Ah ChatGPT enters the thread …
To respond to the earlier point about God’s attributes: early Christian writers expressed different views on this. Some early writers (I think Tertullian) said that there was a time when God wasn’t Father because he didn’t become Father until the only begotten son came into existence. Later Trinitarians would turn this on its head and argue that God must always have been Father and therefore in fact the Son didn’t come into existence. Intuition, common sense, and the language of scripture indicates (to me at least) that the first position advocated by Tertullian makes more sense. One of the fundamental attributes of fathers is that they are older than their sons, and scripture talks about Wisdom being begotten long ago as the first of God’s acts of creation (Prov 8.22), that the Word was “in the beginning” (John 1.1), that Jesus lives “because of the Father” (John 5.67), is “the firstborn of all creation” (Col 1.15), and is “the beginning of the creation of God” (Rev 3.14). If all those expressions are not meant to convey that Jesus is God’s first creation then it’s an odd choice of language. No wonder a majority of ordinary Christians when polled agree with JWs that Jesus is God’s first creation. It takes a lot of strained argumentation from Trinitarian apologists committed to Nicene orthodoxy to convince a person otherwise.