What Dose Trinity Means in Real World

The word "Trinity" comes from the Latin noun "trinitas" meaning "three are one." "Trinity" expresses the belief that God is one Being made up of three distinct Persons who exist in co-equal, co-eternal communion as the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. The doctrine or concept of the Trinity is central to most Christian denominations and faith groups, although not all. Among churches that reject the doctrine of the Trinity are The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Jehovah's Witnesses, Christian Scientists, Christian Unitarians, the Unification Church, the Christadelphians, and Oneness Pentecostals, as well as others.
"What does the Bible teach about the Trinity?"
Answer: The most difficult thing about the Christian concept of the Trinity is that there is no way to adequately explain it. The Trinity is a concept that is impossible for any human being to fully understand, let alone explain. God is infinitely greater than we are, therefore we should not expect to be able to fully understand Him. The Bible teaches that the Father is God, that Jesus is God, and that the Holy Spirit is God. The Bible also teaches that there is only one God. Though we can understand some facts about the relationship of the different persons of the Trinity to one another, ultimately, it is incomprehensible to the human mind. However, this does not mean it is not true or not based on the teachings of the Bible.

ancient symbol of trinity

Awen - Druidic trinity symbol.
Keep in mind when studying this subject that the word "Trinity" is not used in Scripture. This is a term that is used to attempt to describe the triune God, the fact that there are 3 coexistent, co-eternal persons that make up God. Understand that this is NOT in any way suggesting 3 Gods. The Trinity is 1 God made up of 3 persons. There is nothing wrong with using the term "Trinity" even though the word is not found in the Bible. It is shorter to say the word "Trinity" than to say "3 coexistent, co-eternal persons making up 1 God." If this presents a problem to you, consider this: the word grandfather is not used in the Bible either. Yet, we know there were grandfathers in the Bible. Abraham was the grandfather of Jacob. So don't get hung up on the term "Trinity" itself. What should be of real importance is that the concept that is REPRESENTED by the word "Trinity" does exist in Scripture. With the introduction out of the way, Bible verses will be given in discussion of the Trinity.

2 artistic symbol of trinity
1) There is one God: Deuteronomy 6:4; 1 Corinthians 8:4; Galatians 3:20; 1 Timothy 2:5.
2) The Trinity consists of three Persons: Genesis 1:1; 1:26; 3:22; 11:7; Isaiah 6:8; 48:16; 61:1; Matthew 3:16-17; Matt 28:19; 2 Corinthians 13:14. In the passages in the Old Testament, a knowledge of Hebrew is helpful. In Genesis 1:1, the plural noun "Elohim" is used. In Genesis 1:26; 3:22; 11:7 and Isaiah 6:8, the plural pronoun for "us" is used. That "Elohim" and "us" refer to more than two is WITHOUT question. In English, you only have two forms, singular and plural. In Hebrew, you have three forms: singular, dual, and plural. Dual is for two ONLY. In Hebrew, the dual form is used for things that come in pairs like eyes, ears, and hands. The word "Elohim" and the pronoun "us" are plural forms - definitely more than two - and must be referring to three or more (Father, Son, Holy Spirit).
In Isaiah 48:16 and 61:1, the Son is speaking while making reference to the Father and the Holy Spirit. Compare Isaiah 61:1 to Luke 4:14-19 to see that it is the Son speaking. Matthew 3:16-17 describes the event of Jesus' baptism. Seen in this is God the Holy Spirit descending on God the Son while God the Father proclaims His pleasure in the Son. Matthew 28:19 and 2 Corinthians 13:14 are examples of 3 distinct persons in the Trinity.

3) The members of the Trinity are distinguished one from another in various passages: In the Old Testament, "LORD" is distinguished from "Lord" (Genesis 19:24; Hosea 1:4). The "LORD" has a "Son" (Psalm 2:7, 12; Proverbs 30:2-4). Spirit is distinguished from the "LORD" (Numbers 27:18) and from "God" (Psalm 51:10-12). God the Son is distinguished from God the Father (Psalm 45:6-7; Hebrews 1:8-9). In the New Testament, John 14:16-17 is where Jesus speaks to the Father about sending a Helper, the Holy Spirit. This shows that Jesus did not consider Himself to be the Father or the Holy Spirit. Consider also all of the other times in the Gospels where Jesus speaks to the Father. Was He speaking to Himself? No. He spoke to another person in the Trinity - the Father.
4) Each member of the Trinity is God: The Father is God: John 6:27; Romans 1:7; 1 Peter 1:2. The Son is God: John 1:1, 14; Romans 9:5; Colossians 2:9; Hebrews 1:8; 1 John 5:20. The Holy Spirit is God: Acts 5:3-4; 1 Corinthians 3:16 (The One who indwells is the Holy Spirit - Romans 8:9; John 14:16-17; Acts 2:1-4).
5) The subordination within the Trinity: Scripture shows that the Holy Spirit is subordinate to the Father and the Son, and the Son is subordinate to the Father. This is an internal relationship, and does not deny the deity of any person of the Trinity. This is simply an area which our finite minds cannot understand concerning the infinite God. Concerning the Son see: Luke 22:42; John 5:36; John 20:21; 1 John 4:14. Concerning the Holy Spirit see: John 14:16; 14:26; 15:26; 16:7 and especially John 16:13-14.
6) The tasks of the individual members of the Trinity: The Father is the ultimate source or cause of: 1) the universe (1 Corinthians 8:6; Revelation 4:11); 2) divine revelation (Revelation 1:1); 3) salvation (John 3:16-17); and 4) Jesus' human works (John 5:17; 14:10). The Father INITIATES all of these things.

The Son is the agent through whom the Father does the following works: 1) the creation and maintenance of the universe (1 Corinthians 8:6; John 1:3; Colossians 1:16-17); 2) divine revelation (John 1:1; Matthew 11:27; John 16:12-15; Revelation 1:1); and 3) salvation (2 Corinthians 5:19; Matthew 1:21; John 4:42). The Father does all these things through the Son, who functions as His agent.
The Holy Spirit is the means by whom the Father does the following works: 1) creation and maintenance of the universe (Genesis 1:2; Job 26:13; Psalm 104:30); 2) divine revelation (John 16:12-15; Ephesians 3:5; 2 Peter 1:21); 3) salvation (John 3:6; Titus 3:5; 1 Peter 1:2); and 4) Jesus' works (Isaiah 61:1; Acts 10:38). Thus the Father does all these things by the power of the Holy Spirit.
None of the popular illustrations are completely accurate descriptions of the Trinity. The egg (or apple) fails in that the shell, white, and yolk are parts of the egg, not the egg in themselves. The Father, Son and Holy Spirit are not parts of God, each of them is God. The water illustration is somewhat better but still fails to adequately describe the Trinity. Liquid, vapor, and ice are forms of water. The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are not forms of God, each of them is God. So, while these illustrations may give us a picture of the Trinity, the picture is not entirely accurate. An infinite God cannot be fully described by a finite illustration. Instead of focusing on the Trinity, try to focus on the fact of God's greatness and infinitely higher nature than our own. "Oh, the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable his judgments, and his paths beyond tracing out! Who has known the mind of the Lord? Or who has been his counselor?" (Romans 11:33-34)
Below is the best symbol for the Trinity we are aware of:

Matrix Trinity
Trnity is fictional character in The Matrix universe, played by Carrie-Anne Moss in the films. In the gameplay segments of Path of Neo, she is voiced by Jennifer Hale. Trinity first appears in the original Matrix film and is a major character throughout the trilogy.

Character

In The Matrix
We first meet Trinity at the beginning of The Matrix, in a phone conversation with Cypher, which is heard offscreen. This cuts to a dingy hotel room a chase scene between Trinity and a group of police officers and Agents, a series of programs that police the Matrix against rebels.

Trinity is next seen communicating with Neo for Morpheus in several encounters. Eventually, she and the rest of the Nebuchadnezzar crew unplug Neo from the Matrix and begin his training as a new recruit in the war against the machines. She participates in several missions into the Matrix, including taking Neo to The Oracle, a computer program inside the Matrix who is said by the rebels to have supernatural powers.
Throughout the film, it is apparent that Trinity has developed romantic feelings for Neo. Near the end of the film, after he is killed by Agent Smith in the Matrix, she speaks to his still-plugged-in body and reveals that the Oracle told her that she "would fall in love, and... the man who [she] loved would be The One," a prophesied individual with superpowers inside the Matrix. She insists that he can't be dead, because she is in love with him, then kisses him, whereupon he miraculously wakes up. Neo defeats the Agents and the film ends.This marks the beginning of a romantic relationship between Neo and Trinity which will prove decisive in the outcome of the series.
In The Matrix Reloaded
Trinity's importance as an individual character in the first sequel to The Matrix is fairly minimal for the first half of the film, though she appears in almost every scene. She aids in the rescue of the Keymaker from the Merovingian and in the subsequent escape, but her real role in the plot does not come into play until the climax of the story, where Neo is forced, at least ostensibly, to choose between saving Trinity and saving Zion, the underground city where the last humans not living in the Matrix reside.
Motivated by his individual love for Trinity, where all of the five previous Ones were motivated by a profound general attachment to humanity as a whole, Neo chooses to save Trinity, and revives her after she is shot by an Agent.
In The Matrix Revolutions
In the final installment of the Matrix series, Trinity is involved in the rescue of Neo from a cut-off segment of the Matrix, where he is being held by the Trainman, a program in the employ of the Merovingian who helps transfer programs from the Machine City into the Matrix. Once reunited, Neo states his decision to go to the Machine City in the real world, eventually arriving there despite the attempts of Neo's foe Smith (who managed to possess the body of 'redpill' Bane). Although Neo is blinded in the subsequent confrontation, Smith is defeated, and Trinity subsequently pilots Neo to the Machine City. Unfortunately, she is fatally injured upon arrival, but, in her last moments of life, gently assures Neo that he has to go on, and that she is grateful for having these last few hours to say goodbye to him. With her death, Neo gains the courage to make the final sacrifice for humanity, giving his life to defeat Smith and thus negotiate a truce with the Machines.

Carrie anne Moss
Early life
Carrie-Anne Moss was born in Burnaby, British Columbia. She has an older brother, Brooke. Moss's mother Barbara named her after The Hollies' 1967 hit song, "Carrie-Anne." Moss lived with her mother in Vancouver as a child. the age of eleven, she joined the Vancouver children's musical theatre and later went on to tour Europe with the Magee Secondary School Choir in her senior year. She attended high school with Gil Bellows. She enrolled at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in Pasadena upon her return. In 1985, she left Vancouver for Toronto and became a model. This career took her to Japan and Spain in the late 1980s.

Career
While in Spain, she landed a role in the drama series Dark Justice, her first television appearance. She moved from Barcelona to Los Angeles, California with the series in 1992. She starred in FOX's short-lived primetime soap opera Models Inc., a spin-off of Melrose Place, as one of the models. Her big breakthrough came when she was chosen to play the latex-clad hacker Trinity in the 1999 box office success The Matrix. She reprised the role of Trinity in two sequels as well as providing voice-overs for video game and animated spin-offs of the film. (Coincidentally, she had previously co-starred in an unrelated made-in-Canada television series also entitled Matrix.)

Following the release of the The Matrix, Moss was snapped up by some of Hollywood's most prominent producers for starring roles in four films. First, audiences saw her star opposite Burt Reynolds and Richard Dreyfuss in the Disney mobster comedy The Crew for producers Barry Sonnenfeld and Barry Josephson. Then they saw her star with Val Kilmer in Red Planet for Warner Bros. for producer Mark Canton. She then co-starred opposite Juliette Binoche, Johnny Depp and Dame Judi Dench in Miramax's Oscar-nominated film Chocolat for director Lasse Hallstrom and producer David Brown. Next, she starred with Guy Pearce in the critically acclaimed independent thriller Memento for which Carrie-Anne earned an Independent Spirit Award for her performance.

Personal life
Moss married fellow actor Steven Roy in 1999. They have two sons, one born at the end of 2003 and the second born in November 2005. Moss, very keen to protect her and her family's privacy, has only revealed her oldest son's name, Owen.

Moss's best friend is actress Maria Bello, who is the godmother of Moss's older son.

- Hanging Out Hooking Up Falling in Love (2008) (filming) .... Amanda Bingham
- Pretty/Handsome (2008) (TV) (post-production)
- Fireflies in the Garden (2008) .... Kelly Hanson
- Normal (2007) .... Catherine
- Disturbia (2007) .... Julie
- Suspect (2007) (TV) .... Lt. Chivers
- Fido (2006) .... Helen Robinson
- Mini's First Time (2006) .... Diane
- Snow Cake (2006) .... Maggie
- The Chumscrubber (2005) .... Jerri Falls
... aka Glück in kleinen Dosen (Germany) - Sledge: The Untold Story (2005) .... Girlfriend
- Suspect Zero (2004) .... Fran Kulok
... aka Suspect 0 (Philippines: English title) - The Matrix Revolutions (2003) .... Trinity
... aka The Matrix Revolutions: The IMAX Experience (USA: IMAX version (promotional title)) - Kid's Story (2003) (voice) .... Trinity
... aka The Animatrix: Kid's Story (USA: series title) - Enter the Matrix (2003) (VG) (voice) .... Trinity
- The Matrix Reloaded (2003) .... Trinity
... aka The Matrix Reloaded: The IMAX Experience (USA: IMAX version (promotional title)) - A Detective Story (2003) (voice) .... Trinity
... aka The Animatrix: A Detective Story (USA: series title) - The Animatrix (2003) (V) (voice) .... Trinity (segments "Kid's Story" and "A Detective Story")
- Chocolat (2000) .... Caroline Clairmont
- Red Planet (2000) .... Cmdr. Kate Bowman
- Memento (2000) .... Natalie
- The Crew (2000/I) .... Detective Olivia Neal
- The Matrix (1999) .... Trinity
- New Blood (1999) .... Leigh
- "Viper" .... Stacy Taylor (1 episode, 1997)
- Triple Cross (1997) TV episode .... Stacy Taylor - Lethal Tender (1997) (as Carrie Anne Moss) .... Melissa Wilkins
... aka Deadly Currents - "F/X: The Series" .... Lucinda Scott (8 episodes, 1996-1997)
- Medea (1997) TV episode .... Lucinda Scott
- Supernote (1996) TV episode .... Lucinda Scott
- Eye of the Dragon (1996) TV episode .... Lucinda Scott
- French Kiss (1996) TV episode .... Lucinda Scott
- The Brotherhood (1996) TV episode .... Lucinda Scott
(3 more) - The Secret Life of Algernon (1997) .... Madge Clerisy
- Sabotage (1996) .... Louise Castle
- "Spider-Man" .... Additional Voices (2 episodes, 1996)
- Sins of the Fathers Chapter 3: Attack of the Octobot (1996) TV episode (voice) .... Additional Voices
- Sins of the Fathers Chapter 2: Make a Wish (1996) TV episode (voice) .... Additional Voices - "Due South" .... Irene Zuko (1 episode, 1996)
... aka Direction: Sud (Canada: French title)
- Juliet Is Bleeding (1996) TV episode .... Irene Zuko - 364 Girls a Year (1996)
... aka The Last Bachelor - "Nowhere Man" .... Karin Stoltz (1 episode, 1995)
- Something About Her (1995) TV episode .... Karin Stoltz - "Models Inc." .... Carrie Spencer (29 episodes, 1994-1995)
- Sometimes a Great Commotion (1995) TV episode .... Carrie Spencer
- Exposure (1995) TV episode .... Carrie Spencer
- By Crook or by Hook (1995) TV episode .... Carrie Spencer
- Adam's Family Values (1995) TV episode .... Carrie Spencer
- Really Big Problems (1995) TV episode .... Carrie Spencer
(24 more) - Toughguy (1995) .... Tracy
... aka Evil Never Sleeps (UK: DVD title)
... aka Terrified - "Baywatch" .... Gwen Brown / ... (1 episode, 1994)
... aka Baywatch Hawaii (USA: new title)
- Mirror, Mirror (1994) TV episode .... Gwen Brown / Mattie Brown - The Soft Kill (1994) .... Jane Tanner
- "L.A. Law" .... Woman Driving the Jeep (1 episode, 1993)
- Pacific Rimshot (1993) TV episode .... Woman Driving the Jeep - "Silk Stalkings" .... Lana Bannon / ... (1 episode, 1993)
- The Perfect Alibi (1993) TV episode .... Lisa/Lana Bannon - "Matrix" .... Liz Teel (13 episodes, 1993)
- The Yellow Chamber (1993) TV episode .... Liz Teel
- Lapses in Memory (1993) TV episode .... Liz Teel
- Shadows from the Past (1993) TV episode .... Liz Teel
- Conviction of His Courage (1993) TV episode .... Liz Teel
- Love Kills (1993) TV episode .... Liz Teel
(8 more) - "Dark Justice" .... Tara McDonald / ... (4 episodes, 1991-1993)
- Suitable for Framing (1993) TV episode .... Tara McDonald
- Diplomatic Immunity (1991) TV episode .... Tara McDonald
- Brother Mine (1991) TV episode .... Tara McDonald
- Nowhere to Hide (1991) TV episode .... Tara - "Street Justice" .... Jennifer (2 episodes, 1991-1993)
- A Sense of Duty (1993) TV episode .... Jennifer
- Kid Stuff (1991) TV episode (as Carrie Ann Moss) .... Jennifer - Doorways (1993) (TV)
- Flashfire (1993) .... Meredith Neal
... aka August Fires (USA: TV title) - "Forever Knight" .... Monica Howard (1 episode, 1992)
- Feeding the Beast (1992) TV episode .... Monica Howard - "The Hat Squad" (1 episode, 1992)
- Phoenix Rising (1992) TV episode - "Down the Shore" .... Nancy (1 episode, 1992)
- Atlantic City (1992) TV episode .... Nancy - "Nightmare Cafe" .... Amanda (1 episode, 1992)
- Nightmare Cafe (1992) TV episode .... Amanda - "The Hitchhiker" .... Lookalike (1 episode, 1989)
... aka Deadly Nightmares (UK)
... aka Voyageur, Le (France)
- My Enemy (1989) TV episode .... Lookalike

Television
| Year | Title | Role | Other notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1991 | Dark Justice | Tara McDonald | |
| 1992 | Forever Knight | Monica Howard | 1992 |
| 1993 | Matrix | Liz Teel | 1993 |
| Doorways | |||
| Silk Stalkings | Lisa/Lana Bannon | ||
| 1994 | Models, Inc. | Carrie Spencer | |
| Baywatch | Gwen Brown/Mattie Brown | ||
| 1995 | Nowhere Man | Karin Stoltz | 1995 |
| 1996 | F/X: The Series | Lucinda Scott | (1996-1997) |
| Due South | Irene Zuko | ||
| 2008 | Suspects | announced |

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