
Questions and Answers on the Trinity
25. How many Persons are there in God?
In God there are three divine Persons--the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost.
(a) Unaided by divine revelation, the human mind could not know the existence of the
Blessed Trinity because it is a supernatural mystery.3 Even after God has revealed the
existence of the Blessed Trinity, we cannot understand it fully. When we believe, on the
word of God, that there are three Persons in one God, we do not believe that three Persons
are one Person, or that three gods are one God; this would be a contradiction.
26. Is the Father God?
The Father is God and the first Person of the Blessed Trinity.
(a) The first Person of the Blessed Trinity is called the Father because from all
eternity He begets the second Person, His only-begotten Son.
(b) God the Father is called the first Person not because He is greater or older than
the other two Persons, but because He is unbegotten.
27. Is the Son God?
The Son is God and the second Person of the Blessed Trinity.
(a) The second Person of the Blessed Trinity is called the Son because from all
eternity, He is the only begotten of the Father. Proceeding from the Father, the Son is
called the Divine Word or the Wisdom of the Father.
28. Is the Holy Ghost God?
The Holy Ghost is God and the third Person of the Blessed Trinity.
(a) The third Person of the Blessed Trinity is called the Holy Ghost because from all
eternity He is breathed forth, as it were, by the Father and the Son. Proceeding from the
Father and the Son, He is called the Gift or Love of the Father and the Son.
(b) The word "Ghost" applied to the third Person means "Spirit."
29. What do we mean by the Blessed Trinity?
By the Blessed Trinity we mean one and the same God in three divine Persons.
30. Are the three divine Persons really distinct from one another?
The three divine Persons are really distinct from one another.
(a) Although the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost are distinct Persons, they are not
distinct in nature. The nature of the Father is entirely the nature of the Son; and the
nature of the Father and the Son is entirely the nature of the Holy Ghost.
31. Are the three divine Persons perfectly equal to one another?
The three divine Persons are perfectly equal to one another, because all are one and
the same God.
(a) No one of the three Persons precedes the others in time or in power, but all are
equally eternal and all-powerful because they have the same divine nature.
32. How are the three divine Persons, though really distinct from one another, one
and the same God?
The three divine Persons, though really distinct from one another, are one and the same
God because all have one and the same divine nature.
(a) Because the three divine Persons have one and the same divine nature, they have the
same perfections and the same external works are produced by them. But in order that we
may better know the three divine Persons, certain perfections and works are attributed to
each Person; for example, omnipotence and the works of omnipotence, such as creation, to
the Father; wisdom and the works of wisdom, such as enlightenment, to the Son, love and
the works of love, such as sanctification, to the Holy Ghost.
33. Can we fully understand how the three divine Persons, though really distinct
from one another, are one and the same God?
We cannot fully understand how the three divine Persons, though really distinct from
one another, are one and the same God because this is a supernatural mystery.
34. What is a supernatural mystery?
A supernatural mystery is a truth which we cannot fully understand, but which we firmly
believe because we have God's word for it.
(a) In addition to those truths which can be attained by man's natural reason, there
are certain mysteries hidden in God which we cannot know without divine revelation, but
which we must believe because God has revealed them. Divine mysteries by their very nature
are far above the power of human understanding and even when revealed and accepted on
faith they remain obscure during our life on earth. To understand these things fully, a
finite mind would have to comprehend the infinite.
(b) In heaven there will be a fuller understanding of these mysteries, but never an
infinite comprehension of them.
It is reasonable to believe supernatural mysteries revealed by God because He can
neither deceive nor be deceived. In our everyday life we believe many things on the word
of human beings even though at times they deceive or are deceived.
The Baltimore Catechism, no. 3, Lesson 3.
Electronic text (c) Copyright EWTN 1997. All rights reserved.
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