The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (2527 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
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Trinity, The
.
A predominantly Christian understanding of the inner nature of the Godhead. Trinitarian understandings of God may arise primarily from revelation, as Christians affirm, but they are more widely embedded in a belief that there is an analogical relationship between God and the created or manifest world (see
ANALOGY
): since in this world it is only possible to be a self in a field of selves, the inference is drawn that the interior nature of God must be relational, and not monistically abstract. Among Hindus, the relational character of God may be dipolar, with opposites united in a single character and action, but equally, as in the
Trim
rti
emphasis, it may be of far greater complexity. None of this contradicts the insistence in Islam (though many Muslims suppose that it does) on
taw
d
, the absolute unity of God, since whatever God may turn out to be, it can only be God that God turns out to be—though it so happens that that nature is relational: see also
SAN-I
in Taoism;
TRIK
YA
in Buddhism.
It is, however, in Christianity that the Trinitarian nature of God has been most complexly explored, affirming that there is the one God, who exists in three persons: Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit
. The basis for this doctrine in the Bible consists of threefold formulae like Matthew 28. 19; 1 Peter 1. 2, and Isaiah 6. 3. These passages in no way predicate a God who is eternally three in one, but they set the terms for later thinking toward that end. In the 3rd and early 4th cents., against
Sabellianism
and
Arianism
, the Son and Father were defined as distinct yet coequal and coeternal. In the late 4th cent. the
Cappadocian Fathers
took the final step by understanding the Holy Spirit as of the same status. God was then to be spoken of as one
ousia
(being) in three
hypostases
(persons), and this has remained the orthodox formulation.
Many modern scholars have said that, given the essential mystery of the doctrine, the two kinds of conceptions need not be considered incompatible: the doctrine of the Trinity is a necessary consequence of
Christology
, and takes seriously the necessity for interrelation in the formation of all appearance or reality. The
patristic
concept of
circumincessio
(Gk.,
(em)perichoresis
), the inner involvement of the Three Persons, anticipates the current social model of the Trinity, of three distinct realities, inseparably requiring each other to be the sort of reality they are, and therefore also only one reality.
Trinity Sunday
.
In W. Christian churches, the first Sunday after
Pentecost
. Its observance was made binding on the Church by Pope John XXII in 1334.
In the
Book of Common Prayer
the Sundays until Advent are numbered ‘after Trinity’.
Tripi
aka
(Skt., ‘Triple Basket’; Chin.,
Sants'ang
; Jap.,
Sanz
;
Korean
,
Samjang
). The threefold collection of authoritative texts in Buddhism. It is used more loosely in
Mah
y
na
Buddhism to mean the entire body of the Buddhist scriptures, corresponding to the P
li Tripi
aka in its general meaning, although the content and arrangement of the Mah
y
na canons, of which the chief are the Chinese Tripi
aka and the Tibetan canon, are significantly different.
The Pali Tripi
aka is the most fundamental collection extant, though it is believed that each of the original eighteen schools of Buddhism had tripi
akas of their own. It is divided into three parts,
Sutra
/Sutta Pitaka (discourses),
Vin
ya
(rules for the sa
gha) and
Abhidharma
/
Abhidhamma
(philosophical and psychological analysis). During the
Mah
y
na

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