>>23157672I already answered this, you shill
"I'm not a Christian, but the idea as I understand it is that there's one divine consciousness, shared across the three distinct entities, with those three entities being parts or facets or sub-structures of a single, unified God
so the framing of the question: that they could have separate wills in the first place, doesn't actually make any sense within their trinitarian theology
the question makes no sense
analogy:
>if you were dead-set on painting the fence red, and you were dead-set on painting the fence blue, what colour would you paint the fence?you cannot be dead-set on painting the fence red if you're dead-set on painting it blue"