No, it‘s correctly represented as 1 x 1 x 1. We just showed that and you verified it with the math example. You correctly determined the apple was still 1 apple no matter the number of ones (1’s) on the left side of the chalkboard. We can do that with multiplication, but not with addition.
Then you refused to follow your own Little Johnny to where this automatically leads ─ what is
√(Ghost/[Jesus-God])
?
After all, if you can multiply, you can divide, and if you can divide you can extract roots. And I've only asked you for the square root, not the (5i+13)th root.
Then you’re left with little Johnny’s argument which you’ve already expressly denied.
Because, as I showed you, and as you've confirmed by not providing the answer to my sum, it's a false analogy.
I don't think even the heretics claim to be composed of 1/3 body, 1/3 spirit, and 1/3 soul.
Not that I've noticed, though with those dingbats you never know. The claim that Jesus, Father and Ghost are simply manifestations of the one God, is found in early church history. It's not unlike the Jewish concept of the ruach ('breath') being a manifestation of God rather than a distinct entity. But the Trinity doctrine expressly denies both the fractions notion and the One God notion.
Where did I “sponsor” Little Johnny?
By bringing him into the conversation in order to (attempt to) make a point.
It is still a mystery in the strict sense. A mystery is simply something that was hidden in the Old Testament but revealed in the New. So it is a revealed truth.
More accurately, it's a revealed nonsense, which is what 'mystery in the strict sense, as I told you before, but will again refresh your memory:
[The Trinity] doctrine is held to be a mystery in the strict sense, in that it can neither be known by unaided reason apart from revelation, nor cogently demonstrated by reason after it has been revealed.
─ Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, under 'Trinity'.
The online
Catholic Encyclopedia, under 'Trinity' and 'Mystery', agrees.
2. It is revealed in the New Testament.
The Trinity isn't revealed in the NT. It's devised as a solution to a question debated in Early Church politics of the 3rd and 4th centuries. It didn't exist in Jesus' day.
And as you recall, he never once pretended to be God, and repeatedly denied he was God, stating that the Father was 'the only true god', and further stating that he worshiped the Father ─ problems neither you nor Spartan have ever addressed.
Christ is 100% God because he is God. Ditto for the Holy Spirit and the Father.
That's right. There are three separate and distinct persons each of whom is 100% of God. 100%+100%+100%=300%=3 gods. I suppose you'd want to argue that 100%x100%x100%=1,000,000%=10,000 gods. no?
The three are one God as to substance (God) but three as to person (Father, Son, Spirit).
What substance is that, exactly? How can we distinguish it from 'person'?
Correct. If Trinitarians believed in 3 Gods, then your equation of
This is where I pointed out last time that because the Trinity doctrine denies that 1+1+1=3, it's a mystery in the strict sense, which as you saw above is very very difficult to distinguish from a nonsense.