Thank you for an interesting reply; but, quite frankly, I think you?re a little too dismissive! ?Life?, all conscious mortal existence, is about discovering what does, and doesn?t work. If you accept this proposition (and I recognize that you might not.) then, of course, you realize: ?One man's opinion is another man?s truth.?
This very supposition lends itself to Pilate?s argument with Christ wherein he challenged Jesus with the statement: ?What is truth?? I have always found it to be particularly interesting (and most people completely fail to notice) that Christ never gave Pilate a specific answer to his question!
Instead, The Lord remained silent, and gave Pilate no direct answer to his question. (Christ had no personal responsibility to do Pilate?s thinking for him; Pilate had a very real subjective responsibility to ?? think for himself!)
?Why?? Because I think that, in this world and under this system of things, the discovery of truth is an individual responsibility. You, yourself, seem to be on that very same quest that I am on; and, in a sense, we are both embarked upon the same road. (Only I refuse to use a comic book in order to establish a didactic point!) 😉
I also think Nikola Tesla would agree that, ?natural trinities? are often less than obvious, tend to be subtle, and are able to be ascertained only by those whose intellects are attuned to the resolution of whatever problem is at hand. (?Seek and ye shall find!? of course implies that, ?Do not seek and ye shall, indeed, not find;? and now we?re back to Pilate?s original question and responsibility to himself!)
It?s a psychological truism that: All men think they are wise; but, at any given time and for any given problem, only the smallest number of people ever actually are, ...... ?wise?!
Most people go throughout their lives being nothing more than, ?stupid-smart?; (My own definition of an, ?idiot savant? ? Which in my own life-experience I have, in fact, found far too many men to be.) Moreover if I have seen this very human, very curious, intellectual phenomenon once, I have witnessed it, at least, a thousand times!
While, ?The nature of truth is, therefore, self-evident.? truth, itself in any and all things, still has to be looked for, rationalized, and pragmatically demonstrated to be, somehow, useful BEFORE it can be realistically justified, rationally accepted, and put to (hopefully) good use. (Which is not mankind?s usual penchant!)
(I?m reminded of the current scientific argument that Einstein?s famous equation is actually incorrect; and the speed of light is NOT constant, but variable instead.)
What Tesla related about: 3?s, 6?s, & 9?s is equally true of other naturally occurring numerical phenomena like, say, a: (1) Fibonacci Series, (Which even Wall Street stockbrokers use in order to analyze their investments!) (2) the extraordinary relationship between all circles and their diameters, (Which is usually expressed by the Greek letter, ?TT? or 3.141592); and (3) what has been called, ?The Golden Ratio? (1:1.618033) and which (among other cultures) all ancient: Egyptian, Greek, and Roman architecture repeatedly employs.
The triumvirate, ?Godhead? is nowhere directly expressed, nor asserted anywhere inside of canonical scripture ? Nowhere! The Trinity is an implied, and only an implied, Christian doctrine. Like the natural world which surrounds us, Christendom?s ?Holy Trinity? is suggested by implication, only; and, as such, the concept of the Trinity (natural, spiritual, or otherwise) has often been abused by various religious thinkers in the distorted religious doctrines which they have so frequently produced: e.g., The recently modified Roman Catholic myth of the Virgin Mary being described as the, ?Mother of God?.
(An asinine religious concept in the extreme; but, still, a great many people have been savagely tortured and burned to death for refusing to accept the presumed, ?high truth? of this religious proposition!)
Hence, the reason for my remark, ?I am not a Trinitarian in any strict sense of the word;? and your apparent puzzlement over the subjective reasoning behind it.
Now, you have replied, ?If God is, indeed, the source of all things and all things are extensions of Him then we would see reflections of this in our universe.? How shall I reply? What can I say other than, ?Well, yeah, duh ?? !?
What did The Christ, Himself, say when the Jews accused Him of blasphemy before attempting to stone Him? Jesus quoted Asaph, in Psalms, and pointed out to those who intended to murder Him, ?I have said ye are gods; and all of you are children of The Most High.? Which raises the interesting question: How is it, then, that, ?God inherits all nations??
You have put a lot of effort into describing Saint Patrick?s concept of the Trinity as being, ?Three in One?; however, let me offer you a biblical example of where this triumvirate concept does NOT apply: (Ready?) Right out of the foundational King James Translation, ?In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.? But, wait, He didn?t!
Here, and in another 2,601 times throughout the original Hebrew Tanakh, the English word, ?God? is written in its broadly plural form of, ?Gods?. (Elohim rather than El.) Neither is there any logical place for the transcendental form(s) of: Father, Son, and Holy Ghost within the Hebrew plural noun, ?Elohim?. The straightforward meaning is, ?Gods? or, depending upon your point-of-view, ?gods?.
What is true of Tesla?s science, and the natural world is, then, not necessarily true of spiritual reasoning. (Unless, of course, you know of some cognitive link of which I am presently unaware?)
Neither do I agree that Christendom?s Trinity is comprised of any three separate, but equal, divine entities. ?Why?? Because Spirit always transcends any and all other forms of individual entity. Hence the abstruse significance to another one of Christ?s most profound remarks, ?God is a spirit; and they that worship Him must do so in spirit and in truth.?
Please have a good day; I enjoyed your reply; and, again, wish to thank you!