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of God which the holy Scriptures give us, and not, through our intellectual 
pride and prejudice, to turn aside from the light, close our eyes, and 
substitute man's philosophy for God's revelation. God Most Merciful gave us this 
holy revelation because man's utmost efforts to find God had failed, as it is 
written: 'Hath 1 not God made foolish the wisdom of the world? For 
seeing that in the wisdom of God the world through its wisdom knew not God, it 
was God's good pleasure, through the foolishness of the preaching 2 
to save them that believe. Seeing that Jews ask for signs, and Greeks seek after 
wisdom: but we preach Christ crucified, unto Jews a stumbling-block, and unto 
Gentiles foolishness; but unto them that are called, both Jews and Greeks, 
Christ the power of God, and the wisdom of God.' The doctrine of the trinity of Hypostases in the unity of the divine nature 
  is doubtless mysterious; but, when we compare it with any of the philosophical 
  dogmas which we have considered above, it must be confessed that it is 
  simplicity itself. There may be something in the scriptural teaching on the 
  nature of God which exceeds the limits of our finite intellect and in that 
  sense is above reason; but it is certainly not contrary to reason, as these 
  philosophical theories are. Nor does the scriptural 
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| DOCTRINE OF THE HOLY  TRINITY | 185 |  |  | doctrine of the Trinity in Unity lead either to pantheism or agnosticism, as 
the human systems of speculation do. In this they tend to render the worship of 
God an absurdity; for who can adore the universe as God, or worship an unknown 
God? Pantheism does away with all distinction between right and wrong; and so 
also does agnosticism, thus abolishing all morality. The scriptural doctrine of 
the Trinity reveals God, enables men to know Him through His Word and His Holy 
Spirit, leads them to hate sin and love holiness, to worship Him in spirit and 
in truth. It also does away with fate, substituting for it the will of an 
All-Wise, All-Good, All-Holy, All-Loving, Heavenly Father. True wisdom 
therefore, the wisdom which is from above, leads us to accept what God has 
taught us about His own most Holy Nature, and not to substitute for it the 
baseless and illogical theories of men, which have neither analogy nor authority 
to support them, and which satisfy neither reason nor conscience.  From what we have already said it will be clear to our honoured readers that 
no philosopher has succeeded by means of his keenness of intellect in solving 
the mystery of the divine nature. In fact we find that all human study and 
effort has failed to fathom the measureless depths of the knowledge of God. The 
finite cannot fully comprehend the infinite. Of God's nature man can know only 
what God has revealed in the sacred Scriptures and in |  |