No.
You understand the concept about yourself. I was saying that the same concept applies to the Father.
There is a very close connection in scripture between mind and spirit.
“Who has directed the spirit of the LORD? Or as his counselor has informed Him?”
(Isaiah 40:13)
”For who has known the mind of the LORD, that he will instruct Him? But we have the mind of Christ.“
(1 Corinthians 2:16)
Again, you have failed to answer my question:
Why do Peter and Luke call the Holy Spirit "God"?
He meant they are one in will and purpose.
You're taking the word "one" out of context. He didn't just say "one", He said "are one".
ἐσμεν = exist
"The Father and I
exist as one (or unity). It is a statement of existence, not will and purpose. They happen to be one in will and purpose, but we get that from other scriptures. This verse is a verse about their existence.
No. As I’ve said several times, the life of Jesus began in the womb of his mother. Jesus is not presented in scripture as an eternally existing person.
When I talk about the eternal nature of "Jesus", I am referring to who he is, not what He is. I am referring to the Son of God. Do you believe that the Son of God had a beginning?
There is no plurality in the word echad, only singularity. Echad may be used to modify a collective noun. When that occurs the plurality is in the collective noun, not in echad. One means one, not more than one.
In the most respectful way I can say this...You don't know what you're talking about. There are singular and plural for many Hebrew words. There is a singular form of echad, and there is a plural form or echad. Moses could have used either, but he used the plural form of the word. Some Hebrew words can only have one form, so with those words (like Elohim), context has to determine the meaning. But echad has concrete congregations, meaning there is no ambiguity in the number of the word's case.
I will illustrate with this verse from
Luke 22:
“
Simon, Simon, behold, Satan has demanded permission to sift you like wheat; but I have prayed for you, that your faith may not fail; and you, when once you have turned again, strengthen your brothers."
Question 1. Who has Satan demanded permission to sift?
Question 2. Who's faith has Jesus prayed for (according to this verse)?
(I'll wait for your answers)
In your example, how many clusters of grapes are there? One, not more than one. The plurality is in the collective noun “cluster,” not in the word one.
The passage here in Num 13 uses the plural form of echad to refer to a collective whole. Every use of the plural form of echad refers to a collective whole (e.g. a group of people)Here the plural form is used because the "cluster" is a collective whole (containing many grapes).
The parallel to the Trinity would be:
Cluster= The being "God" (a collective whole containing...)
...3 Grapes= 3 persons (namely, Father, Son, Spirit)
If there was only one grape on the vine in
Num 13, then the singular for of echad would have been used. But when the plural form is used, it is indicating plurality within the "one" thing it refers to.
The one God (the Father) is speaking to his angelic court.
So we are made in the image and likeness of angels too?
There is tension here between the statements and the one God of Israel/Jesus.
I already explained why this is totally in line with trinitarianism. You either don't understand my trinitarianism, or you don't understand what you said, or you don't understand the explanation I gave about how it is consistent with trinitarianism.
The God of Israel/Jesus. The Father.
When did he die?