The language difference in words between "I am" in reference to the Deity and I am enjoying this pizza is zero, it is the context that is different. There is not a special language for I am.
The whole reason trinitarians must resort to such rationalizations is precisely because there is not a trinity verse* in Scripture. Otherwise they'd just refer to it. We can
rationalize what day Eve was created, which is different from simply quoting the verse that says Adam was created on Day 6.
Trinitarians take it many steps further. Despite what Scripture says - and doesn't say on the matter - they invent this threat or
rejection criteria (
@GodsGrace used the term "allowed." Allow is the language of power, not persuasion.) You're not even a Christian if you don't embrace
this rationalization of what day Eve was created. In fact, you are not even saved if you don't embrace this
rationalization of what day Eve was created. The hellfires await you if you don't embrace this
rationalization of what day Eve was created. It begs the question of
why they are so doctrinally invested in their manmade rationalization? (It's because there is not a trinity verse among other reasons)
Such a sentiment is not in Scripture. In fact, it goes against the sentiment in Scripture;
2 Corinthians 3:17 where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom. This affirms what an old Pastor observed in a video when he finally came to reject the trinity;
the trinity does not produce the fruit of the spirit. They really have no answer to the observation that everyone uses the phrase "I am" - it doesn't make them God and was never a claim of deity. (They merely move the goal post, others thought as they do. It reminds me other Mother's question. If others jumped off a bridge, would you?)
God himself did not use that term to indicate he is God. Rather he used a phrase the VOICE translation succinctly renders "eternal," as his unique and defining characteristic. The Hebrew term strictly translated is cumbersome, "was, am and am becoming." Jesus never applied this cumbersome expression to himself. Eternal is a great translation and certainly does not apply to Jesus, who we know was a man who was born and died - like any other man.
Death indicates the precise opposite of being eternal.
It's almost as if trinitarians start with their conclusion and rationalize it at every turn. What would IDOLATRY look like again?
Why would Christ followers teach what Jesus did not?
* To be clear, when I write that the trinity is not found anywhere in Scripture, I mean that neither the word nor the concept of the trinity is explicitly in the Bible. To avoid the inevitable Appeal to Strawman, there simply is no verse that reads something like The nature of God is a trinity - consisting of the Father, Son & Holy Spirit who are co-equal, co-substantial and co-eternal - and if you do not believe this, you cannot be saved but are damned to hell forever. If there were such a verse, it would be the most quoted verse in Scripture by those who claim one’s salvation depends on believing it. The concept of the trinity is so important that in 66 books, it is not mentioned once!