One Christian doctrine that sets it apart from other religions is that of the Trinity. The idea here is that there is one God that is made up of three Persons--the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. They are each distinct, with their own characteristics, but also unified as one. An analogy I've heard to explain it is the three parts of the egg--the white, the yolk, and the shell, and how they are each separate, but they all come together to make just one egg. One consequence of this is that God has as a fundamental characteristic the value, desire, and even need for community. But that need is fulfilled within Himself, since He, in His very essence, is Three. When John writes, " God is love " (1 John 4:8b), he hints at this idea, since one cannot love without something to love. And as so very often happens where there is love, the love overflows: " Then God said, 'Let us make humankind in our image, according to our likeness; and let them have dominion...
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