The “all we can humanly understand” refers to a limit of knowledge, not that individual truths cannot be absolutely known.[/1QUOTE]
This makes no sense for me. But it seems to say man can know the “absolute truth”.
Brendan;13518903:
I fully agree that we can only every have a limited understanding of the full nature of the Trinity. The number of person in the Trinity is a finite truth, one that we can know the absolute truth of.
It is your prerogative to believe that the number ‘3’ is an “absolute truth”, but I believe it is a matter of faith rather than any knowledge of an “absolute truth”. There is a difference between knowledge and belief, and I believe a person can come to a fuller understanding of the ineffable mystery of the Trinity through faith and belief. It is the insistence that an “ineffable mystery” can be objectively known that I reject. It is simply not Catholic teaching, and from my perspective the insistence that one can attain what is impossible for man is irrelevant, for to maintain that the number ‘3’ is in itself an “absolute truth” is a hinderance to one’s understanding and spiritual development. While there could be little practical difference, the insistence that one knows the “absolute truth” does lead to judgmentalism. To say the objection to the notion that the number ‘3’ is a “finite absolute truth” (a certain contradiction, for ‘finite’ means ‘having limits, having a limited nature’) is an “insinuation” that “violates” Catholic teaching would be a prime example of it.
There are many ways to explain this phenomenon. We live in an era where science and analysis are dominant, and the primacy of “objective truth” is the perspective of the cultural and epistomological paradigm described in
Laudato Si. It is also the mantra of secularism and moral relativism, where Reason is the Providence of Man.