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Beyond the Binary | Start With Mystery

Aaron Friesen November 7, 2025

At the core of Christian theology is the doctrine of the trinity, that God is one God in three persons – Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, and the doctrine of the incarnation, that Jesus Christ is both fully divine and fully human. Both of these doctrines defy human logic and rational reasoning because: 1) they join two ideas that are normally held to be logically in tension with or opposed to one another (binary options), and 2) they do so without any other corresponding reality in the universe. 

Thus, at the center of Christian theology is a profound mystery.

Many of the early church Councils and debates focused on deciding what precise words should be used to describe this divine mystery. They debated how to talk about God as one single God without straying into polytheism, reducing the full divinity of either the Father, Son, or Spirit, or creating some kind of hierarchy of divinity within God. They also debated how to talk about the divinity and humanity of Christ without reducing one or the other to a partial presence or making one part wholly subservient to or controlled by the other.

Over the first five centuries of the church’s existence, there were many leaders who attempted to move the church toward more rationally palatable doctrines of God or Christ by reducing or collapsing important distinctions in the Godhead or by separating out the unified aspects of God or Christ into multiple disconnected parts. It is fascinating to me that in all of their debates over particular words and phrases, the orthodox Christian position continued to uphold the utterly mysterious natures of God and Jesus Christ. In doing so, they placed the revealed truth of God in Christ over human reason. 

I used to think all the trinitarian debates of the early church Councils were splitting hairs unnecessarily and choosing to divide over mostly irrelevant theological minutia. While that may be true in some isolated cases, I’ve come to appreciate that the bigger picture of what was at stake in these debates was very important, even essential, to one’s quest to know God. One might say that these early apologists of orthodox theology took upon themselves the responsibility of preserving the mysterious nature of the Christian God for future generations by defending it against the forces of reductionism, rationalism, and binary thinking.

A practical consequence of this history is that as we seek to grow in our knowledge of God and progress down the path of following Christ, we must start with mystery. Mystery is not a theological last resort or a place of theological failure, where one ends up reluctantly after one’s rational proposals and doctrines about God prove to have some logical flaws or weaknesses in them. Rather, mystery is a place of beginning. One must start with an appreciation of the bigness and awesomeness of that which we seek to understand and follow, the God who is most clearly yet mysteriously revealed in Jesus Christ. Whatever words or doctrines or principles we use to describe this God, we must begin with the understanding that they will never be exhaustive, and they will often prove to be grossly inadequate. 

Starting with mystery does not mean that God is distant or unknowable. (In fact, one of the most mysterious aspects of God is his nearness and closeness to us.) Starting with mystery simply means assuming that our knowledge of God will always be partial and incomplete. Our quest to know God will ever lead us into new moments of awe and wonder. As Metropolitan Kalistos Ware says in his opening chapter of The Orthodox Way, “We see that it is not the task of Christianity to provide easy answers to every question, but to make us progressively aware of a mystery. God is not so much the object of our knowledge as the cause of our wonder.”(1) Starting with mystery keeps one humble, always open to new experiences and surprises from God that do not neatly fit into one’s past conceptions or definitions of God. 

Although such surprises might lead to feelings of distance from God at first. Over time, they have the power to deepen our sense of intimate connection with God as they represent God’s self-disclosure that is truly, to quote Michael W. Smith’s 2003 hit, Above All:

Above all powers, above all kings
Above all nature and all created things
Above all wisdom and all the ways of man
You were here before the world began

Above all kingdoms, above all thrones
Above all wonders the world has ever known
Above all wealth and treasures of the earth
There's no way to measure what You're worth


(1) Metropolitan Kallistos Ware, The Orthodox Way (Yonkers, NY: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2018), 21.


About the Author

Aaron is a passionate seeker of God and truth, and he enjoys encouraging others in their own pursuits of the same. He especially likes to think about how God is at work in the most ordinary and mundane aspects of our existence. He loves going on adventures to new places with his wife, Heather, and four kids and his perfect day would involve an excellent cup of coffee (or two!), a hike to somewhere beautiful and serene, and some good conversation over a pint at a warm pub. He currently serves as an adjunct instructor at Portland Seminary and co-leads the CitySalt Kids’ Ministry along with his wife, Heather.

In Aaron Friesen Tags Beyond the Binary, Mystery, Trinity, Incarnation, Wonder
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Seeing the Other | The Father, Jesus, The Holy Spirit, and Me

Darla Beardsley June 1, 2018

This has been an amazing season for CitySalt blog writers and readers. I have been blessed again and again by the insights and hearts revealed through the theme of “Seeing the Other“. If you missed any of the posts in the last few months, I highly recommend that you click on the Salt Blog and scroll down to read the ones you missed. It is a treasure trove.


Do you ever think of God as ‘the Other?’

The Nicene Creed begins,
“We believe in one God,
the Father, the Almighty,
maker of heaven and earth,
and of all that is, seen and unseen.”

I recited that creed every Sunday in my youth and I believed it and still do. I have spent a lifetime trying to wrap my head and my heart around a God who is amazingly wise, all powerful, perfect, all seeing, a God who created a universe that appears endless and incomprehensible. A God who Psalm 139 says, “knit me together in my mother’s womb.” We have only scratched the surface in understanding how these bodies of ours function and must constantly amend our understanding as we learn more. How is it that I can have anything in common with the amazing Being who created me?

“We believe in one Lord, Jesus Christ,
the only Son of God,
eternally begotten of the Father,
God from God, Light from Light,
true God from true God,
begotten, not made,
one in Being with the Father.
Through him all things were made.”

Jesus, one with the Father, also God, almighty, all powerful…

John 1:1-5
In the beginning the Word already existed.
The Word was with God,
and the Word was God.
He existed in the beginning with God.
God created everything through him,
and nothing was created except through him.
The Word gave life to everything that was created,
and his life brought light to everyone.
The light shines in the darkness,
and the darkness can never extinguish it.

Yet, he calls me, friend (John 15:15). He is my Savior, He laid down His life for me. He left His place by the Father’s side and experienced pain and death for me. He came as a servant when He was God. How is it that I have anything in common with this extraordinary Man?

“We believe in the Holy Spirit,
the Lord, the giver of life,
who proceeds from the
Father and the Son.
With the Father and the Son
he is worshipped and glorified.
He has spoken through the Prophets.”

The Holy Spirit, teaches me, empowers me, inspires me. He, too, is God. He is also a gift from God to us that we might know Him better and be more like Him.

John 14:26
But when the Father sends the Advocate as my representative—that is, the Holy Spirit—he will teach you everything and will remind you of everything I have told you.

John 20:22
Then he breathed on them and said, “Receive the Holy Spirit.”

How is it that I have anything in common with this amazing trinity of Beings? I can interact with Them but can I truly be like Them? The idea is so much greater than me.

Does God see me as “the Other?” It would appear not.

Genesis 1:27
So God created human beings in his own image.
In the image of God he created them;
male and female he created them.

I (we) are created in the image of God. He says so Himself. How can that be? I see such a difference when I compare my behavior with His. I (we) have fallen from a great height, no doubt about it. But still we are created to be like Him. We are not ‘other’ than Him, we are created in His image. The whole of the bible, the coming of Jesus and the gift of the Holy Spirit reinforces for me the truth that God the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit are committed to restoring that image and relationship to its former glory.

Do I completely understand it? Do I know how it will be accomplished? Can I wrap my head around all that it entails? No. But I know more than I did, 5, 10, 30 years ago, because He is intent on leading me if I will listen. Have I executed each learning challenge flawlessly? Hardly. But it is worth it to me to keep pushing forward through my incompleteness and lack of understanding to be more like Him. He has made it clear that it is worth the struggle for Him and so it is worth it to me.

Romans 8:18
For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us.

Is God “Other” than me? No. He is the Creator and I am the created, it will always be that way. Yet in His love He saw fit to create me in HIs image. He wants me to be like Him and be in relationship with HIm. It seems it is HIs good pleasure. I want to say, “yes” to that.


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About the Author

Darla wears many hats, one of them being Media Communication Coordinator for CitySalt Church. She is a life long learner, who is always up for a challenge. She is married to her amazing husband, Mark. Though they have no children she enjoys being involved in the lives of her nieces and nephews as their ‘crazy aunt.’

In Darla Beardsley Tags Seeing the Other, Created in God’s Image, In Common with God, Trinity
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