Acolyte said:

You don't know your own churches doctrine?
This is just a small tid bit.
Here is the whole big ship.
My grandmother on my father's side is a Mormon, when she found out from her pastor that the LDS taught this she nearly had a heart attack.
true to the patern of anti literature, you start out kind close and then (deviate from there adding their own spin on their perception of LDS teachings as they go along.
(F:first off, I bet you would find very few people who completely know and understand all of the teachings of their church whatever it might be.)
(F:next, in this allegory are claims made about doctrines as presented in the bible that are based on perceptions of the meanings put forth in the bible and not necessarily based on fact.)
The Bible teaches that Jesus is not the spirit brother of Lucifer or of human beings.
(F:bible doesn't address specifics regarding this)
Lucifer is an angel and part of the created
(F:what is created)
order. Ezekiel 28:13-19 reveals that Lucifer, in contrast
(F:no contrast made)
to Jesus, is a created cherub angel. Colossians 1:16 tells us that Christ is the Creator of all things
(F:things not specifically defined),
including the angelic realm
(F:never says that)
. The words "thrones", "dominions", "principalities" and "powers" were used by rabbinical Jews to describe different orders of angels. In Colossae, there was a problem of worshipping angels. Christ had been degraded to their level. Paul's argument here is that Christ is superior to the angels for Christ created them
(F:where does the bible say that). Lucifer falls into this category of a created angel, thus making him a created being. Hebrews 1:4 also reinforces the fact that Jesus, being God the Son, is superior in nature to the angels
(F:who would deny that Christ was superior). Christ is Creator, while Lucifer is creature, two totally different classes and they cannot be spirit brothers as Mormonism teaches
(F:this whole line of reasoning is intended to demonize the LDS church via a twisting of the pre-existence. Very satanic strategy, if you ask me, as it is intended to separate us from God and limit our eternal perspective putting more focus on the world).
The Incarnation of Christ
The Mormon doctrine of Jesus deviates from biblical teaching regarding the preincarnate life of Christ. It also deviates in its teaching on the incarnation of Jesus. Mormonism teaches that Jesus' incarnation was the result of sexual relations between the flesh and bone Heavenly Father and Mary.
(F:this is only a supposition on someones part. not the teaching of the LDS church. We are not given such specifics.)
Jesus is the only earthly offspring so conceived. Mormon theologian Bruce McConkie states, "Christ was begotten by an Immortal Father in the same way that mortal men are begotten by mortal fathers."{12}
(F: once again jumping to conclusions. this does not say that Heavenly Father had sex with Mary. why doesn't this person tell what McConkie has to say about the virgin birth. Also what McConkie says does not equal official doctrine.)
He also writes, "God the Father is a perfected, glorified, holy man, an immortal Personage. And Christ was born into the world as the literal Son of this Holy Being; He was born in the same personal, real and literal sense that any mortal son is born to a mortal father. There is nothing figurative about this paternity; He was begotten, conceived, and born in the normal and natural course of events, for He is the Son of God, and that designation means what it says."{13}
(F:same thing)
James Talmage wrote, "Jesus Christ is the Son of Elohim both as spiritual and bodily offspring; that is to say, Elohim is literally the Father of the spirit of Jesus Christ and also of the body in which Jesus Christ performed His mission in the flesh."{14}
(F: once again this only says that Jesus was the literal son of Heavenly Father, but does not say Mary had sex with God)
Mormon theology teaches that the Father was the main person involved in Mary's conception, not the Holy Spirit. Joseph Fielding Smith wrote, "Christ is not the Son of the Holy Ghost, but of the Father."{15} Mormon Historian Stephen Robinson states, "Mary was in some unspecified manner made pregnant by God the Father, through the power of the Holy Spirit."{16} Dr. Robinson attempts to remain faithful to Mormon theology and the Bible, but his attempt falls short.
(F:Hello...did you somehow miss this. falls short?)
The Bible makes it clear: Jesus was conceived as the result of a miraculous work of the Holy Spirit, not a physical union with the Father. John 4:24 says that God is spirit.
(F:Guess what...you are also a spirit)
He is not a resurrected man.
(F:It doesn't say that)
Luke 1:35 states, "The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you." The Holy Spirit's supernatural work in Mary's body enabled Christ--eternal God--to take on human nature. Jesus thus had a dual nature. He was fully God and fully man.
(F:that's right)
Mormons reject this teaching.
(F:huh? famous anti trick; all you need is two Mormons who thnk this way to make the statement true)
Stephen Robinson writes, the "unbiblical doctrine of the two natures in Christ was added to historic Christianity by the Council of Chalcedon in 451 A.D."{17}
(F:I don't know what SR is refering to here;I suspect his comment is being taken out of context, but it doesn't matter...SR doesn't get to decide official church doctrine)
This might be a consistent conclusion for Mormonism, but it is contrary to the Bible. Throughout the Gospels Jesus showed His humanity: He was hungry, He got tired, and His human body experienced death. However, He also revealed His divinity, demonstrating omnipotence (Colossians 1:17), omniscience (John 2:25), eternity (John 1:1), and omnipresence (Matthew 28:20)
(F:last reference..big stretch).
There is a wide separation between the Mormon doctrine of the incarnation of Christ and what the Bible teaches.
(F:Bible sure makes a lot more sense to me now than before I became LDS)