This video was produced from my email correspondence with Trinitarian apologist Luis Carlos Reyes.
"For I have come down from heaven, not to do my own will, but the will of Him who sent Me.” John 6:38
If the common Trinitarian view of John 6:38 was correct, how then could a coequally distinct pre-incarnate God the Son's will have been a distinct God will before the incarnation? Can a coequal God will ever have the capacity to be at odds with another coequal God will? If your argument held any weight, then you would have to answer in the affirmative regarding John 6:38 relating to a God the Son coming down from heaven, not to do His own alleged coequal Divine Will, but only the only the Divine Will of Him who sent Him, namely the Father.
Even the New Testament proves that there is only One Divine Will of the Father, and only one human will of the Son. So where is the alleged Trinity of three God Minds and three God wills in scripture?
While there is no other passage with the precise words of Christ in John 6:38, we do find other passages proving that the Son had only one human will. For example, John 5:30 informs us that that the Son as the Son can do nothing by himself because there is only one human will in Christ.
"I can do nothing by Myself; I judge only as I hear. And My judgment is just, because I do not seek My own will, but the will of Him who sent Me (John 5:30)."
WHY THERE CANNOT BE THREE DISTINCT GOD WILLS OF A THREE PERSON DEITY
1. The Bible never informs us that God has more than one divine mind, will or consciousness.
2. The Bible informs us that the Father is the divine mind, will, and consciousness of only One God, whilst the human mind, will, and consciousness of the Son had the capacity to be in disagreement with the divine will because the human child born and son given was made “fully human in every way” (Heb. 2:17 NIV).
3. When the man Christ Jesus said that he came “not to do my own will (a human will), but the will of Him who sent me (the divine will),” he proved that his will as a Son had the potential to be in conflict with the Father’s divine will. If the Son’s will was a distinct divine God will number two, then a coequal God Persons’ will would have the capacity to be out of harmony with God will number one. For why would an alleged Heavenly God the Son come down from heaven, not to do His own distinct God will, but only the distinct God will of Him who sent Him if there was no potential for God to ever be in disagreement with Himself? If God could ever disagree with Himself there would be confusion and disarray in the Universe.
4. If God has three divine minds, three divine wills, and more than one divine center of personal self-consciousness, then God could no longer be One God (Monotheism), but would have to be three God’s (Tri-Theism).

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