In These Three Are One, David Cunningham articulates a Trinitian perspective that challenges a wide range of modern assumptions about God and the created order.
Cunningham seeks to rehabilitate the Augustinian tradition of locating the "triune marks" left upon the world by its Creator. This book explores ancient rhetoric, communication theory, and literature as well as more traditional theological sources to illuminate not only the Christian doctrine of God, but also its radical critique of contemporary culture. This book confounds the popular notion that the doctrine of the Trinity is esoteric and irrelevant and describes how it is at the very heart of Christian life and thought.