Yes.

Contrary to popular opinion, many ancient Romans believed in God long before Christianity. The idea of a singular divinity stretches back to early Greek philosophy. Plato outlined the idea of the One, also called the God hundreds of years before Christianity.

So yes, we recognize that God is ultimately singular but proceeds into multiplicity creating many Gods.

To illustrate this, we could imagine a mountain with many paths. One path to the summit is hard steep and icy. Another is full of green trees and well groomed trails. Another trail is unkempt and requires hacking through thick brush.

If 3 groups took each path, meeting at the summit they would argue about what the mountain was like.

One says it’s a frozen ice wall, another a warm sunny trail and another that it is a razer sharp thicket of thorns.

They all would be right of course, but their experience varies wildly.

God is the mountain itself and culminating in the summit. The paths are the different devotional paths and Gods that people follow to the summit.

The paths can vary wildly but many reach the summit.

This does not mean all spiritual paths reach the summit. Some merely say they do but lead people around in circles or worse trick them into taking dead end paths.

Romanism’s Platonic spiritual path is time tested and was the defacto spiritual path in antiquity with many sages summiting to god to prove it’s legitimacy. It is the western science of spiritual ascent to God.