Jehovah’s Witnesses and the Sabbatarians — The Holy Trinity and Its Proof

The lecture defends the doctrine of the Holy Trinity and responds to the interpretations of Jehovah’s Witnesses and the Sabbatarians that deny the divinity of one or more of God’s Persons. The speaker explains that the Bible mentions the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit as distinct and at the same time united, and he cites verses such as Matthew 28, 1 John 5, 2 Corinthians 13 and others to prove that.
Biblical evidences
It is presented that the names of the Trinity appear distinctly and in sequence (the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit), and that there are explicit verses affirming the divinity of each Person: the Father (as the one God), the Son (John 1: “the Word was God,” and the Lord’s sayings “I and the Father are one”), and the Holy Spirit (Acts 5: where lying to the Spirit is called lying to God). Also mentioned that the attribute of eternality is ascribed to Christ and the Spirit according to Hebrews and Daniel and remains an attribute of God.
Response to manuscript/textual objections
It mentions Jehovah’s Witnesses’ objection regarding 1 John 5 as being absent in their copies, and it replies that this does not negate that the text appears in many other manuscripts and that scribe errors may occur, but multiple evidences in other books support the Trinity.
Theological and spiritual dimension (from a Coptic Orthodox faith perspective)
The speaker affirms the unity of Coptic Orthodox faith in professing one God in three Persons, and emphasizes that confessing the divinity of Christ and the Spirit is not contradictory to monotheism but its fulfillment according to the understanding of the Fathers. He also stresses that salvation is available to all according to the Gospel, and briefly discusses Jehovah’s Witnesses’ deviations regarding ranks of salvation and dividing souls into categories.
Practical conclusion
A call to adhere to multiple texts and biblical testimonies to demonstrate the Trinity, and vigilance against attempts to change certain textual formulas or interpret them in a way that diminishes the divinity of any Person. Affirmation that salvation according to the Gospel includes those who believe in Christ without artificial distinctions that have no basis in the apostolic tradition
For better translation support, please contact the center


