nothing quite as sobering as listening to the theologically unwashed presume to lecture a 2,000 year old church.” ~ Thomas Sowell
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I’ve never seen such a succinct statement.
Athiest-Jew knows how to state hs case.
He and Mohammed agree on this.
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From Webster’s 1828 dictionary:
“TRIN’ITY, n. L. trinitas; tres and unus, unitas, one, unity.
In theology, the union of three persons in one Godhead, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.”
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At the first new gathering, what if someone states, “I don’t care what the new name is, my spirit, soul, and body will not bringing the buffet potatoes again.”
:-O
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The small churches in local communities who are working together to further the Kingdom don’t have the time or money to advertise that they are working together.
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