Below is a chronological, historically grounded list of major Christian teachers (post–New Testament, ~2000 years) who explicitly or structurally taught the economic (οἰκονομία) aspects of the Divine Trinity—that is, the Trinity as God’s self-disclosure and operation in creation, incarnation, redemption, and consummation, as distinct (though inseparable) from the immanent Trinity.

I keep the focus on teachers, key formulations, and representative quotations or paraphrases, showing development rather than repetition.

 


 

 

I. Early Church: Economy as Rule of Faith (2nd–3rd c.)

 

 

1.

Irenaeus of Lyons

 (c. 130–202)

 

📌 Foundational architect of Trinitarian economy

“The Father plans, the Son executes, and the Spirit perfects.”

(Against Heresies, IV–V, paraphrased)

Contribution

 

  • Introduced οἰκονομία as:

     

    • God’s historical self-administration
    • Unified saving plan

     

  • Trinity known through actions, not speculation.
  • Son and Spirit as the “two hands of God.”

 

➡ Economy precedes ontology methodologically

 


 

 

2.

Tertullian

 (c. 155–220)

 

“The Trinity is manifested in the economy, though one in substance.”

(Against Praxeas)

Contribution

 

  • Coins Trinitas.
  • Explicit economic Trinity:

     

    • One substance
    • Three persons in dispensation (dispensatio).

     

  • Economy defends distinction without division.

 

 


 

 

3.

Hippolytus of Rome

 (c. 170–235)

 

“The Father sends the Word, and the Word bestows the Spirit.”

Contribution

 

  • Linear missional economy:

     

    • Father → Son → Spirit

     

  • Strong salvation-historical orientation.

 

 


 

 

II. Nicene & Pro-Nicene Fathers (4th c.)

 

 

4.

Athanasius of Alexandria

 (c. 296–373)

 

“He became man that we might become God.”

(On the Incarnation)

Contribution

 

  • Economy of incarnation as:

     

    • Revelation of eternal Sonship
    • Means of deification

     

  • Distinguishes:

     

    • Eternal generation
    • Temporal mission

     

 

 


 

 

5.

Basil the Great

 (c. 330–379)

 

“The order of revelation is from the Father, through the Son, in the Spirit.”

Contribution

 

  • Explicit economic taxis (order):

     

    • Father = source
    • Son = mediator
    • Spirit = perfecter

     

  • Operations inseparable, roles distinct.

 

 


 

 

6.

Gregory of Nazianzus

 (c. 329–390)

 

“The Old Testament proclaimed the Father openly, the Son obscurely;

the New revealed the Son and hinted at the Spirit.”

Contribution

 

  • Progressive economy of revelation.
  • Pedagogical unfolding of the Trinity.

 

 


 

 

7.

Gregory of Nyssa

 (c. 335–395)

 

“The divine nature is known in its operations.”

Contribution

 

  • Economy as epistemological access to God.
  • Unity of action, distinction of persons.

 

 


 

 

III. Augustine & Latin Tradition (4th–5th c.)

 

 

8.

Augustine of Hippo

 (354–430)

 

“The missions of the Son and the Spirit reveal their eternal processions.”

(De Trinitate)

Contribution

 

  • Classic mission–procession framework:

     

    • Temporal economy reflects eternal relations.

     

  • Economy is revelatory, not accidental.

 

⚠️ Strong psychological emphasis, but economy retained.

 


 

 

IV. Byzantine & Medieval East (6th–14th c.)

 

 

9.

Maximus the Confessor

 (c. 580–662)

 

“The mystery of Christ recapitulates all the divine economies.”

Contribution

 

  • Christological economy as center of all history.
  • Trinity acts synergistically in deification.
  • Economy → cosmic consummation.

 

 


 

 

10.

John of Damascus

 (c. 675–749)

 

“The economy reveals the distinctions without dividing the nature.”

Contribution

 

  • Systematization of Greek patristic thought.
  • Economy safeguards orthodoxy.

 

 


 

 

11.

Gregory Palamas

 (1296–1359)

 

“The energies of God are communicated in the economy.”

Contribution

 

  • Distinction:

     

    • Essence (immanent)
    • Energies (economic)

     

  • Trinity experienced through divine operations.

 

 


 

 

V. Reformation Era (16th c.)

 

 

12.

Martin Luther

 (1483–1546)

 

“God is known only in His works toward us.”

Contribution

 

  • Functional, economic emphasis.
  • Trinity revealed in:

     

    • Cross
    • Gospel
    • Justification

     

 

 


 

 

13.

John Calvin

 (1509–1564)

 

“God accommodates Himself to our capacity.”

Contribution

 

  • Economy as divine condescension.
  • Father–Son–Spirit distinguished in salvation.
  • Strongly biblical, anti-speculative.

 

 


 

 

VI. Post-Reformation & Modern Theology (18th–20th c.)

 

 

14.

Friedrich Schleiermacher

 (1768–1834)

 

“The Trinity is a doctrine of redemption.”

Contribution

 

  • Trinity derived from economy of salvation.
  • Weak ontology, strong economy.

 

 


 

 

15.

Karl Rahner

 (1904–1984)

 

“The economic Trinity is the immanent Trinity, and vice versa.”

Contribution

 

  • Most influential modern formulation.
  • Rejects separation of economy and being.

 

 


 

 

16.

Jürgen Moltmann

 (b. 1926)

 

“The Trinity is revealed in the history of suffering and love.”

Contribution

 

  • Historical, relational economy.
  • Cross as trinitarian event.

 

 


 

 

17.

Hans Urs von Balthasar

 (1905–1988)

 

“The Trinity is a drama enacted in history.”

Contribution

 

  • Theodramatic economy.
  • Missions of Son and Spirit central.

 

 


 

 

VII. Recovery Tradition / Chinese Theology (20th c.)

 

 

18.

Watchman Nee (倪柝声)

 (1903–1972)

 

“The Father is the source, the Son the expression, the Spirit the application.”

Contribution

 

  • Experiential economy.
  • Trinity known in salvation and life.

 

 


 

 

19.

Witness Lee (李常受)

 (1905–1997)

 

“The Divine Trinity is not for doctrine but for God’s economy.”

Contribution

 

  • Highly developed economic Trinitarianism:

     

    • Father → Son → Spirit → believers

     

  • Economy = God dispensing Himself.
  • Distinction without separation; coinherence emphasized.

 

 


 

 

VIII. Summary Timeline (Condensed)

 

Era Key Emphasis
2nd c. Economy as rule of faith (Irenaeus)
4th c. Missions reveal processions
7th c. Christological economy
Medieval East Energies & participation
Reformation Economy over speculation
Modern Economy ↔ immanent identity
Recovery Economy as divine dispensing

 


 

 

IX. One-Sentence Synthesis

 

Across two millennia, the doctrine of the Trinity is consistently known, confessed, and safeguarded through God’s economy—His historical self-giving as Father, Son, and Spirit—rather than through abstract ontology alone.

 


 

If you want next, I can:

 

  1. Compare Eastern, Western, and Recovery models side-by-side
  2. Provide a journal-style literature review section
  3. Map “divine economy” to Greek οἰκονομία usage patristically
  4. Critically evaluate Rahner’s Rule in light of Irenaeus & Witness Lee

 

Just tell me the next step.