> They did, but they didn't credit Aristotle.
If Aristotle didn't use the term (he used ousia), and if the term homoousia wasn't coined until the Gnostics, and if Nicea didn't "credit" Aristotle, then I have every reason to reject your claim of derivation. Similarity doesn't necessitate derivation.
> That's three Gods, and there's no such thing as trinitarian monotheism.
This is where you continue to be mistaken. Christian Trinitarianism is distinctly monotheistic, and you must know this. I am a Christian and a monotheist. There is only one God, and He exists in three Persons. There is only one divine essence.
> Do you also believe that the Shield of the Trinity is an accurate representation of the trinity?
Seems to be.
> No, there's literally nothing the word and concept polytheism that signifies separate essences.
Polytheism is a plurality of gods. Christian Trinitarianism is monotheistic.
> I can assure you, I know trinitarian theology and its history better than you do.
That's an odd claim since you don't know with whom you are talking and what I know.
> You affirm three Gods with one side of your mouths, and with other side, you falsely claim to be monotheist because you are doctrinally required to do so.
This is untrue, as I have repeated stated.
> you falsely claim to be monotheist because you are doctrinally required to do so.
I genuinely claim to be a monotheist because the teachings of both the OT & NT require it.
> You don't believe in the same amount of Gods as Jew or Socinians.
I do. As Christians we subscribe to the shema. We believe that the Father, Son, and HS are the one true God.
> Can you even explain how Socinians can reject one of your Gods and accept one, if you both believe in the same amount of Gods?
Socianism is based on a particular misinterpretation of NT trinitarian texts. His beliefs have always been rejected by the Church. In their effort to purge the Roman Catholic Church of its corruptions, Laelius and Faustus Socinus ended up throwing out the baby with the bathwater by repudiating all kinds of legitimate Christian doctrine. Their followers were more like a cult of Christianity than a genuine belief branch.
> Can you explain how trinitarians and modalists can both end up at numerically one if they claim they are one and the same, and you reject it?
This is like a pop quiz. Modalists believe that there is one God who manifested Himself in different ways (Father, Son, Spirit), like Sabellianism, while Trinitarians believe there is one God who exists in three Persons. Modalism is distinction in manifestation while Trinitarianism is distinction is divine action.
> You can't and you won't.
Umm... did.
> Can you even define what a son is?
When the Gospels use "son," it is to describe Jesus's particular unique relationship to God the Father (the intimacy of unity of essence), not to imply any beginning or source. It is a descriptor of His uniqueness and incomparability (Jn. 3.16) in fellowship with the Father. As the Son, he shares the status of God (Ps. 2; 110.1), the distinctives of God's being (Isa. 9.6), and the nature of God (Isa. 7.14).
Jesus is considered the Son in several ways:
* The theological necessity of the incarnation, that Jesus would actually be born in human flesh.
* To emphasize the uniqueness of Jesus’s relationship with YHWH in personal fellowship.
* To emphasize the sending of the 2nd person of the Trinity on a mission (repeatedly in John's Gospel).
* To emphasize the “one-bloodness,” so to speak, kinship relationship of YHWH and Jesus. They share a nature; they are of the same essence (Jn. 3.16; 10.30).
Is that the end of the quiz?
> I'm a monotheist, I'd die before denying God.
Moi aussi. This we share.