Brian Leftow has proposed a "Latin" doctrine of the Trinity according to which "the Father just is God," and so also for the Son and the Spirit. I argue that Leftow's doctrine as he presents it really does have the consequence that Father, Son, and Spirit are all identical, a consequence that is inconsistent with orthodox Trinitarianism. A fairly minor modification would enable Leftow to avoid this untoward consequence. But the doctrine as modified will still retain a strongly modalistic flavor: it implies, among other things, that the prayers of Jesus in the Gospels are instances of God-as-Son praying to himself, namely to God-as-Father. If this is found unacceptable, Leftow may have been too quick to dismiss Social Trinitarianism.
CITATION STYLE
Hasker, W. (2009). A Leftovian trinity? Faith and Philosophy, 26(2), 154–166. https://doi.org/10.5840/faithphil200926224
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