Runningman
Active Member
No. Trinitarian style gods are not a new thing, they are quite old. By the time your group went fully pagan, they just became another group on the list. Christianity is a strictly monotheistic one-person God in Christianity.According to some research I've done, Gnosticism's roots are found in Egypt, where all the ancient mystery religions originate from. It was one of the heresies taught at the school of Alexandria. The teaching of the Godhead was never taught in Egypt, but in Antioch, where they were first called Christians. Acts 11:26
Egypt and other pagan nations developed trinitarian gods in their own religions too.
Egypt
"The Hymn to Amun decreed that 'No god came into being before him (Amun)' and that 'All gods are three: Amun, Re and Ptah, and there is no second to them. Hidden is his name as Amon, he is Re in face, and his body is Ptah.' . . . This is a statement of trinity, the three chief gods of Egypt subsumed into one of them, Amon. Clearly, the concept of organic unity within plurality got an extraordinary boost with this formulation. Theologically, in a crude form it came strikingly close to the later Christian form of plural Trinitarian monotheism" (Simson Najovits, Egypt, Trunk of the Tree, Vol. 2, 2004, pp. 83-84)."The origin of the conception is entirely pagan"
Egyptologist Arthur Weigall, while himself a Trinitarian, summed up the influence of ancient beliefs on the adoption of the Trinity doctrine by the Catholic Church in the following excerpt from his previously cited book:"It must not be forgotten that Jesus Christ never mentioned such a phenomenon [the Trinity], and nowhere in the New Testament does the word 'Trinity' appear. The idea was only adopted by the Church three hundred years after the death of our Lord; and the origin of the conception is entirely pagan . . .
"The ancient Egyptians, whose influence on early religious thought was profound, usually arranged their gods or goddesses in trinities: there was the trinity of Osiris, Isis, and Horus, the trinity of Amen, Mut, and Khonsu, the trinity of Khnum, Satis, and Anukis, and so forth . . .
https://www.ucg.org/learn/bible-stu...-trinitarian-gods-influenced-adoption-trinity