by Sidney Hatch
In the history of Christendom, the doctrine of the trinity has not produced the fruit of the Spirit (Gal. 5:22, 23). Rather, it has led to persecution and death.
The Code of Justinian imposed the death penalty on those who denied the trinity, and the ugly record of the Inquisition is notorious. Only God in heaven knows how many earnest Christians have been put to death because they were loyal to the Scriptures rather than the trinity. Thus the doctrine of the trinity has, throughout the centuries, main-tained itself by force.
This is in contrast to the Biblical principle that “the weapons of our warfare are not carnal” (2 Cor. 10:4).
As we look back over the history of Christendom, we cannot help but ask ourselves if the existence of the United States, with its principle of religious liberty, is at least partly due to a desire to escape traditional European trinitarianism. There appears to be a philosophical or idealistic connection between the Socinians of the sixteenth century, John Locke in the seventeenth century, Thomas Jefferson in the eighteenth century, and then the American “Bill of Rights,” produced toward the end of the eighteenth century. One influenced the other.
Paul tells us that it is given to us in behalf of Christ, not only to believe in Him, but to suffer for Him (Phil. 1:29). In the relationship between trinitarians and nontrinitarians, it is always the nontrinitarian who suffers.