by jimwalton » Mon Sep 07, 2020 2:58 pm
Thanks for your honesty. I wasn't trying to be confusing.
> the most I can grasp is that the three can exist at once but not like three separate beings but honestly to me that just doesn’t make sense to me
I used a literary analogy that didn't seem to help. Let me try to take you to the world of science, where we see possible truths that could help us understand the Trinity.
All physical reality has a dual nature. Mass and energy are in principle inter-convertible, through nuclear fission or fusion reactions. E = mc^2. We can, therefore, speak of the universe as a "space-light-time" universe. It is significant that this motion of light is famous for its mysterious and paradoxical complementarity. It has the characteristics of both waves and particles, and yet it definitely behaves as a wave motion under some conditions and as a particle motion under others. This duality applies both in radiations of electro-magnetic energy and in the atomic structure of matter, in which the orbiting electron likewise behaves both as a particle and as a wave. The two disciplines of modern physics known as quantum mechanics and wave mechanics have been developed from these two concepts. So if light (one essence) can be both a wave and a particle (two completely different characteristics), and not be a contradiction, then maybe that can help us understand how God can be Father, Son, and Spirit (one essence) but three Persons (different characteristics).
There are also several principles from quantum mechanics that may show us some analogies. The first is called superposition, where subatomic particles are able to exist in two states simultaneously. Get that—that very same things existing in two separate states at the same time. The second is that of nonlocality and entanglement. The principle here is that objects in far reaches of the universe seem to "know" about each other's states, and yet these separate particles can behave as a single entity. These may be possible analogies, if that helps.
For another potential scientific "validation" of such possibilities, in 2017 a group of quantum scientists (University of Science and Technology of China in Shanghai) successfully teleported a photon from Earth to a satellite in orbit. It's called quantum entanglement. As far as our discussion here, quantum entanglement means that the two quantum objects share a wave function and share the same identity, even when separated. What happens to one happens to the other—wherever it exists. They are more than identical twins, the article said, "the two are one and the same." Apparently, according to the article, when they interact with matter on Earth they lose certain aspects of entanglement, but in the vacuum of space, they can extend infinitely (eternally). It's just interesting.
And have you had in geometry class where two parallel lines meet in infinity? That's weird. It sounds like a contradiction, but it's considered to be true.
> my 15 year old mine
Oh, you're 15. That makes you a freshman, right (9th grade)? Then you haven't had this science yet. And maybe not the math.
> If you can somehow make this simpler to understand I will be forever grateful
I thought my first analogy (about the writer putting himself in the book) was the easiest to understand. Maybe you've had in science that light is both a particle and a wave. Those are two different things while being the same thing. Am I helping or no?
I'm glad you're asking your questions rather than just thinking Christianity is stupid and walking away from it. It's better to ask and find out the answers.