P1143:4, 104:1.1
The first Urantian revelation leading to the comprehension of the Paradise
Trinity was made by the staff of Prince Caligastia about one-half million
years ago. This earliest Trinity concept was lost to the world in the unsettled
times following the planetary rebellion.
P1143:5, 104:1.2
The second presentation of the Trinity was made by Adam and Eve in the first
and second gardens. These teachings had not been wholly obliterated even in
the times of Machiventa Melchizedek about thirty-five thousand years later,
for the Trinity concept of the Sethites persisted in both Mesopotamia and
Egypt but more especially in India, where it was long perpetuated in Agni,
the Vedic three-headed fire god.
P1143:6, 104:1.3
The third presentation of the Trinity was made by Machiventa Melchizedek,
and this doctrine was symbolized by the three concentric circles which the
sage of Salem wore on his breast plate. But Machiventa found it very difficult
to teach the Palestinian Bedouins about the Universal Father, the Eternal
Son, and the Infinite Spirit. Most of his disciples thought that the Trinity
consisted of the three Most Highs of Norlatiadek; a few conceived of the Trinity
as the System Sovereign, the Constellation Father, and the local universe
Creator Deity; still fewer even remotely grasped the idea of the Paradise
association of the Father, Son, and Spirit.
P1144:1, 104:1.4
Through the activities of the Salem missionaries the Melchizedek teachings
of the Trinity gradually spread throughout much of Eurasia and northern Africa.
It is often difficult to distinguish between the triads and the trinities
in the later Andite and the post-Melchizedek ages, when both concepts to a
certain extent intermingled and coalesced.
P1144:2, 104:1.5
Among the Hindus the trinitarian concept took root as Being, Intelligence,
and Joy. (A later Indian conception was Brahma, Siva, and Vishnu.) While the
earlier Trinity portrayals were brought to India by the Sethite priests, the
later ideas of the Trinity were imported by the Salem missionaries and were
developed by the native intellects of India through a compounding of these
doctrines with the evolutionary triad conceptions.
P1144:3, 104:1.6
The Buddhist faith developed two doctrines of a trinitarian nature: The earlier
was Teacher, Law, and Brotherhood; that was the presentation made by Gautama
Siddhartha. The later idea, developing among the northern branch of the followers
of Buddha, embraced Supreme Lord, Holy Spirit, and Incarnate Savior.
P1144:4, 104:1.7
And these ideas of the Hindus and Buddhists were real trinitarian postulates,
that is, the idea of a threefold manifestation of a monotheistic God. A true
trinity conception is not just a grouping together of three separate gods.
P1144:5, 104:1.8
The Hebrews knew about the Trinity from the Kenite traditions of the days
of Melchizedek, but their monotheistic zeal for the one God, Yahweh, so eclipsed
all such teachings that by the time of Jesus' appearance the Elohim doctrine
had been practically eradicated from Jewish theology. The Hebrew mind could
not reconcile the trinitarian concept with the monotheistic belief in the
One Lord, the God of Israel.
P1144:6, 104:1.9
The followers of the Islamic faith likewise failed to grasp the idea of the
Trinity. It is always difficult for an emerging monotheism to tolerate trinitarianism
when confronted by polytheism. The trinity idea takes best hold of those religions
which have a firm monotheistic tradition coupled with doctrinal elasticity.
The great monotheists, the Hebrews and Mohammedans, found it difficult to
distinguish between worshiping three gods, polytheism, and trinitarianism,
the worship of one Deity existing in a triune manifestation of divinity and
personality.
P1144:7, 104:1.10
Jesus taught his apostles the truth regarding the persons of the Paradise
Trinity, but they thought he spoke figuratively and
symbolically. Having been
nurtured in Hebraic monotheism, they found it difficult to entertain any belief
that seemed to conflict with their dominating concept of Yahweh. And the early
Christians inherited the Hebraic prejudice against the Trinity concept.
P1144:8, 104:1.11
The first Trinity of Christianity was proclaimed at Antioch and consisted
of God, his Word, and his Wisdom. Paul knew of the Paradise Trinity of Father,
Son, and Spirit, but he seldom preached about it and made mention thereof
in only a few of his letters to the newly forming churches. Even then, as
did his fellow apostles, Paul confused Jesus, the Creator Son of the local
universe, with the Second Person of Deity, the Eternal Son of Paradise.
P1144:9, 104:1.12
The Christian concept of the Trinity, which began to gain recognition near
the close of the first century after Christ, was comprised of the Universal
Father, the Creator Son of Nebadon, and the Divine Minister of Salvington
-- Mother Spirit of the local universe and creative consort of the Creator
Son.
P1145:1, 104:1.13
Not since the times of Jesus has the factual identity of the Paradise Trinity
been known on Urantia (except by a few individuals to whom it was especially
revealed) until its presentation in these revelatory disclosures. But though
the Christian concept of the Trinity erred in fact, it was practically true
with respect to spiritual relationships. Only in its philosophic implications
and cosmological consequences did this concept suffer embarrassment: It has
been difficult for many who are cosmic minded to believe that the Second Person
of Deity, the second member of an infinite Trinity, once dwelt on Urantia;
and while in spirit this is true, in actuality it is not a fact. The Michael
Creators fully embody the divinity of the Eternal Son, but they are not the
absolute personality.