@renegade: you started the question, various people have given different analyses, I’ve given you a historical analysis why Christians believe in the trinity and which non-Christians reject it. It is a great filter to see those who still believe in WTBTS doctrine rather than Christian doctrine. This is not about proving a spiritual point or what anyone should believe, but a critical analysis of the Bible and religious history clearly shows the trinity being the heterodox and those who separate from that considered heretical to Christians.
You cannot prove there is no trinity unless you mis-translate the Bible. The above poorly conceived arguments from WTBTS are irrelevant to 99.99% of this world “how could he raise himself from the dead” - because his soul/spirit/deity-ness was not missing or dead. The flesh was ‘dead’, sure, it was figuratively eaten by his disciples in the story, and again, not arguing whether this was a real thing that happened as a matter of fact, but in the scripture, Jesus said himself that he was going to descend into hell for 3 days, now, if he was dead, how would he go somewhere, why would he make a point to clarify he was going to hell, nowhere does Jesus say he was going to ‘rest’ or ‘sleep’ or ‘be unaware’. If you want to say hell is just the grave (good luck proving that) now also reject the religious and symbolism for the soul and hell and redemption, you keep threading that apart, you get to dismantle the entire structure of Christianity and that is exactly what WTBTS tries to do, deconstruct everything so they are holding the power, it is what cults do.
I don’t personally believe in a literal hell, literal soul, or literalism in general, but what WTBTS does is deconstruct the entire Christian culture and with it Western society. I am interested in the analysis of the symbolism and the effects that has had on culture, laws and history and therefore, I am an ‘atheist in defense of the trinity’.