Worship of the Thrice Holy God

Thrice Holy = Three Persons?

A popular argument in favor of the trinity has it that because God is described as being thrice holy (“holy, holy, holy, is the Lord God Almighty”), therefore he is thrice personal (Father, Son, and Holy Spirit). This is seen, for example, in the opening verse of the popular hymn, Holy, Holy, Holy.

Holy, holy, holy! Lord God Almighty!
Early in the morning our song shall rise to thee.
Holy, holy, holy! merciful and mighty!
God in three Persons, blessed Trinity!

The use of this thrice holy terminology isn’t discussed in the main articles because there are better proofs for the trinity with more substantive weight that are worth addressing. But for those who find the argument persuasive, this article is meant to provide a more careful, contextual analysis of the scriptures in question. As is often the case with one-shot trinitarian prooftexts, a simple analysis of the context can help to show the problems intrinsic to their use.

Thrice Holy In Context

The thrice holy description of God appears in two places in scripture, Isaiah 6:1-4 and Revelation 4:8. Both occur in the context of a man having a vision of the throne of God in Heaven, and creatures attending the throne declaring that God is thrice holy. These also occur in a context of God vindicating his judgement on the peoples of the earth. So they are certainly meant to be interpreted as complementary passages, as often occurs in Revelation’s allusions to the rest of scripture.

If we did not have the commentary in Revelation, it would be reasonable for a trinitarian to interpret Isaiah’s thrice holy description of God as referring to the trinity. To be clear, Isaiah doesn’t teach that God is trinity; it simply refers to God as thrice holy without commentary. However, Revelation makes the same statement, and adds the reason for God’s receiving this threefold title.

And the four living creatures, each of them with six wings, are full of eyes all around and within, and day and night they never cease to say, “Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord God Almighty, who was and is and is to come!” (Rev 4:8)

In this passage, God is seen as thrice holy because 1) he was, 2) he is, and 3) he is to come. It is a reference to his temporal relationship to the kingdoms of man, that God has been righteous in his past judgements, he is righteous in his then-present judgement of the earth, and he will be righteous in the judgements of the kingdom he establishes at his return (in Christ and in the descent of New Jerusalem 1,000 years later).

The unchanging, eternal nature of God’s holiness is also discussed in Isaiah, simply in another context. When you compare the three passages together, the point seems to be that God’s ever-existent, unchanging holiness is a sure hope to the repentant, and a sure destruction to those who remain in rebellion against his righteous ways. Whereas idols may come and go, waxing and waning in power and character, God never changes; therefore the repentant are not destroyed (cf. Mal 3:3-6).

When you cry out, let your collection of idols deliver you! The wind will carry them all off, a breath will take them away. But he who takes refuge in me shall possess the land and shall inherit my holy mountain. And it shall be said, “Build up, build up, prepare the way, remove every obstruction from my people’s way.” For thus says the One who is high and lifted up, who inhabits eternity, whose name is Holy: “I dwell in the high and holy place, and also with him who is of a contrite and lowly spirit, to revive the spirit of the lowly, and to revive the heart of the contrite.” (Isa 57:13-15, emphasis mine)

Because the immediate context of Revelation 4 gives us an interpretive grid for God’s thrice holy nature (past, present, and future holiness), this should not be used as evidence for a thrice personal nature of God (Father, Son, and Holy Spirit). If the trinity is biblical (which I contend it is not), it should be established on other grounds, leaving scriptures that reference his thrice holy nature as addressing something else entirely.

Share This Article

Pattern Christology

Jesus has two natures — an uncreated divine nature, and a created human nature.

Jesus is truly God, meaning that his divine nature predates the existence of the universe, and has all of the attributes of monotheistic, biblical divinity (omniscience, omnipotence etc.). He is not a lesser, created god, but rather exists eternally before and outside of time as the one true God.

Jesus is truly man, meaning that his human nature is truly descended from Adam. From the moment of conception onward, he has (and forever will have) a human body comprised of matter and energy, and a human soul with its own distinct intellect and will. He is not a mirage or apparition; he truly lived a real, human life among us, while simultaneously possessing and displaying his divinity through miraculous works and words of life.

Like the title “son of man,” the title “son of God” describes Jesus’ created, human nature. Adam, Jesus, and the Christian are all described as sons of God because we are in the form/image/likeness of God. Both divine and human activities are ascribed to Jesus through both titles, because of their contextual meaning (Jesus is a particular son of man who is divine; Jesus is a particular son of God who is divine). But the title “son of God” fundamentally describes his human nature and human relationship to God.

A few scriptures describe Jesus as having a father/son relationship with God prior to his incarnation as a man. If Jesus’ sonship is through his humanity, then this presents a challenge to pattern christology, because his human relationship with God predates his existence as a man.

Trinitarians turn to Jesus’ divinity to explain this preincarnate sonship. Patternists, on the other hand, maintain that he was the son of God through a “preincarnate hypostatic union” known as the angel of the Lord. Prior to the incarnation, Jesus was truly God, and truly angelic (or at least a true creature). This allows the person of the son to exist from the moment that God first created light, without compromising his true divinity.

Like trinitarians, patternists believe that Jesus has two natures that together form a single person. Unlike trinitarians, we also affirm that each nature is distinctly personal, and that Jesus can behave as a single unified person, or as two distinct persons (often identified as the Father and the Son). Scripture shows us that Jesus has a human mind and human will that are distinct from his divine mind and divine will. This implies that Jesus’ human and divine natures are distinctly personal.

Pattern christology therefore agrees with both orthodox christology (belief in a single person), and nestorianism (belief in two distinct persons). This is not a contradiction, because scripture supports the idea of two (or more) persons becoming and behaving as one person.

God dwells in Jesus as a human temple, similar to how he dwells in a Christian, but with a few differences. First, Jesus is described as God incarnate, and we are not. Second, God dwells in Christ through the divine person of the Word, whereas he dwells in the Christian through the divine person of the Holy Spirit.

These two temples correspond to the two persons in the godhead. God is a composite union of two persons who are one, the Word and the Spirit. The term “Father” is used to denote the godhead as a whole, the composite union of Word and Spirit. Thus it is accurate to say that the Father (God) dwells in Christ through the Word, and the Father (God) dwells in the Christian through the Spirit.

Pattern Theology

There is one God, who exists as two persons. The Word is truly God; the Holy Spirit is truly God; and they are distinct from one another. Together, they form the composite person of God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.

This union of two divine persons who are one provides us with a pattern that explains many things in creation, including marriage and the human body.

Why did God create the heavens and the earth? Why not just the earth? The Word and Spirit were both active in creation, and God made a fitting environment to enthrone each person of the godhead — heaven and earth, dust and stars.