he paper develops a structural argument that the universe’s relational architecture requires a relational source, and that only the Christian doctrine of a triune Creator possesses the internal ontology capable of generating such a world without contradiction. It begins by identifying relationality—not matter, energy, or consciousness—as the fundamental feature of reality across physics, information theory, biology, cognition, and social systems. These domains all exhibit a triadic pattern of generativity, form, and coherence.The paper then evaluates the major metaphysical frameworks found in world religions and philosophical systems. Monism lacks internal distinction, dualism lacks unity, emanationism lacks intrinsic relationality, polytheism lacks coherence, and non‑theistic systems lack an originating ground. Each fails to supply one or more of the structural requirements that a relational cosmos demands.The core claim is that Christianity’s triune Creator uniquely satisfies these requirements. The eternal relations of Father, Son, and Spirit provide distinction, unity, and mediation within a single divine essence. This makes relationality eternal rather than contingent, and coherence intrinsic rather than emergent. The universe’s triadic structure is therefore not accidental but reflective of its source.The paper concludes that the Christian Creator is not merely one theological option but the only metaphysically sufficient ground for a relational universe. It reframes the doctrine of creation, the intelligibility of the cosmos, and the philosophy of religion by showing that the Trinity is the minimal ontology capable of generating the world we inhabit.
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Denis Bailey (Fri,) studied this question.