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Doctrine of the Trinity
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Lesson OneChristianity Is Trinitarian2 Activities
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Lesson TwoOn Knowing God2 Activities
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Lesson ThreeIntroductory Matters2 Activities
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Lesson FourThe Trinity in the Old Testament2 Activities
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Lesson FiveGod the Father2 Activities
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Lesson SixThe Deity of Jesus Christ1 Activity
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Lesson SevenThe Deity of the Holy Spirit2 Activities
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Lesson EightToward Clarity of Mind2 Activities
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Lesson NineGnosticism, Tritheism, and Modalism1 Activity
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Lesson TenThe Nicene Creed (AD 325)1 Activity
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Lesson ElevenThe Development of Dogma1 Activity
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Lesson TwelveFrom Nicea to Constantinople1 Activity
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Lesson ThirteenAthanasius and Orthodoxy1 Activity
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Lesson FourteenThe Cappadocian Theologians1 Activity
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Lesson FifteenNiceno-Constantinopolitan Creed (AD 381)1 Activity
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Lesson SixteenAugustine of Hippo2 Activities
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Lesson SeventeenThe Athanasian Creed2 Activities
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Lesson EighteenChristian Worship2 Activities
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Lesson NineteenEastern Orthodoxy1 Activity
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Lesson TwentyMedieval Theologians1 Activity
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Lesson Twenty-OneMedieval, Western Councils1 Activity
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Lesson Twenty-TwoProtestantism1 Activity
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Lesson Twenty-ThreeSurveying the Modern Scene1 Activity
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Lesson Twenty-FourConclusion1 Activity
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Course Wrap-UpCourse Completion1 Activity|1 Assessment
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Recommended Reading
- Take your New Testament and read the following texts slowly and carefully paying attention to the context. Note the Trinitarian structure within or underlying each text.
A) Matthew 28:18-20
B) Mark 1:9-11
C) II Corinthians 13:14 - Set aside at least one hour to read slowly through the Letters from Paul to the churches of Colossae and Philippi and to notice the underlying Trinitarian structure. Allow your mind through Paul’s letters to ponder God-as-God-is-towards-us.