Authenic Discipleship in Christ through Reflective ChristianitySeries Books.

Christianity: God, Jesus, The Trinity & The Holy Spirit

This book offers a clear and compelling guide to the nature of God—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—and what it means to truly know and walk with the triune God. While many Christians understand who Jesus is, and most speak of God generally, few deeply engage with the person and power of the Holy Spirit. This work seeks to correct that imbalance by showing how all three persons of the Trinity are active, personal, and essential—not only in doctrine but in daily Christian life.

Through 13 foundational chapters and one reflective benediction, the book walks the reader through who each member of the Trinity is, how they relate to one another, and how they relate to us. The Spirit is not merely a force or feeling but a personal and divine presence, as active in creation as in Pentecost. The Son is not a temporary emissary but the eternal Word made flesh. The Father is not a distant authority but the designer of our gifts, callings, and very place in the Body. Together, they operate in perfect unity, inviting us into their love and purpose.

One chapter is dedicated to correcting our modern misunderstanding of the Spirit as “emotional” or secondary. Another asks hard questions about why we relegate the Holy Spirit to a supporting role, when Scripture shows He is the indwelling power of God Himself. In later chapters, the book explores how the Trinity is not only theological truth but the framework through which creation, redemption, spiritual gifting, and unity are accomplished.

The final chapters call Christians to stop comparing their roles and start honoring the Spirit’s choices and the Father’s placement. The church has no spare parts. Jealousy, status, and pride are foreign to God’s design. Each believer has been uniquely placed to fulfill a holy purpose.

This is not a book of abstract theology, but a deeply practical invitation to know God as He is—and to live boldly in that knowledge. It is a call to reverence, unity, power, and love… lived out between the first garden and the last.