I gave an example of three different beings: one being of no persons, one being of one person, and one being of three persons. I didn’t equivocate person and being. That’s your tired shtick.
You are relying on
your definitions of “person” and “being”, which may not be the same as the definitions of
others (again, anyone familiar with the development of “ousia” and “hypostasis”, and even today’s modern English use of “person” and “being”, would know this). Your examples are modeled after your own definitions, which are simply not universal. Sheed refers to “being” as “nature”, therefore my supposed equating of “person” with “being” as an example of modalism wouldn’t work (and Mormonism wouldn’t be teaching “three beings”=“three natures”, since we clearly believe that there is only one divine nature, and we are all of that nature).
That is the issue that you cannot see, and why the premise of your argument fails.
Here are your topic shifting
The Holy Trinity: Biblical Proofs. But they’re irrelevant. Multiple gods are logically impossible, you don’t need to look in a Catholic book like the Bible for proof of that fact.
It seems as if you are unfamiliar with the divine council within the Bible (and Israelite religion), as discussed by historians and other scholars. Perhaps you should do more reading on that issue, as I directed hosemonkey to do.
The funny thing about that list of verses is that not a single one shows that the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost are “one Being” (what is “being” referring to? nature? they are one nature, according to Sheed? Mormons would agree with such a definition, as mentioned above). The section on the Unity of God does not address
how God is one. Latter-day Saints believe that the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost are one in purpose, and are referred to as “one God” in our latter-day scriptures. Such a statement does not necessitate a oneness of “being” (whatever that refers to, depending on the theologian, time period, etc), which is the question at hand. Interestingly, he quotes 1 Cor 8:6, which
I have already mentioned. It states that the “one God” is the
Father, and Jesus is the “one Lord”.
Sorry, not a single verse in that list address “three persons in one being”.