Evangelical churches and denominations have a
Trinitarian theology, and as in almost every major Christian stream of thought, the God of creation is eternally present and revealed in three divine Persons, namely, the Father (Almighty God), the Son (or – literal , , , Jesus Christ); and the Holy Spirit. The insistence of evangelicals, based on their beliefs found in the Gospels, differs from Catholicism in that evangelicals "only wish to justify this creed on the basis of biblical passages or concepts" and not on
Tradition or the
Councils (believing that the birth of this dogma is often attached to the
Council of Nicaea, which took place at the beginning of the 4th century). Evangelicals normally adhere (at least informally) to the
Nicene Creed (381) defining the relational differentiation of God, both one and triune, as well as the principle of unity and identity, in the case of the two natures, in the person of Christ (
christology), as well as the positions of the
First Council of Nicaea (and not at the council itself) which condemn
Arianism. Before the Council of Nicaea, the idea of the Trinity was not an official teaching of the Church but had been the topic of many early Christian teachings. The Nicene Creed put in place once and for all the idea of Trinitarian theology as is believed to be true by most Christian believers. Nevertheless, most evangelical churches, in order to avoid any unnecessary controversy, often posit that the mystery of the exact relations between the three divine persons is beyond any human reason, and will not encourage speculative theology concerning the subject of the Trinity beyond that which is not immediately deductible from the Bible. The
Virgin Mary is so called because she was a virgin before the birth of Jesus but the evangelicals believe that she had other biological children, the brothers and sisters of Jesus quoted in the
Gospels (Mark 6:3). She is recognized as "Maria
Christotokos" () and is considered a model of faith, humility and obedience to God. Some evangelicals refute the name of "
Theotokos" () of the
Council of Ephesus (431) to avoid any confusion with the
Marian devotion found in the Roman Catholic Church, but most evangelical theologians accept this formulation from a theoretical point of view by relying on the principle of communicating idioms and considering that rejecting it would amount to denying the uniqueness of the person of Christ; they generally complete it cautiously with a "according to its human nature". Evangelicals almost universally reject the idea that Mary is
co-redemptor or
mediator, as well as the
Immaculate Conception, the
Dormition and the
Assumption, considering them as biblically unjustified, as well as any form of Marian piety as practiced by the Catholic Church. This Trinitarian conception of God has various consequences in the evangelical
Christian faith:
God the Father To evangelicals, like other Christians,
God, is the
creator of heaven and earth. Moreover, God is presented as a loving
Father, and the relation of the human to God must necessarily be that of a child vis-à-vis his father.
Jesus Jesus is considered perfectly man and perfectly God (
Christology). This component of the Trinity, has a resonance and particular consequences for the evangelicals • Jesus Christ is considered the "only begotten Son" of God or of the Father (John 3:16), without any biological connotation (belief in his miraculous birth), but in the biblical sense of the term, which according to the evangelical interpretation has a filial symbolic and spiritual status to God, brought closer to
Isaac, the son of
Abraham (book of
Genesis). • Jesus Christ is considered as "God made man". It is a firm object of faith that Jesus Christ is only a carnal manifestation of God, and that He has existed from all eternity. • Jesus Christ is, considered in his divinity, as a stakeholder in the judgment of the living and the dead which will take place at the
end times.
Holy Spirit The
Holy Spirit (or
Spirit of God) God as Spirit is considered to be fully God. It is the eternal manifestation of God in the human dimension. It is the presence of the Spirit that Jesus promised in the Gospel to those who would be converted, attested by the first witnesses of Christ (
Acts of the Apostles chapter 2). All evangelical movements consider that the
Holy Spirit is present and working in the personal stories of each believer, as well as in the future of the universal Church. As a stakeholder in the
conversion of the individual, it is also considered to be the origin of various gifts, which vary a great deal from the New Testament writings, but it is common in the
Charismatic movement emphasize on one gifts delivered by the Spirit. The gifts of the Holy Spirit are 9; creative gifts (writing and the arts), pastoral gifts (community guidance and guidance), apostolic gifts (preaching, teaching), prophetic gifts (prophecy in its various forms), prodigious gifts (wonders and miracles). Evangelical Christianity, particularly in the
Pentecostal,
Evangelical charismatic, and
Neo-charismatic movements, places an emphasis on the Spirit and its action in human lives and in the church. == Adoration of God only ==