Trinitarians hold to a position that God is three persons within three entities and yet one God somehow. This defies logic and is confusion, though they call it the mystery. The word of God has revealed all mysteries (of the nature of God and His will) including the triad of the trinity, which is the mystery of iniquity.

Trinitarians hold to a inexplicable proposition that the father is God, the son is God, and the Holy Spirit is God, yet there are not three Gods, but one. But this actually defies the laws of logic. Whenever reason, logic, and arguments run into trouble they always say it is a divine mystery, incomprehensible to mankind. In essence, they resort to divine mystery to explain how that there are three who are God, but not three Gods but somehow they are just one. If the doctrine of the trinity is a divine mystery, is it proper to claim that it has been revealed? Revelation is, by definition, the unveiling of a mystery: once revealed, it is a mystery no longer (see Ephesians 1:9-10; 3:1-6; Colossians 2:2-3); if it remains a mystery, then it has not been revealed.

The trinity speaks of three different entities, yet they are all supposedly one. What if someone said that Zeus spoke from heaven, Hercules died and rose again, and Hermes came in the form of a dove. I am borrowing these names from Greek mythology for the father, son, and Holy Spirit. Then it becomes clear that trinitarians are thinking of three gods, but refuses to admit it because this would directly contradict Scripture’s monotheistic affirmation as found in the Shema of Deuteronomy 6:4-5. “Hear, O Israel. The Lord Our God is one Lord. And thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all of thine heart, soul, mind and strength.”

Many skeptics have scoffed at Protestant Pastors and Catholic Priests who have little interest in subjecting their views to examination, critique, and possibly falsification. They are unlike scientists, who publish their works for the very purpose of having their claims checked by the scientific and broader community. Scientists often revise their work and change their thesis when shown to be in error.

Logician Steven Davis summarizes the serious difficulty of their supposed trinity. Consider the following things.

1. The Father is God.

2. The Son is God.

3. The Holy Spirit is God.

4. The Father is not the Son and the Son is not the Holy Spirit and the Holy Spirit is not the Father.

5. There is one and only one God.

The problem is that these statements seem to constitute an inconsistent set, that is, a set of statements not all of whose members can be true. This can be shown easily, since, 1,2,3 and 5 entail:

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