"Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them
in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:"
If ex-President George Bush told General Norman Schwartzkopf to
"Go ye therefore, and speak to the Iraqis, chastising
them in the name of the United States, Great Britain, and the
Soviet Union," does this require that these three countries
are one physical country? They may be one in purpose
and in their goals but this does in no way require that
they are the same physical entity.
Further, the "Great Commission" as narrated in the Gospel
of Mark, bears no mention of the Father, Son and/or Holy
Ghost (see Mark 16:15). As we shall see in chapter two, Christian
historians readily admit that the Bible was the object of continuous
"correction" and "addition" to bring it in
line with established beliefs. They present many documented cases
where words were "inserted" into a given verse to validate
a given doctrine. Tom Harpur, former religion
editor of the Toronto Star says:
"All but the most conservative of scholars agree that at least the latter part of this command was inserted later. The formula occurs nowhere else in the New Testament, and we know from the only evidence available (the rest of the New Testament) that the earliest Church did not baptize people using these words - baptism was 'into' or 'in' the name of Jesus alone. Thus it is argued that the verse originally read 'baptizing them in my name' and then was expanded to work in the dogma. In fact, the first view put forward by German critical scholars as well as the Unitarians in the nineteenth century, was stated as the accepted position of mainline scholarship as long ago as 1919, when Peake's commentary was first published: 'The church of the first days did not observe this world-wide commandment, even if they new it. The command to baptize into the threefold name is a late doctrinal expansion.'"
"For Christ's sake," Tom Harpur, p.
103
This is confirmed in 'Peake's Commentary on the Bible' published
since 1919, which is universally acclaimed and considered to be
the standard reference for students of the Bible. It says:
"This mission is described in the language of the church
and most commentators doubt that the Trinitarian formula was original
at this point in Mt.'s Gospel, since the NT elsewhere does not
know of such a formula and describes baptism as being performed
in the name of the Lord Jesus (e.g. Ac. 2:38, 8:16, etc.)."
For example, these Christian scholars observed that after Jesus
allegedly issued this command and then was taken up into heaven,
the apostles displayed a complete lack of knowledge of this command.
"And Peter said to them, 'Repent, and let each of you be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins;...'"
Acts 2:38.
These Christian scholars observed that it is extremely unlikely
that if Jesus had indeed specifically commanded his apostles to
"baptize in the name of the father and the son and the holy
Ghost" that the apostles would later disobey his direct command
and baptize only in the name of Jesus Christ, alone.
As a final piece of evidence, it is noted that after the departure
of Jesus, when Paul decided to preach to the Gentiles, this resulted
in a heated debate and a great difference of opinion between him
and at least three of the apostles. This would not be the case
if Jesus had, as claimed, openly commanded them to preach to the
Gentiles (see section 6.13 for more). So we notice that not only
does this verse never claim that the three are one, or even that
the three are equal, but most scholars of Christianity today recognize
that at the very least the last part of this verse ("the
Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost") was not originally
part of the command of Jesus but was inserted by the church long
after Jesus' departure.