The trinity isn't in the Bible. It was made up hundreds of years after Jesus, in the flesh a different person from God the father, prayed to his father, and was visited by the Holy Ghost in the form of a dove.
Three separate entities seems scriptural to me.
Why wouldn't God have a wife? Celibate kid-fucker like a Catholic priest?
Don't know about that, but if we are made in God's image it kind of makes sense.
Not sure where you get the idea of being co-equal to Jesus Christ being bad...isn't that what he would want us to be, like him?
Obviously you are not a Christian yourself and have close to zero knowledge of Christian theology or history.
Trinitarianism isn't explicit in scripture, it is implicit. There is only one God, who is Holy and Indivisible. What does that make the Son of God and the Holy Spirit? Work it out.
God does not have a wife. There is nothing in 5,000 years of recorded scripture or tradition to support that claim. Medieval Jewish mysticism states that the Godhead has a feminine element. That is not the same thing, so don't even bother bringing it up because you heard it somewhere.
The idea of humans being co-divine on the same level as God is pure blasphemy. The idea literally comes from Satan. Genesis (3:4): "And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die: For God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil."
You do realize that every religion disagrees on hundreds of things, and none of it is scientifically backed at all. You can't claim to be any more of an authority than literally anybody else. The Catholic church is the original GloboHomoPedo, and they met and discussed it, claiming NO REVELATION whatsoever, and decreed what the now mixed Pagan-Judeo-Christian religion would believe. Not even claiming it was from God. They argued and came to a compromise.
You have a comic-book level understanding of Christianity, my man. I can't take anything you seriously. Spend at least 6 months learning the basics of Christian history and then maybe we can have this discussion.
The trinity isn't in the Bible. It was made up hundreds of years after Jesus, in the flesh a different person from God the father, prayed to his father, and was visited by the Holy Ghost in the form of a dove.
Three separate entities seems scriptural to me.
Why wouldn't God have a wife? Celibate kid-fucker like a Catholic priest?
Don't know about that, but if we are made in God's image it kind of makes sense.
Not sure where you get the idea of being co-equal to Jesus Christ being bad...isn't that what he would want us to be, like him?
Obviously you are not a Christian yourself and have close to zero knowledge of Christian theology or history.
Trinitarianism isn't explicit in scripture, it is implicit. There is only one God, who is Holy and Indivisible. What does that make the Son of God and the Holy Spirit? Work it out.
God does not have a wife. There is nothing in 5,000 years of recorded scripture or tradition to support that claim. Medieval Jewish mysticism states that the Godhead has a feminine element. That is not the same thing, so don't even bother bringing it up because you heard it somewhere.
The idea of humans being co-divine on the same level as God is pure blasphemy. The idea literally comes from Satan. Genesis (3:4): "And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die: For God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil."
You do realize that every religion disagrees on hundreds of things, and none of it is scientifically backed at all. You can't claim to be any more of an authority than literally anybody else. The Catholic church is the original GloboHomoPedo, and they met and discussed it, claiming NO REVELATION whatsoever, and decreed what the now mixed Pagan-Judeo-Christian religion would believe. Not even claiming it was from God. They argued and came to a compromise.
You have a comic-book level understanding of Christianity, my man. I can't take anything you seriously. Spend at least 6 months learning the basics of Christian history and then maybe we can have this discussion.