For many years, I wrote about the Trinity without any strong emotional attachment. It was a concept I respected, studied, and referenced—but it remained largely intellectual. When I first encountered the idea of the Thought Adjuster, however, something shifted. My understanding of God became more intimate and personal. That realization stirred deep appreciation and love, as if my mind had opened into a new relational space with the divine.
Still, the Trinity itself felt distant—important, yes, but abstract and aloof.
That began to change as I worked through my trilogy on Jesus and delved more deeply into the roles of the Holy Spirit and the Spirit of Truth. As my focus shifted from abstract doctrine to lived spiritual experience, I found myself drawn into the Trinity—not merely what it is, but how it operates in the believer's life. A new understanding gradually emerged. I began to see the Trinity not as a remote theological structure, but as a living, relational unity—the very foundation upon which reality itself rests. Even more striking was the recognition of how this triune reality works within human personality, guiding, nurturing, and drawing us toward God even as it prepares us for eternal life.
To my own surprise, this understanding stirred my heart. Never in a million years would I have imagined that contemplating the Trinity could evoke such love, gratitude, and emotional depth. What had once felt distant and intellectual became personal and relational. That experience ultimately moved me to write The Trinity: The Living Foundation of All Reality.
Because how we understand God quietly shapes how we understand reality—and how we understand reality shapes how we live.
A universe grounded in relational unity invites a very different way of seeing existence. It suggests that love precedes creation, that purpose underlies structure, and that personal growth is woven into the fabric of the cosmos. In such a universe, human life is neither accidental nor insignificant; it is participatory. We are not merely observers of reality—we are contributors to its unfolding.
This perspective also offers insight into why theological differences arise among religious traditions, and even within them. Such differences rarely stem from a lack of sincerity or devotion. More often, they reflect the inherent challenge of apprehending infinite reality through finite understanding. When any aspect of God is emphasized in isolation from the larger relational whole, interpretations naturally diverge.
As our grasp of the triune nature of God deepens, it becomes possible to hold these differences within a wider frame—one that fosters mutual respect, meaningful appreciation, and progressive understanding rather than division. Unity, in this sense, does not require uniformity. It arises through shared insight into a greater whole.
My hope is that this writing conveys not only the ideas that reshaped my understanding, but the depth of inner change that accompanied them—and that readers, too, may glimpse spiritual insights that deepen their own relationship with the Trinity. If this reflection helps even one person move beyond abstraction into a more living, relational awareness of God, then the journey it represents has been worth sharing.
The book is available from Amazon.
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