Do our images of "one God in three persons" reflect God well?
Throughout history, Christians have pictured the relationships between Father, Son, and analogies. Such illustrations–some from the West from Latin America, Asia, Africa, and more–come freighted with theological ramifications that the church has rejected (heresies) or embraced (doctrines). In Three in One, William David Spencer shares a lifetime of insights from teaching within the global church, bringing fresh images and analogies of the Trinity to deepen our theological vocabulary.
Drawing from his extensive teaching in geographically and culturally diverse contexts and his artist's passion for evocative words and visuals, Spencer offers readers a rich, multifaceted, and practical exploration of the Trinity. Alongside historical and contemporary theology and biblical studies, he considers the strengths and shortcomings of various analogies used to explain the Trinity, such as:
● Light
● Water
● Musical harmonies
● The totem pole
● The Celtic knot
● The human body
● The family
About the Author:
William David Spencer (ThD, Boston University School of Theology) is Distinguished Adjunct Professor of Theology and the Arts at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary's Boston campus (Center for Urban Ministerial Education). He has authored, coauthored, or coedited eighteen books, including The Global God: Multicultural Evangelical Views of God and Global Voices on Biblical Equality: Women and Men Serving Together in the Church, as well as hundreds of publications in journals and periodicals. He has served in urban ministry for more than fifty-five years.