Did early Christians borrow from Plato to define the Trinity? Explore how Greek concepts of the Logos and Forms shaped the doctrines we follow today.

The early Christians used Plato’s 'World of Ideas' as a conceptual architecture to explain how a perfect God could have a relationship with an imperfect world. They didn't see philosophy as 'pagan' versus 'Christian,' but rather as the 'grammar' that allowed them to articulate the logic of the universe.
I want a lesson that explores deeply the connection between platonic thought and philosophy into the biblical cannons and the doctrines surrounding the early councils. How much of Christianity is platonic philosophy. We’re the actual writings influenced as well by Plato and maybe through in any other philosophers of the time that platonic or not influenced this Bible we have today. And the doctored that define Christianity.


Creado por exalumnos de la Universidad de Columbia en San Francisco
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Creado por exalumnos de la Universidad de Columbia en San Francisco

Jackson: You know, Lena, I was looking at the Gospel of John the other day, and it hit me—when we read "In the beginning was the Word," are we reading pure scripture, or are we actually stepping into a Greek philosophy classroom?
Lena: That is the ultimate question, isn't it? It’s fascinating because someone like St. Augustine actually claimed he found the exact same teaching about the eternal Logos in the writings of the Platonists before he even fully embraced Christianity.
Jackson: Wait, so you’re saying one of the most famous saints felt he could "smell" the divine through pagan philosophy?
Lena: Exactly. He saw Plato’s "World of Ideas" as a precursor to the biblical understanding of God. But it makes you wonder: did the early Church simply adopt these ideas to make sense of the Trinity, or was the philosophy already woven into the very fabric of the New Testament?
Jackson: That’s a huge distinction to unpack. Let’s explore how these ancient Greek concepts of eternity and causality actually built the doctrines we recognize today.