How can you try to disprove God with science, when God created the laws of science and he doesn't have to play by those rules either?The way I've always seen it, it's rather illogical to try and disprove God by the assumption that he exists and that the Bible is true, because the contradictions and historical inaccuracies are so glaring. There are tons of completely reasonable scientific ways of disproving the existence of God, so why are we stuck with paradoxical hypotheticals?
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First of all, God is "jealous" for our hearts. He deeply and passionately wants us to love him as he loves us. The bible never said God gets jealous when we worship idols alone.a. Omnibenevolence is pretty much ruled out seeing how God killed, oh, about 2,391,421 people in the Bible. He is also described as being a jealous God, which doesn’t seem to be a beneficial emotion, nor does it make any sense. I can see why he wouldn’t want people to worship idols, but why should He be jealous? He knows they aren’t real. I think Jesus is omnibenevolent, but there could be complications with the “three-in-one” theory here.
Second of all, I would like to say that we do have freewill, and God gave us freewill because no one can be forced into truly loving someone, and he created us so that he could love us and we could him back. I already explained some time ago. This also could be used as an argument to many of your statements.
Third of all, your over thinking the "three-in-one" theory here. Jesus is a sense, literally God but in a similar way not. Imagine this: First there was God, and the "Holy Ghost" is a copied instance of 'God' that fills us at a certain time, only it isn't literally God, it's more like an instance of his spirit. And Jesus is effectively a copy of God's spirit, so while, in a sense, "The father(God), the son(Jesus), and the Holy spirit" are the same thing, they are not. (Though, the holy spirit is obviously bond to God, while Jesus isn't literally bound to God.) The three-in-one thing is something very complicated, and trying to fully understand it is like trying to imagine heaven.