Buddy, you are so wrong on this and I'm not here to criticize but to educate.
What you are referring to is the main difference between most Christian denominations. Catholics believe that God and Jesus are separate identities, the Holy Trinity is just a term that explains the "holiest of the holy" in the hierarchy of the kingdom of God. Orthodox Christians believe that the Holy Trinity is One and is composed of the body (Jesus), the soul (Holy Spirit) and the mind (God).
Protestants, Lutherans , Evangelians are taking it up further by discussing it from a totally different perspective.
That makes the concept pretty much closer to Jewish Kaballah (but still very different) than Hinduism.
So to aid the other user - what you are saying is not a fact and you should refrain from talking so confidently about a subject you know very little about.
I'm part Catholic, part Orthodox. I come from a line of priests on the Catholic side and I can tell you for sure that they do think that Jesus is the manifestation of God, not God himself.
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u/Vertebruv Jul 11 '25
Buddy, you are so wrong on this and I'm not here to criticize but to educate.
What you are referring to is the main difference between most Christian denominations. Catholics believe that God and Jesus are separate identities, the Holy Trinity is just a term that explains the "holiest of the holy" in the hierarchy of the kingdom of God. Orthodox Christians believe that the Holy Trinity is One and is composed of the body (Jesus), the soul (Holy Spirit) and the mind (God). Protestants, Lutherans , Evangelians are taking it up further by discussing it from a totally different perspective.
That makes the concept pretty much closer to Jewish Kaballah (but still very different) than Hinduism.
So to aid the other user - what you are saying is not a fact and you should refrain from talking so confidently about a subject you know very little about.