PRESUPPOSITIONLESS THEOLOGY
If you want to be informed of the true nature of God, your mind must diirempt itself of notions about God that have been put there by others without you having considered the truthfulness of those notions. For example, there are books which are called Holy Books, which contain blatant errors concerning the true nature of God. Those books are well meaning and were written by those who sincerely believed that what they were writing were truths given to them by God.
So when you study theology, and you begin your studies with these presuppositions as the cornerstones of your labors, you labor in vain in search of truth. Stories are fine for children who cannot grasp the deep theological principles upon which you must begin your studies. Thomas Aquinas began his treatises on the true nature of God with his mind filled with presuppositions, one of which was that God was not one person but three persons. Before he began his treatises, he was already a priest and was taught and believed that there were three persons in the Divine Godhead.
Aquinas beautifully describes in his Summa Theologica how God can only be one person because there can only be one initial or prime cause and he used the name to describe this initial cause as the Uncaused Cause. In every religion, there is general belief that their God, whether God is called Brahman, Allah, or God, there is universal belief that the Prime Cause was never caused. These various religions refer to the Uncaused Cause by different names, but they are referring to the same being. Nevertheless, there is much confusion when human beings introduce presuppositions into their writings, as in Aquinas's case. You cannot in one breath say that God is one person, and in the next breath declare that God is three persons. Going even farther back in time prior to Aquinas, you cannot say that God is omnipotent in one breath, and then say that God "rested" in the next breath (Gen. 2: 1-3). God is infinitely powerful, and to say that God needed to rest is contrary to the stated principle that God is omnipotent.
Consequently, it is extremely important if you are a serious student of the Divine Nature that you empty yourself of all presuppositions that you yourself have not examined. A true study of God's nature requires complete intellectual honesty, and that means your theology must be a presuppositionless theology, else as Christ admonished:
MT 7:26 And everyone who listens to these words of mine but does not act on them will be like a fool who built his house on sand.