to be honest i don't know
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No, the word 'Trinity' is not in the King James Bible. The use of the term Holy Trinity began with the Council of Nicaea in 325, when it agreed that God the Father, Jesus and the Holy Ghost formed a Holy Trinity. In modern Bibles, 1 John 5:7 refers indirectly to the concept of the Trinity, but this was never in the early Greek manuscripts, only appearing in the Latin translation of the fifth century, after the Trinity doctrine had been accepted.
It's just a little different than you stated it . . . God is 3 in 1. God is the Lord all-powerful (1) Jesus the Christ was God in human form living with the Jewish people (2) and God is in the spirit of God . . . this is the form that moves among us, although you cannot see a spirit. (3) These 3 forms that God takes, or has taken, are often called the Holy Trinity.
The word 'Trinity' can not be found in the Bible, nor can any actual references to the Trinity. The Holy Trinity was a third century concept that was adopted by the Council of Nicaea and made legally binding by Emperor Theodosius later in the fourth century. A passage known as the "Johannine Comma" (1 John 5:7) does refer indirectly to the concept of the Trinity, but was never in the early Greek manuscripts, only appearing in the Latin translation of the fifth century, long after the Trinity doctrine had been accepted by the Council of Nicaea.
The word Trinity is not in the bible.
It stands for the Holy Trinity, The Father, The son and the Holy Ghost.