After establishing why believers should seek God, Augustine summarizes what he has already discussed in previous book about the Trinity. In book one, he asserts …show more content…
Augustine argues that the universe exclaims that glory of an excellent creator! God has given us minds to reason and understand that he exists. Since he is the creator of all things, Man can know that He cannot die, cannot change, is omniscient, does not have a body, is all powerful, is most righteous, and more.
Augustine argues to what extent man can know God through reason. Man can know God through himself because he bears the image of God. Augustine argues that Man’s inward qualities such as understanding, memory, and love points to God’s Trinitarian. However, love is not understanding, understanding is not memory, and memory is not love. These observations point to the Trinity. The mind uses memory to remember himself. However, he points out that this analogy has …show more content…
All three persons come from the same essence of God equally. For example, all three persons are love and no person loves more than another person. When one speaks of one of God’s qualities, he speaks of God Himself. All three persons are their quality and of their quality. Jesus said, “I am the way the truth and the light.” And again, Holy Scriptures say Christ is called “the power of God, and the wisdom of God.” The Son is wisdom of wisdom in the same way he is light of light, God of God. While speaking of the Trinity as a whole, Augustine discusses the uniqueness of each person—particularly the Word/God the Son and the Holy