Is the Trinity compatible with God being Pure Act?

 Thomists hold that God is Pure Act. This means that God is all that he is and that there is no unactualized potentials in God; however, the Trinity has unactualized potentials. God the Father never incarnated, but he could have incarnated so this is an unactualized potential in the trinity. To put the argument more formally: 

Premise 1: God is Pure Act. 

Premise 2: If God is Pure Act, then there are no unactualized potentials in God. 

Premise 3: There are unactualized potentials in the Trinity.

Therefore the Trinity is not Pure Act. 

Therefore the Trinity is not God. 

The only way the Thomist can reply is by arguing that premise 3 is false, but how can he do that when he also affirms that the persons of the Trinity all have libertarian free will and acted in the world differently? 

The majority of Christian theists, laymen and philosophers alike, will deny premise 1, but the Thomist has to argue that in fact the Trinity is without potentiality. I see no way for the Thomist to hold the belief that the Trinity is God and that God is Pure Act. 

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