You can question an idea, or accept it and see where it takes you. What's your pleasure? If the former, if you're looking for sense, I do not think you will find any at all.So the trinity is the idea — Pinprick
So the trinity is the idea that somehow God, Jesus, and the Holy Ghost are separate, but one. — Pinprick
I take it that a mind is indivisible and thus the mind of God - like any mind - is not divisible. It is thus one, not three. — Bartricks
So the trinity is the idea that somehow God, Jesus, and the Holy Ghost are separate, but one — Pinprick
I think there's plenty of scope to make some kind of sense of it without contradiction or metaphysical absurdity. — Bartricks
Wouldn’t he be privy to all the information or knowledge that God has? — Pinprick
For I seem to remember hearing somewhere that it is not explicit in the bible. — Bartricks
Christians discover ideas that can be thought of but which are above reason. Those doctrines are amazing and mind expanding. — Gregory
It's just a matter of formulating it in a way that makes it acceptable to philosophy in general — Apollodorus
In a few quick posts you have gone from claiming you can formulate the Trinity in a way that is acceptable to philosophy in general to throwing a tantrum. — Fooloso4
I never said I can formulate the Trinity, I don't need to. — Apollodorus
So, there is no contradiction. It's just a matter of formulating it in a way that makes it acceptable to philosophy in general, not just to Christian philosophers. — Apollodorus
So, I don't need to formulate it for myself. — Apollodorus
My comment was addressed to him. Nothing to do with you. — Apollodorus
Since you see no contradiction it follows that it is not possible for you formulate it in such a way. — Fooloso4
This is a public forum. If you don't want anyone to challenge your claims then you are in the wrong place. — Fooloso4
Since you see no contradiction it follows that it is not possible for you formulate it in such a way.
— Fooloso4
It doesn't follow at all. No logical or even grammatical connection between one thing and the other. — Apollodorus
So, there is no contradiction. It's just a matter of formulating it in a way that makes it acceptable to philosophy in general, not just to Christian philosophers. — Apollodorus
My claim is that Christians have the right to interpret their own religion in whatever way they wish. — Apollodorus
No one is preventing you from interpreting it any way you want. — Fooloso4
Jesus would have been appalled to find that he was deified. — Fooloso4
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