ozzie,
BTW didn't Stephen at his martyrdom cry out to Jesus?
As I mentioned above:
The context reveals why Stephen spoke to Jesus as he did. When you last prayed to Jesus, did you see him in a vision right in front of you? Jesus was in the company of Stephen, and Stephen was looking right at him. Such is not likely to be the situation each time someone prays to Jesus or to the Holy Spirit.
Stephen's frame of mind was that God had placed Jesus as his Savior, Lord, Master and Teacher. Jesus was the Head of the church that he was serving by appointment. Any number of reasons can be given for Stephen's inclination to speak to someone who was such a large and perceptible part of his life. Additionally, his outcry was a testimony to his persecutors that Jesus had indeed been raised back to life.
It seems to me that Trinitarians are generally in the habit of reading into the Bible what is not there. Jesus said we should pray to the Father, but in their effort to raise Jesus to equality with Almighty God the Father, Trinitarians believe they've found a loophole here and there that authorizes them to disobey Jesus' precise instructions on how to pray.
It amazes me that, despite the testimony of the Scriptures that God is One, that he is a "he" and not a "they," Trinitarians go all through their lives holding on to an unproven theory that doesn't even make sense to the God-given human mind--a theory that most of them have a most difficult time trying to explain.
herk