spotlight wrote:One being. Three persons.
The definition of person is a human being. So your definition of god is three human beings.
Sorry ! Jesus is the only person in The Godhead who fits your definition

spotlight wrote:One being. Three persons.
The definition of person is a human being. So your definition of god is three human beings.
spotlight wrote:One being. Three persons.
The definition of person is a human being. So your definition of god is three human beings.
huckelberry wrote:Mittens wrote:
Not so fast spotlight![]()
We teach 1X1X1=1 or three separate persons ONE GOD
but are gods
you realize perhaps that 1x1x1 =1x1x1x1x1x1x1x1x1x1x1x1x1x1x1x1x1x1
x1x1x1x1x1x1x1x1x1x1 etc
does that mean that the LDS godhead equals the Trinity?
huckelberry wrote:spotlight,
that is one possible definition of person. It is not the one being used in trinitarian discussion.
reasonable quick view in wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Person
it points out that the discussion starts with the question of what is relationship between God ,Jesus and, holy spirit. It is concerned with relationship.
Separating LDS thought from Trinitarian can present difficulties and uncertainties. I doubt that either the number or exact definition of persons is an easy path to clarify. There may be more difference in the idea of what is god to start with.
spotlight wrote:Mittens finds the LDS version of god (three but one in purpose) laughable while proclaiming a belief in the "mainstream" Trinitarian view of god. I submit that all views of literal gods are laughable. The Trinitarian god is no exception. Jesus being the son of Mary would have had the signature of ERV patterns in his DNA proving that his body was descended from primordial apes and from there back to the first life form which if we wish we could for sake of argument attribute to the creative power of god. So now the Trinitarian god (singular) is his own father and his own son and he created himself. Sounds laughable to me.
Maksutov wrote:Spotlight, it should be possible to research this. I understand that there are several cathedrals that have remnants of the Son of God's foreskin. So we can sequence the genome of a God-human hybrid.
spotlight wrote:Mittens finds the LDS version of god (three but one in purpose) laughable while proclaiming a belief in the "mainstream" Trinitarian view of god. I submit that all views of literal gods are laughable. The Trinitarian god is no exception. Jesus being the son of Mary would have had the signature of ERV patterns in his DNA proving that his body was descended from primordial apes and from there back to the first life form which if we wish we could for sake of argument attribute to the creative power of god. So now the Trinitarian god (singular) is his own father and his own son and he created himself. Sounds laughable to me.