I would say that it is generally accepted amongst mainstream Christianity. Exact percentages, however I would not know. I would guess 70% or so.
2006-06-18 14:29:56
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answer #1
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answered by RandyGE 5
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100%
By definition, a Christian is somebody who has been baptized using a Trinitarian baptism. Ergo somebody who is not a Trinitarian will not have a Trinitarian baptism and cannot be a Christian.
Also: Baptism causes a permanent ontological change in the individual (why it cannot be repeated). Once baptized a person becomes a child of God permanently (but they still can end up in hell) or a Christian. As such, a person's current beliefs about the Trinity do not enter into the equation (preventing it from becoming less than 100%), they are still a Christian, just a schismatic, heretical, or apostate Christian depending on the extent of their beliefs.
2006-06-19 00:41:30
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answer #2
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answered by Liet Kynes 5
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The ones that have the Spirit of God living inside them.
The ones that can discern the Truth of The Most High God by the witness of His Spirit!
"He,{God's Spirit}, who is in us, is greater than he,{Muhammed}, who is in this world!
2006-06-19 00:20:18
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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what is a trinitarian?
2006-06-18 21:28:32
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answer #4
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answered by Patrick C 1
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No statistics on this, just as there are no reliable statistics on how many catholics/ protestants really go to church.
2006-06-18 21:28:00
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answer #5
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answered by Egyptian Prince 4
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