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LongingSoul
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Brendan;13516478:
There is no claim that it is the “absolute truth”. This is very clear in the teaching.Brendan, how would I know?
The number ‘3’ is not an “absolute truth”. It is a finite number. In formulating the teaching of the Trinity, it is said there are three persons in one God. CCC 251 provides that this is an attempt to express in human language what is an “ineffable mystery” (i.e., what is inexpressible in limited human language). I accept this teaching.
The “absolute truth” of the Trinity is “infinitely beyond all of our human understanding”. It is the belief that the number three “signifies” a relationship that cannot be expressed and is said to be “relative” (i.e., not absolute). This does not seem comprehensible (i.e., it remains a mystery) but the CCC teaches that this is Catholic belief.
It is Catholic dogma that Apostolic preaching advances through the centuries until its full revelation at the end of time. In this way, the number three cannot yet be said to be the “absolute truth”. While this is Catholic belief, it cannot even be said what it signifies. I do not know how the understanding of the Trinity will advance to the revelation of its “absolute truth”.
The number three is a concept, an idea of human understanding and not an “absolute truth”. I know this is not easily grasped, but I think it is far easier to grasp than would be knowledge of the infinite Being of God. It is difficult to put into words, but I believe the infinite Being of God could only be experienced and is beyond human understanding.
Yes, as per Aquinas…
Because our intellect is not eternal, neither is the truth of enunciable propositions which are formed by us, eternal, but it had a beginning in time. Now before such truth existed, it was not true to say that such a truth did exist, except by reason of the divine intellect, wherein alone truth is eternal. But it is true now to say that that truth did not then exist: and this is true only by reason of the truth that is now in our intellect; and not by reason of any truth in the things. For this is truth concerning not-being; and not-being has not truth of itself, but only so far as our intellect apprehends it. Hence it is true to say that truth did not exist, in so far as we apprehend its not-being as preceding its being.
newadvent.org/summa/1016.htm#article7