The passage in Matthew's Gospel where Jesus says, "Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit" is a good place to look for those three names in Greek. Starting at "in the name..." the Greek reads like this [with a transliteration and translation provided for each word], "εἰς [eis, into] τὸ [to, the] ὄνομα [onoma, name] τοῦ [tou, of the] πατρὸς [patros, father] καὶ [kai, and] τοῦ [tou, of the] υἱοῦ [huiou, son] καὶ [kai, and] τοῦ [tou, of the] ἁγίου [hagiou, holy] πνεύματος [pneumatos, spirit]." It's important to note that Greek declines nouns (so "Father" is "πατήρ" [pater] but "of the Father" as it is here is "πατρὸς.")
Source: http://www.zhubert.com/bible?source=greek&verseref=Matthew+28%3A19
a way
Say 'I invite the holy spirit in' and the holy spirit will come in
Father Son and Holy Spirit = الآب والابن والروح القدس (pronounced al-Ab, al-Abn, wa al-Ruħ al-Quds)
Ancient greek does not have small (or capital) letters
Slava Otcu i Sinu i Svjatomu Duhu
You could say that a white dove is the bird used to describe both the Holy spirit and peace.
The Father is the only one and true God. He is the very person who God is. You could say the Father is the will of God. From the Father comes his Logos, word, or reason (the Son) and from the Father through the Son comes the breath of God (God's Holy Spirit), who carries the Son.
(Name) I baptize you in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit
Jesus said it himself in the Bible that "I and my father are one" so whatever God possess He possess. Jesus was invested by the Holy Spirit by turning His soul in the direction of God. When you consider Jesus, you can say this is God, you can say He is the image of God, you can say the Holy Spirit is reflected in Him, and you can say He is a son of man, the child of Mary and Joseph.
A:Christians regard the Holy Trinity as three persons in one God - the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. There is actually nothing in the Bible that supports the concept of the Holy Trinity, but we could look at whether this passage is a reasonable representation. When Matthew has Jesus say, "For it is not ye that speak, but the Spirit of your Father which speaketh in you," He is at most talking of the Holy Spirit, not representing the Spirit as part of the Holy Trinity. When we look at the key words, "the Spirit of your Father," it is even less like the later Christian idea of three persons in one but seems to excludes Jesus from a close relationship with the Spirit.
This expression goes back to Jesus who told his disciples to go to all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen is an expression meaning "let it be so".
Different religious people may have varying beliefs about God, ranging from a single divine being with absolute power to multiple gods representing different aspects of existence. Some may view God as a loving figure who guides and protects them, while others may see God as a force of nature or a cosmic energy that governs the universe. Ultimately, beliefs about God are deeply personal and often central to one's religious faith and practices.