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De la trinité
CHAPITRE VII.
DIEU EST TRINITÉ, MAIS N’EST POINT TRIPLE.
- Et parce qu’il est trinité, il ne faut pas s’imaginer qu’il soit triple: autrement le Père seul, ou le Fils seul, seraient moindres que le Père et le Fils réunis. Du reste on ne voit pas comment on pourrait dire le Père seul, ou le Fils seul, puisque le Père est toujours et inséparablement avec le Fils et le Fils avec le Père, non pour être tous les deux Père ou tous les deux Fils, mais parce qu’ils sont toujours ensemble et jamais séparés. Néanmoins comme nous disons Dieu seul, en parlant de la Trinité, bien que Dieu soit toujours avec les esprits et les âmes des saints, et que nous l’appelons seul, parce que ces esprits ne sont point Dieu avec lui; ainsi nous disons le Père seul, non parce qu’il est séparé de son Fils, mais parce qu’ils ne sont pas Père tous les deux.
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The Fifteen Books of Aurelius Augustinus, Bishop of Hippo, on the Trinity
Chapter 7.--God is a Trinity, But Not Triple (Triplex).
But God is truly called in manifold ways, great, good, wise, blessed, true, and whatsoever other thing seems to be said of Him not unworthily: but His greatness is the same as His wisdom; for He is not great by bulk, but by power; and His goodness is the same as His wisdom and greatness, and His truth the same as all those things; and in Him it is not one thing to be blessed, and another to be great, or wise, or true, or good, or in a word to be Himself.
9. Neither, since He is a Trinity, is He therefore to be thought triple (triplex) 1 otherwise the Father alone, or the Son alone, will be less than the Father and Son together. Although, indeed, it is hard to see how we can say, either the Father alone, or the Son alone; since both the Father is with the Son, and the Son with the Father, always and inseparably: not that both are the Father, or both are the Son; but because they are always one in relation to the other, and neither the one nor the other alone. But because we call even the Trinity itself God alone, although He is always with holy spirits and souls, but say that He only is God, because they are not also God with Him; so we call the Father the Father alone, not because He is separate from the Son, but because they are not both together the Father.
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[The Divine Unity is trinal, not triple. The triple is composed of three different substances. It has parts, and is complex. The trinal is without parts, and is incomplex. It denotes one simple substance in three modes or forms. "We may speak of the trinal, but not of the triple deity." Hollaz, in Hase's Hutterus, 172.--W.G.T.S.] ↩