Have you ever asked the specific question: Who is Jesus Christ? 

According to historic Christianity, Jesus Christ is the God-man (a single person with both a divine and human nature). Through his divine nature, he is the Spirit-anointed Son of the Father. That means that as the Christ (meaning Messiah or anointed one), Jesus was uniquely anointed by God the Holy Spirit for his earthly Messianic ministry. And as the Son of God, Jesus’s Sonship is derived from being God the Father’s unique Son. 

As Christian theologian Michael Reeves notes, “When you proclaim Jesus, the Spirit-anointed Son of the Father, you proclaim the triune God.”1                                  

Thus Jesus Christ’s true identity is revealed through his relationship to the Spirit and the Father. So, theologically speaking you can’t have Jesus Christ without the Trinity. In light of this relationship, is it possible for Christians to fail to focus adequately on the Trinity in our theology and worship? 

Interestingly enough, Yale historical theologian Jaroslav Pelikan, who was known as “The Doctrine Doctor,” said, “You evangelicals talk too much about Jesus and don’t spend enough time thinking about the Holy Trinity.”2

I don’t know if one can actually talk too much about Jesus, but I think Pelikan is correct that too many of us don’t spend enough time thinking about the Trinity. When we embrace the true identity of Jesus Christ, we are also introduced to the Trinity.

Trinitarian-Focused Worship
In my own experience, Pelikan seems to be correct in his assessment that evangelicals at times do not place the person of Jesus as the God-man in his proper trinitarian context. Now that certainly doesn’t mean evangelicals don’t affirm the Trinity, for they surely recognize its truth and doctrinal importance. But it’s possible to focus so much on Jesus that we fail to appreciate what his incarnational coming into the world reveals about his relationship to both the Father and the Holy Spirit.

One of the things that attracted me to the Anglican tradition is The Book of Common Prayer’s deep liturgical focus on the Trinity. In fact, being interested in and encouraged by God’s triune nature, in one Sunday morning service I counted 20 explicit references to the Trinity in the liturgy and that’s not counting formal hymns and the sermon.

The great contemporary Christian theologian J. I. Packer is said to have called The Book of Common Prayer the Bible arranged for worship.3 So in this extraordinary text of historic Christianity you get the major themes of Scripture arranged so you can recite, confess, and pray them while worshipping the triune God. 

For those evangelical Christians who are leery about the use of liturgy in a church’s worship service, there’s no need to worry that The Book of Common Prayer replaces or competes with Scripture as God’s unique Word. Why? It’s estimated that The Book of Common Prayer is made up of about 85% biblical quotations.3 So The Book of Common Prayer is an ecclesiastical tool or instrument that uses Scripture for worship of the triune God.

I would add that a person doesn’t have to be Anglican to benefit from The Book of Common Prayer. It is readily available as a private devotional text. So if you want a devotional resource that will help you focus more on the Trinity in your life of faith, I invite you to get a copy of The Book of Common Prayer and read and pray through it. It’s one of historic Christianity’s masterpieces of theology. I use it as part of my personal devotional time as well as in my Bible studies.

Reflections: Your Turn 
Have you used The Book of Common Prayer in your public or private devotional worship? If so, what do you think of it as a devotional resource?

Check out more from Reasons to Believe @Reasons.org

Endnotes

  1. Michael Reeves, Delighting in the Trinity: An Introduction to the Christian Faith (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity, 2012), 37–38.
  2. This is from an interview between Jaroslav Pelikan and David Neff, former editor of Christianity Today. See “Q&A: Bishop Kallistos Ware on the Fullness and the Center,” Christianity Today, July 6, 2011, 41.
  3. See David Roseberry, The Bible Arranged for Worship: Our Book of Common Prayer, Anglican Compass, January 26, 2021.

About The Author

Kenneth R. Samples

I believe deeply that "all truth is God’s truth." That historic affirmation means that when we discover and grasp truth in the world and in life we move closer to its divine Author. This approach relies on the Christian idea of God’s two revelatory books - the metaphorical book of nature and the literal book of Scripture. As an RTB scholar I have a great passion to help people understand and see the truth and relevance of Christianity's truth-claims. My writings and lectures at RTB focus on showing how the great doctrinal truths of the faith (the Trinity, the Incarnation, the Atonement, creation ex nihilo, salvation by grace, etc.) are uniquely compatible with reason. This approach reflects the historic Christian apologetics statement - "faith seeking understanding." I work to help myself and others fulfill Peter's words in 2 Peter 3:18: "But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. To him be glory both now and forever! Amen." As an RTB scholar I have a great passion to help people understand and see the truth and relevance of Christianity's truth-claims. • Biography • Resources • Upcoming Events • Promotional Items Kenneth Richard Samples began voraciously studying Christian philosophy and theology when his thirst for purpose found relief in the Bible. He earned his undergraduate degree in philosophy and social science from Concordia University and his MA in theological studies from Talbot School of Theology. For seven years, Kenneth worked as Senior Research Consultant and Correspondence Editor at the Christian Research Institute (CRI) and regularly cohosted the popular call-in radio program, The Bible Answer Man, with Dr. Walter Martin. As a youth, Kenneth wrestled with "unsettling feelings of meaninglessness and boredom," driving him to seek answers to life's big questions. An encounter with Christian philosophy in Mere Christianity by C. S. Lewis led Kenneth to examine the New Testament and "finally believe that Jesus Christ is the divine Son of God, the Lord and Savior of the world." From then on, he pursued an intellectually satisfying faith. Today, as senior research scholar at Reasons to Believe (RTB), Kenneth uses what he's learned to help others find the answers to life's questions. He encourages believers to develop a logically defensible faith and challenges skeptics to engage Christianity at a philosophical level. He is the author of Without a Doubt and A World of Difference, and has contributed to numerous other books, including: Lights in the Sky and Little Green Men, The Cult of the Virgin, and Prophets of the Apocalypse. He has written articles for Christianity Today and The Christian Research Journal, and regularly participates in RTB's podcasts, including Straight Thinking, a podcast dedicated to encouraging Christians to utilize sound reasoning in their apologetics. He also writes for the ministry's daily blog, Today’s New Reason to Believe. An avid speaker and debater, Kenneth has appeared on numerous radio programs such as Voice America Radio, Newsmakers, The Frank Pastore Show, Stand to Reason, White Horse Inn, Talk New York, and Issues Etc., as well as participated in debates and dialogues on topics relating to Christian doctrine and apologetics. He currently lectures for the Master of Arts program in Christian Apologetics at Biola University. Kenneth also teaches adult classes at Christ Reformed Church in Southern California. Over the years Kenneth has held memberships in the American Philosophical Association, the Evangelical Philosophical Society, the Evangelical Theological Society, and the Evangelical Press Association. The son of a decorated World War II veteran, Kenneth is an enthusiastic student of American history, particularly the Civil War and WWII. His favorite Christian thinkers include Athanasius, Augustine, Pascal, and C. S. Lewis. He greatly enjoys the music of the Beatles and is a die-hard Los Angeles Lakers fan. Kenneth lives in Southern California with his wife, Joan, and their three children.



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