Again your rebuttal ignored the difference between a thing (a forum account) and a human. You're inserting a feature of free will that is completely irrelevant to the argument. "Free Will is a requirement of being able to seek". Yes, it's also a requirement to go against God's Will. It's a requirement to sin. It's a requirement to choose between having pasta or pizza for dinner. A forum account's lack of free will does not refute anything about the identity of the entity: it is through Jesus, and not any other human, that the world may perceive God, just as it is through bible_student, and not any other Vigilant forum account (unless you have sockpuppets), that the Vigilant community may perceive Daddy.
You keep going back to this analogy of a forum account. Christ is
not a forum account neither a "thing" (I don't know if you meant to imply that or if you did so by mistake). Christ is a Spirit-Being and He has God given Free-Will just like anyone else has. He submits to Father out of his own Free-Will. Therefore, to try and use this analogy is way off the mark. It doesn't apply and is starting to seems more like an attempt at deflection than anything else.
And if Daddy does nothing, bible_student does nothing, therefore bible_student is Daddy; and if the Father does nothing, Jesus does nothing, therefore Jesus is God.
No. Jesus is not a forum account. It is a silly comparison.
If I know you in real life and you post a thread and I reply "Hey, Daddy", the antitrinitarian would come in and say "Art dude, that's not Daddy, that's bible_student."
There, the level of antitrinitarianism in a nutshell.
The analogy fails because Christ is not a "forum account" (or in other words a puppet) He is the Oldest and First created Son of God (Michael The Archangel, The Prince of heaven and The Messiah); called the beginning of the creation of God in the book of Revelation (i.e. He is the First Angel that God created)
Daniel 9:25 ...the Messiah the Prince...
Daniel 10:21...Michael your Prince....
Rev. 3:14
And unto the angel of the community of the Laodiceans write; These things saith the Amen, the Faithful and True Witness (Christ - Rev. 1:5), the beginning of the creation of God;
And Christ has His own Free-Will (and He has His own hopes and dreams too) just like everyone else also has them.
What did Christ demonstrate? That when God called upon Him to do what he would rather not have to have done and gone through, He nevertheless did not hesitate but yielded his will to God's Will for His greater purpose and the sake of others (unselfishly giving up His human life to help all of us
criminals).
Matthew 6:10
Thy Kingdom come. Thy Will be done in earth, as [it is] in heaven.
Matthew 26:39 And he went a little further, and fell on his face, and prayed, saying,
O my Father, if it be possible, let this "Cup" pass from me: nevertheless not as I will, but as Thou [wilt].
26:40 And he cometh unto the disciples, and findeth them asleep, and saith unto Peter,
What, could ye not watch with me one hour?
26:41
Watch and pray, that ye enter not into temptation: the spirit indeed [is] willing, but the flesh [is] weak.
26:42 He went away again the second time, and prayed, saying,
O my Father, if this "Cup" (Holy Grail) may not pass away from me, except I drink it, Thy will be done.