Thursday, March 19, 2026

Евсевий и Матфея 28:19: теория тринитарной интерполяции

Краткое содержание

Некоторые утверждают, что Матфея 28:19 был изменён в IV веке, чтобы поддержать учение о Троице. Обычно этот аргумент строится на некоторых сокращённых цитатах Евсевия Кесарийского. Однако трезвый анализ текстологических и исторических данных показывает иное: Евсевий цитировал Писание свободно, тогда как полная форма стиха была известна и употреблялась задолго до Никеи.

Время от времени снова появляется утверждение, будто Матфея 28:19 не принадлежал к первоначальному тексту Евангелия от Матфея, а был поздней тринитарной вставкой. Главным основанием для этой идеи обычно служит Евсевий Кесарийский, который в некоторых местах приводит сокращённую форму повеления Иисуса, передаваемую примерно так: «сделайте учениками все народы во имя Моё».

Но этот аргумент не доказывает того, что пытается доказать.

Проблема в том, что Евсевий не передаёт какой-то одной устойчивой и последовательной текстовой версии Матфея 28:19. Иногда он цитирует этот стих в сокращённом виде, иногда в более краткой форме, а иногда — в полной, общеизвестной форме, дошедшей до нас. Это указывает не на существование какого-то иного оригинального текста, а на гибкую практику цитирования.

И это полностью соответствует его обычному методу. Евсевий сокращал, перефразировал и адаптировал библейские тексты в зависимости от своей цели. Когда он опускает полную форму, наиболее естественное объяснение заключается в контексте: его интерес обычно сосредоточен на всемирном масштабе миссии Иисуса, а не на дословном воспроизведении всей крещальной формулы. Следовательно, его краткие цитаты отражают свободу изложения, а не утраченный первоначальный вариант текста.

Кроме того, исторические данные указывают в том же направлении. Даже после Никеи Евсевий продолжает цитировать как краткие формы, так и полную форму. А в своём письме 325 года, написанном во время Никейского собора, он приводит стандартную форму таким образом, что видно: она была ему знакома и раньше. Это делает крайне затруднительным утверждение, будто длинная версия стиха возникла именно в никейском контексте.

Более широкая картина ещё убедительнее. Дидахе, один из древнейших христианских документов вне Нового Завета, содержит крещальную формулу, тесно связанную с Матфея 28:19. То же самое мы видим у дохристианских? Нет — у раннехристианских авторов, живших до IV века, таких как Иустин Мученик, Тертуллиан и Ориген. Иными словами, полная форма этого стиха существовала задолго до Константина, задолго до Никеи и задолго до позднейшего догматического оформления церковной ортодоксии.

Именно здесь теория о подлоге теряет всякую убедительность. Чтобы её сохранить, пришлось бы предположить, что ещё только формирующееся тринитарное движение изменило текст, навязало новую версию всему христианскому миру и уничтожило без следа первоначальное чтение во всех рукописях, фрагментах и патристических цитатах. Это не серьёзная текстологическая гипотеза. Это чрезвычайная историческая реконструкция без достаточных доказательств.

Самое простое объяснение остаётся самым убедительным: Евсевий цитировал Матфея 28:19 свободно, но полная форма стиха уже была древней, известной и широко засвидетельствованной. Поэтому идея о том, что Матфея 28:19 — это тринитарная порча текста IV века, основана не на твёрдых доказательствах, а на натянутом прочтении данных.

И когда теория может держаться только ценой насилия над доказательствами, проблема не в тексте, а в самой теории.

Eusebio, Mateo 28:19 y la Hipótesis de una Corrupción Trinitaria

Resumen: Algunos sostienen que Mateo 28:19 fue alterado en el siglo IV para apoyar la doctrina de la Trinidad. Su argumento principal suele basarse en ciertas citas abreviadas de Eusebio de Cesarea. Sin embargo, una revisión sobria de la evidencia textual e histórica muestra otra cosa: Eusebio citaba con libertad, mientras que la forma larga del versículo ya era conocida y usada mucho antes de Nicea.

Por carlos@thehumanjesus.org

De vez en cuando reaparece la afirmación de que Mateo 28:19 no formó parte original del Evangelio de Mateo, sino que fue una adición trinitaria tardía. La base principal de esta idea suele ser Eusebio de Cesarea, quien en algunos lugares cita una forma abreviada del mandato de Jesús, resumida así: “haced discípulos de todas las naciones en mi nombre”.

Pero ese argumento no prueba lo que pretende probar.

El problema es que Eusebio no transmite una variante textual fija y coherente de Mateo 28:19. A veces cita el pasaje de forma resumida, otras de forma abreviada, y otras veces en la forma larga y conocida que ha llegado hasta nosotros. Eso indica, no la existencia de un texto original distinto, sino una práctica de citación flexible.

Y esto encaja perfectamente con su método habitual. Eusebio abreviaba, parafraseaba y adaptaba los textos bíblicos según su propósito. Cuando omite la forma larga, lo más natural es explicarlo por el contexto: su interés suele estar en el alcance universal de la misión de Jesús, no en repetir literalmente toda la fórmula bautismal. Sus citas breves, por tanto, reflejan libertad expositiva, no una lectura primitiva perdida.

Además, el dato histórico va en la misma dirección. Incluso después de Nicea, Eusebio sigue citando tanto formas breves como la forma larga. Y en su carta del año 325, escrita durante el Concilio de Nicea, cita la forma estándar de un modo que sugiere que ya la conocía desde antes. Eso hace muy difícil sostener que la versión larga naciera en el contexto niceno.

La evidencia más amplia es todavía más fuerte. La Didaché, uno de los documentos cristianos más antiguos fuera del Nuevo Testamento, contiene una fórmula bautismal estrechamente relacionada con Mateo 28:19. Lo mismo ocurre con escritores anteriores al siglo IV, como Justino Mártir, Tertuliano y Orígenes. En otras palabras, la forma larga del versículo circulaba mucho antes de Constantino, mucho antes de Nicea y mucho antes de cualquier consolidación doctrinal posterior.

Aquí es donde la teoría de la corrupción pierde toda fuerza. Para sostenerla, habría que imaginar que un movimiento trinitario aún en formación alteró el texto, impuso la nueva versión en todo el mundo cristiano y eliminó sin dejar rastro la lectura original en manuscritos, fragmentos y citas patrísticas. Eso no es una hipótesis textual seria. Es una reconstrucción histórica extraordinaria sin evidencia suficiente.

La explicación más simple sigue siendo la más sólida: Eusebio citó Mateo 28:19 con libertad, pero la forma larga del versículo ya era antigua, conocida y ampliamente atestiguada. Por eso, la idea de que Mateo 28:19 fue una corrupción trinitaria del siglo IV no descansa en evidencia firme, sino en una lectura forzada de los datos.

Y cuando una teoría solo puede sostenerse forzando la evidencia, el problema no está en el texto, sino en la teoría.

Eusebius and Matthew 28:19: The Trinitarian Corruption Theory

Matthew 28:19 is sometimes alleged to be a later Trinitarian corruption rather than original to Matthew’s Gospel. The argument usually rests on the fourth-century bishop Eusebius of Caesarea, who in a number of places cites a shorter form of the verse, I.e., “make disciples of all the nations in my name.”

But the evidence shows that Eusebius often quoted Scripture loosely, abbreviating, paraphrasing, or adapting passages to suit his immediate purpose. That matters because Eusebius does not present a single, stable alternative reading of Matthew 28:19. Rather, he cites the verse in multiple forms:

  1. As a summary form, “Go...nations”;

  2. As a shorter form, “Go...nations in my name”;

  3. And the full longer form used to this day.

In the places where he omits the so-called “longer form” as we have it today, the omission is best explained by context, not by some earlier, Hebrew original underlying text. His focus in those discussions is typically the universal scope of Jesus’ commission, the call to disciple all nations, not the precise wording of the baptismal formula. This was characteristic of Eusebius’s citation method more generally: he frequently omitted phrases he regarded as incidental to his point and sometimes blended language from parallel or related texts. In other words, his own usage reflects flexibility in quotation, not evidence of some lost original Hebrew text.

Even more significantly, after Nicaea Eusebius continues to cite both shorter and longer forms, which weakens the claim that his wording simply tracks some pre-Nicene, non-Trinitarian text. And in his letter of 325, written during the Council of Nicaea, his citation of the standard form strongly suggests that he was already familiar with it well before the council.

The broader historical evidence is even more decisive. Matthew 28:19 is cited in its familiar form long before Nicaea by early Christian writers and extra-biblical sources. The Didache, often regarded as one of the earliest Christian documents outside the New Testament, contains baptismal language closely matching the verse. It is also reflected in writers such as Justin Martyr, Tertullian, and Origen, all of whom wrote generations before the fourth century. Their testimony places the longer reading well before Constantine, well before Nicaea, and well before the rise of later conciliar orthodoxy.

This is where the corruption theory collapses under its own weight. To sustain it, one must imagine that a still-developing Trinitarian movement managed not only to alter Matthew 28:19, but also to replace that text across the Christian world and eliminate every trace of the supposed original, including Greek manuscripts, fragments, and patristic citations.

That is not a serious textual argument.

It is speculation resting on an implausible historical reconstruction.

The simpler explanation is born by the evidence that Eusebius quoted Matthew 28:19 with considerable freedom, as he often did elsewhere. The full form of the verse was already widely known and cited long before Nicaea. So that whatever one thinks about later Trinitarian theology, the claim that Matthew 28:19 is a fourth-century textual corruption is not supported by the evidence.

Did Christians Change the Bible to Make Jesus God?

Textual criticism is the discipline that compares the thousands of surviving New Testament manuscripts in order to recover, as nearly as possible, the earliest form of the text. Because the New Testament was copied by hand for centuries, variations inevitably entered the manuscript tradition. Most are minor and of little consequence. Some, however, appear to reflect theological bias, especially in passages dealing with the identity of the Son of God. The following examples are drawn from Bart Ehrman’s 1993 book The Orthodox Corruption of Scripture.

The best-known example of textual corruption is 1 John 5:7-8. The longer so-called Johannince Comma (“Trinitarian reading"), familiar from the King James Version, is absent from the earliest Greek manuscripts and is widely recognized as a later addition. The oldest manuscript containing the Comma in its text is from the 14th century (629), but the wording there departs from all the other manuscripts in several places. The next oldest manuscripts supporting the Comma—88 (12th century), 429 (14th century), and 636 (15th century)—also preserve the reading only as a marginal note. The remaining manuscripts are from the 16th to 18th centuries. Thus, there is no sure evidence for this reading in any Greek manuscript until the 14th century (629), and that manuscript deviates from all the others in its wording. The form of the wording found in the Textus Receptus was apparently composed after Erasmus’ Greek New Testament was published in 1516.

Other lesser-known examples noted by Ehrman are also significant. In Acts 20:28, some readings make the verse say that God purchased the church with his own blood, a wording with obvious doctrinal force. In 1 Timothy 3:16, one form of the text reads, “God was manifested in the flesh,” while another reads more like, “He who was manifested in the flesh.” In John 1:18, manuscripts differ between “the only begotten Son” and “the only God.” In Jude 5, the text appears in forms that read “the Lord,” “Jesus,” or other Christologically heightened expressions.

Some variants also seem intended to soften language that sounded too human. In Luke 2:33, Luke 2:43, and Luke 2:48, references to Joseph as Jesus’ “father,” or to Joseph and Mary as his “parents,” were altered in some manuscripts. Such changes fit a scribal tendency to protect later theological claims about Jesus’ identity.

Other passages discussed by Ehrman in this connection include Mark 1:1, Luke 3:22, John 1:34, Romans 1:4, John 19:40, Mark 3:11, Luke 7:9, and Galatians 2:20. Not every example carries the same weight, and not every variant was necessarily intentional. Still, the overall pattern is difficult to ignore: in a number of places, the text appears to have been pushed toward a stronger and more explicit identification of Jesus with God.

None of this means that every textual variant affects major New Testament doctrines. But it does mean that major theological tentpoles like the doctrine of the Trinity should not be built on disputed readings.

The fact is the controversy over Jesus’ identity was not fought only in later creeds and councils; it also left its mark on the manuscript tradition. In some cases, scribes appear to have reshaped the text to serve doctrinal ends. Where that has happened, Christian integrity requires that inherited theology give way to the earliest recoverable words of Scripture, however uncomfortable the result.

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

The Devil and Demons Are Real

Some argue that demons and the Devil are not real, personal beings in the Bible. But that claim collapses under the plain evidence of Scripture.

In the Old Testament, Israel was strictly forbidden to consult mediums, spiritists, or the dead (Lev. 19:31; 20:6, 27; Deut. 18:10–12). These are not empty prohibitions. God does not repeatedly warn His people against contact with a non-existent realm where no one lives. The same texts directly connect idolatry with demons: Israel “sacrificed to demons, not to God” (Deut. 32:17; Ps. 106:37). Leviticus 17:7 speaks of sacrifices to “goat-demons” or “goat-idols.” Some demons are even presented with personal names, such as Lilith in Isaiah 34:14 and Azazel in Leviticus 16. The point is false worship is treated as spiritually dangerous because real individuals are behind them.

The New Testament removes all ambiguity.

Jesus and the apostles never treat demons as a metaphor for mental illnesses, or pagan superstition. Demons speak, recognize Jesus, fear judgment, and plead for mercy. In Luke 8, they beg not to be cast into the Abyss. They identify themselves collectively as “Legion.” In Mark 3:22, Beelzebul is called the “ruler of demons,” who some tie directly to Satan himself. Hence, Jesus argues that a kingdom divided against itself cannot stand. But a kingdom cannot be divided if it does not exist. Jesus expels demons repeatedly and in different ways. In Mark 1, a demon cries out and identifies Jesus. In Luke 8, demons ask permission to enter pigs—and Jesus allows it. These are not mental diseases that speak, reason, or beg.

The same belief continues with the apostolic church.

In Acts 16, Paul casts out a “spirit of divination” from a slave girl. James 2:19 states plainly: “Even the demons believe—and shudder.” Mental illness does not believe, does not tremble at the mere thought of God. Only personal beings do.

Paul confirms the same truth when he writes that pagan sacrifices are offered “to demons and not to God” (1 Cor. 10:20–21). He is not accommodating pagan language. He is exposing the spiritual reality behind idolatry called "demons."

And Peter warns that “your adversary, the Devil, prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour” (1 Pet. 5:8). This is not a metaphor for impersonal sin-flesh or human nature. It describes a personal, external adversary. Paul likewise speaks of the Devil as one who “fell into condemnation” (1 Tim. 3:6). That only makes sense if referring to a real individual, not to impersonal forces or systems without further explanation.

Scripture is consistent from beginning to end. Demons are real personal intelligences in rebellion against God.

So, if demons and the Devil are not real, why does Scripture repeatedly warn about them? Why forbid contact with them? Why describe demons as speaking, believing, fearing, falling into condemnation and being cast out? Why connect idolatry with demons at all?

The answer should be obvious.

The Old Testament lays the groundwork. The New Testament removes all doubt.

Demons and the Devil are not symbols for mental illness or metaphors for impersonal sin-flesh. They are real evil spiritual beings over whom God has authority, and over whom He gives His people authority.

To deny demons and the Devil is not to defend biblical truth. It is to explain away the plain meaning of Scripture and that is no defense at all of “the faith once for all handed down to the saints” (Jude 3).

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

On Killing the Enemy and "Just War"

Many sincere Christians continue to teach and practice “just war” — that under certain circumstances, killing in defense of self or country is acceptable and therefore “just.” This belief is often rooted in a desire for justice, social order, and the protection of the innocent.

However, when we turn to the teachings of Jesus and the apostles, a very different picture emerges — one that challenges the entire foundation of Christians being prepared to use lethal violence against the enemy.

A major source of confusion comes from mixing the priorities of earthly nations with the calling of the Christian. Jesus makes a clear distinction when he is confronted by a politician, the Roman governor Pilate:

“My Kingdom is not of this world. If my Kingdom were of this world, then my servants would be fighting…” (John 18:36)

His point is that the nations of this world fight wars. That is what they do. But Jesus explicitly says that his servants, Christians, do not fight, because his Kingdom does not belong to or originate from this world-system. His servants are citizens of a totally different Kingdom that is yet to come. Their loyalty is not ultimately to any present nation, but to God’s holy nation. Therefore, they do not fight as the people of this present evil age do.

In his Sermon on the Mount, Jesus leaves no room for misunderstanding about how we are to treat our enemies:

“But I say to you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you” (Matthew 5:44).

Jesus does not say, “Do not kill your enemies unless it is just,” that is, necessary to do so. The command is unqualified and unconditional: “Love your enemies.”

Period.

It should be obvious that love and killing are fundamentally incompatible. One cannot actively seek to love another person while being prepared to kill them. The two are mutually exclusive actions and lead, in opposite directions, either toward or away from the obedience of faith.

Jesus reinforces this principle at the moment of his arrest when he rebukes Peter:

“Put your sword back into its place; for all those who take the sword will perish by the sword” (Matthew 26:52).

Even in a situation of profound injustice — where the Son of God himself is being wrongfully arrested — lethal violence is rejected. Jesus does not permit his followers to fight, echoing his words to Pilate in John 18: “My servants would be fighting.”

Later, 1 Peter 2:23 reminds the church that:

“When he was insulted, he did not insult in return; when he suffered, he did not threaten, but entrusted himself to the one who judges justly.”

That is, Jesus did not retaliate, did not even threaten, let alone seek to defend himself — or have others defend him — through lethal, violent means. Instead, he chose to trust God because, as Paul later reminds the church at Corinth, He is “the One who resurrects the dead” (2 Corinthians 1:9). If Christians are called to follow in his steps, then the use of lethal violence against others stands in direct contradiction to the example he set.

The apostles continue this same teaching without qualification:

“Repay no one evil for evil… never avenge yourselves, but leave room for the wrath of God.”

“Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good” (Romans 12:17-19, 21).

Again, there are no exceptions, no qualifications to these commandments. Paul does not say, “unless it is a just war,” or “unless the enemy is trying to kill you, your family, or your neighbor.” The command is absolute — do not repay evil with evil. Killing, for any reason is, at its core, repaying evil with evil. It is responding to lethal violence with that same violence. Yet Paul calls Christians to a completely different response: overcoming evil with good. And like love and kill you cannot do evil and good at the same time. Paul echoes his teacher, who told the people in the Sermon on the Mount:

“You have heard that it was said, ‘An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.’ But I say to you, do not resist an evil person. If someone slaps you on the right cheek, turn the other cheek to them as well” (Matthew 5:38-39).

This explains why, later, in Ephesians 6:12, Paul says that “our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers of this present darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places.”

Paul explicitly tells us that our conflict is not against other human beings. “Flesh and blood” refers to people — those we might otherwise label as enemies in war or self-defense. The point is simply this: if our battle is not against people, then killing people cannot be part of that battle. The Christian’s warfare is spiritual, not physical. It is fought with truth, faith, perseverance, and the gospel of the Kingdom — not killing, for any reason. To kill another human being is to act against the very category Paul excludes from our struggle.

In sum, our enemies are not fellow human beings (Ephesians 6:12), because even the enemy bears the image of God (Genesis 9:6). Instead, we are commanded to love our enemies (Matthew 5:44), not to repay evil with evil (Romans 12:17). We are to model the absolute nonviolent example of Jesus (1 Peter 2:23), because we belong to a Kingdom whose servants have been, for the time being, commanded not to fight (John 18:36).

The idea that a Christian can take the life of another person — in war or self-defense or that of others — cannot be reconciled with these teachings. Instead, the follower of Jesus is called to a higher standard: not to take life, but to lay it down if need be, even for his enemies.

In this present evil age, this calling seems not only radical but ludicrous. But it is precisely this obedience of faith that best reflects the person we are said to represent when we call ourselves “Christian.”

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Shared Titles Do Not Prove Shared Identity

Shared titles, shared functions, and shared imagery in the Bible do not prove shared identity. That is a basic rule of sound biblical interpretation, and ignoring it creates needless theological confusion.

Scripture often applies the same titles to different persons without implying that they are the same being. Pagan emperors and kings, for example, are called “king of kings” (Artaxerxes, Ezra 7:12; Nebuchadnezzar, Ezek. 26:7; cf. Dan. 2:37). Yet no one imagines that these rulers therefore share one and the same identity. Again, a shared title does not erase very different persons.

The same principle applies to the title “savior.” Yahweh declares plainly, “I, even I, am Yahweh, and there is no savior besides Me” (Isa. 43:11, LSB). Yet that same Yahweh raised up “saviors” for Israel—human deliverers through whom He rescued His people (Neh. 9:27). This is not a contradiction, but the Bible’s consistent pattern of agency: God is the ultimate source of salvation, while human persons may serve as His appointed instruments. Thus, when exalted language is applied to Jesus, there is no justification for leaping to the conclusion that he is God Himself. The Son bears divine titles and exercises divine functions because he is the Messiah appointed, authorized, and exalted by his God, not because he is, in some mysterious metaphysical sense, the same one God.

A clear example is found in the titles “Alpha and Omega” and “the first and the last.” Revelation does not use these phrases loosely; it defines them in context. When Jesus says, “I am the first and the last,” the text immediately explains the sense in which this is true: he is the one who “was dead, and look, I am alive forevermore” (Rev. 1:17–18; cf. 2:8). In other words, the title as applied to Jesus is qualified by his death and resurrection. That matters greatly, because however one defines death, Scripture is clear that God can not do it, i.e., God cannot die. To claim that God the Father was “dead” and then “made alive” is to slide into the ancient error of Patripassianism—the idea that the Father (pater) in His Incarnation experienced suffering (passio) and died. Therefore, when this language is used of Jesus, it cannot mean that he is the same being as the God who cannot die. The immediate context rules out that conclusion.

By contrast, when Revelation identifies God as “the Alpha and the Omega,” the title is qualified with the added phrase: “the One who is and who was and who is to come” (Rev. 1:8; cf. 1:4; 4:8; 11:17; 16:5). That formula is never used of the Son. It reflects God’s unique, eternal, underived existence and echoes the divine self-disclosure from Exodus 3:14 ("I Am the Self-existing One," LXX). This is the language of the one God, the Father, not of His human Son. The same exclusivity appears in titles such as “God of gods” in the Old Testament (Ps. 136:2; Dan. 2:47) and Pantokrator in Revelation, meaning “the Almighty.” In every occurrence in Revelation, Pantokrator refers to the Lord God, never to the lord Messiah Jesus (Rev. 1:8; 4:8; 11:17; 15:3; 16:7; 21:22).

These are not minor details. They are decisive textual facts.

The Bible never teaches that every shared attribute, function, or imagery collapses two distinct persons—the Father and the Son—into one so-called “essence” or “substance.” That framework belongs to later theological speculation imposed upon the text by post-biblical tradition.

The biblical picture is far clearer and far more coherent: the Father alone is the only one who is true God (John 17:3), called by the personal divine name Yahweh (Deut. 6:4; cf. Mark 12:29).

The Son of God is His Messiah, uniquely begotten in Mary’s womb, not a person who entered her womb from outside (Matt. 1:18–20; Luke 1:30–35).

To confuse shared titles—consistent with the biblical principle of agency—with shared identity is to read Scripture through the lens of later conciliar creeds rather than allowing the inspired biblical authors to speak for themselves.