There are one or two questions I have about the trinity.
How come the Hebrew word for God is a plural?
Why did God say when Adam and Eve ate the fruit, "they have become like us, knowing good and evil". Who is the "us", and who was God speaking to?
When Jesus was baptised, whose was the voice from heaven that said, "This is my beloved Son"? And, what was the bodily form that descended on Jesus from we don't know where?
Is the Holy Spirit, God?
Is Jesus God?
Is the Father God?
How do we explain that?
When Jesus was transfigured, whose was the voice from heaven that said, "This is my beloved Son. Listen to Him."
When Mary met Jesus after His resurrection, why did Jesus tell Mary not to touch Him because He had not yet ascended to the Father?
How come Jesus said that He did only the will of His Father?
Why did John say, "Truly our fellowship is with the Father, and His Son Jesus Christ"?
Why did Paul say, "That I might know you, the only true God, and Jesus whom you have sent?"
If Jesus isn't God, how come He was able to take upon Himself the eternal wrath of God for every single soul who received Christ, past, present and future, within just the three hours He hung on the cross before He died?
How come the Father is a spirit, and no man has ever seen Him, and yet Jesus, as God, is a man that everyone could see clearly?
Who was Jesus crying out to when He said, "My God, my God, why have you abandoned me?" And when He said, "Father, into your hands I commit my spirit".
If the Father is invisible and cannot be seen, who was the fourth person in the fiery furnace with the three young Hebrew men, and was described as someone who looked like "the Son of God?"
And, the Father being invisible, who was the Lord whom Isaiah saw high and lifted up and said, "I am undone"?
Why does the Scripture say that a person who has the Holy Spirit, has Jesus and the Father as well? Does this mean that the Holy Spirit is God as well?
If so, then we have to accept that the Holy Spirit is separate from the Father and Jesus, because Jesus told His disciples that when He goes, He will send the Holy Spirit to be in them, and He will teach them all things they need to know.
I think there is only one way to satisfactorily answer these questions - that God is plural, and is in the persons of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
This means that the Scripture is very clear about the trinity, even though it does not use the word, or to define it as such. But it makes is very clear that there are three separate Persons that are identified as God.
You know that that was more than 'one or two questions' about the trinity?
Either way, here's the point...
1. From nowhere in Scripture does one read the words or expressions 'trinity', 'triune', 'three in one', 'two in one' (natures of Christ), 'God the Son', 'God the Holy Spirit', 'incarnation', 'god-man', ....
2. From nowhere in Scripture has any of the main characters, those closest to God, ever prayed utilizing a triune expression, none of their doxologies employed a trinitarian formula. In the New Testament, not one conversion narrative included a trinitarian statement. Peter, Paul or any other Apostle or Disciple, before the Sanhedrin or authorities, ever accused them of crucifying God, or that they preach God raised from the dead. Nowhere in the Book of Revelation (all heavenly hosts in their exalted states), even mentions the Holy Spirit.
3. Not one of the trinitarian leading proponents, can explain what their exegesis has concluded. Either God or Jesus' ontology, or the atonement. Every time that they speak to defend the doctrine, they are obligated to capitulate their rationale, and appeal to mystery.
4. Not one of your leading proponents have ever asserted that the trinity, is an explicitly taught Biblical revelation. But, on the contrary, they all have included that it's been inferred.
In other words Paul, all the points that you brought up were complete eiseges, you do realize that, right?
Not one of your points, in and of them self, teach or even imply, what you concluded. The practice that you employed, was the quintessence of eisegesis and inference, not one was didactic or explicit.
Thus, do not even try to tell me that God has revealed the most enigmatic, incomprehensible, and implausible, doctrine in all of Christendom, in the manner that either, you just displayed, or that has been defended by any of your major trinitarian proponents and theologians.