The teaching that God is one was paramount in Old Testament theology, since the introduction of the New Testament the concept of one God continued and was expanded by and through Jesus in Second Temple Monotheism. With this in mind, the Bible does not teach the concept of the Trinitarian doctrine. The Apostles, including the New Testament Church, were pure monotheistic and oneness believers knowing and understanding that God is one and not one substance and three persons. Therefore, this book has addressed a variety of issues and provided a body of literature and authority supporting the position that God is numerically one and that the Trinitarian doctrine is a human construct and product that is unscriptural and unbiblical, which evolved over the centuries being fueled by man made creeds and ideologies. It is not surprising then that even Trinitarians struggle to define the Trinitarian doctrine suggesting it is a mystical revelation, when in fact, others have argued that it is incomprehensible.
Overall, this book has good information. However, with that said the author dozens and dozens of times throughout the book cites ‘ibid’ without a page number which is extremely frustrating to those who mine footnotes for further study. Additionally, the amount of spelling errors throughout the book along with other books by the author suggests that they are rushed into production. I would give this book a rating of 3.5 due to citations without page numbers and numerous spelling errors.
This is an incredible resource for the true student of the Word. While it is a deep read, it is also enlightening and inspiring as the author takes us on a journey through the confusion that surrounds the doctrine of the so-called trinity. The only fault I would mention would be a number of grammatical errors that I encountered.