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LDS The 'beginning' of God in Mormonism

Rescued One

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You use 3 books in your theology,A King James Bible,a Book of Mormon and I think the other is a book of pearls.
God is not the Author of confusion!
How can you validate a religon based on one man's statements some 1800 years after the death of Christ and his Apostles?
What you are teaching is the blood of Christ was not enough for salvation, you teach your good works is required if you want to be a God,like God who was once a man.
It is unbelievable you cannot discern the fallacy in this doctrine.

Four books: Bible, Book of Mormon, Pearl of Great Price, and Doctrine and Covenants.
 
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Rescued One

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Mormon requirements for etetnal life(they call it exaltation):

To be exalted, we first must place our faith in Jesus Christ and then endure in that faith to the end of our lives. Our faith in Him must be such that we repent of our sins and obey His commandments.
He commands us all to receive certain ordinances:
. 1.
We must be baptized.
. 2.
We must receive the laying on of hands to be confirmed a member of the Church of Jesus Christ and to receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.
. 3.
Brethren must receive the Melchizedek Priesthood and magnify their callings in the priesthood.
. 4.
We must receive the temple endowment.
. 5.
We must be married for eternity, either in this life or in the next.
In addition to receiving the required ordinances, the Lord commands all of us to:
. 1.
Love God and our neighbors.
. 2.
Keep the commandments.
. 3.
Repent of our wrongdoings.
. 4.
Search out our kindred dead and receive the saving ordinances of the gospel for them.
. 5.
Attend our Church meetings as regularly as possible so we can renew our baptismal covenants by partaking of the sacrament. (cont. next PM)
. 6.
Love our family members and strengthen them in the ways of the Lord.
. 7.
Have family and individual prayers every day.
. 8.
Teach the gospel to others by word and example.
. 9.
Study the scriptures.
. 10.
Listen to and obey the inspired words of the prophets of the Lord.
Finally, each of us needs to receive the Holy Ghost and learn to follow His direction in our individual lives.


Gospel Principles, c. 1978, 1979, and 1981, Chapter 47, Exaltation, p. 291-292

I think they forgot to say that if the bishop calls you to serve in some capacity you are to regard that calling as coming directly from God. You should accept the calling.

“For all who will have a blessing at my hands shall abide the law which was appointed for the blessing, and the conditions thereof, as were instituted before the foundations of the world. (D&C 132:5.)”
Elray L. Christiansen, General Conference, Oct. 1972
 
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withwonderingawe

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You use 3 books in your theology,A King James Bible,a Book of Mormon and I think the other is a book of pearls.
God is not the Author of confusion!
How can you validate a religon based on one man's statements some 1800 years after the death of Christ and his Apostles?
What you are teaching is the blood of Christ was not enough for salvation, you teach your good works is required if you want to be a God,like God who was once a man.
It is unbelievable you cannot discern the fallacy in this doctrine.

First we do not teach that Christ blood is not enough but that we need to be worthy of every precious drop.
Matthew 10:38
38 And he that taketh not his cross, and followeth after me, is not worthy of me.

He is the one that judges us, we need to keep our eye single to him and he will fill us with his light. He knows what is in our hearts and knows what trials and corrections we need to help us up the path back into his presence. We see this earth life as a training ground, a place to learn Godly attributes of love and patients.

The Lord loves all of his children and what he teaches one he teaches all. We use the Bible, the Book of Mormon, the Doctrine in Covenants and the Pearl of Great Price. The Pearl of Great Price has the Book of Moses, the Book of Abraham, a short history of Joseph Smith and the Articles of Faith. All of these sacred scriptures agree in one, one sheds light on the other and helps to enlarge out understanding of God's light and truth. We also have living Prophets and Apostles to help guide us, to help us take up the cross.

Joseph Smith was not alone he had 11 other witness who saw and handled the plates. Three of them spoke to the Angel Moroni, many of them saw a lot more than this. Oliver Cowdery was there when John the Baptist came and restored the Aaronic priesthood and when Peter, James and John came to restore the Melchizedek priesthood.

And then most importantly we have the witness of the Holy Ghost that these things are from God.
 
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withwonderingawe

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Phoebe Ann said;

Mormon requirements for etetnal life(they call it exaltation):

To be exalted, we first must place our faith in Jesus Christ and then endure in that faith to the end of our lives. Our faith in Him must be such that we repent of our sins and obey His commandments.
He commands us all to receive certain ordinances:

1.We must be baptized.
"Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost" Matt 28

2.We must receive the laying on of hands to be confirmed a member of the Church of Jesus Christ and to receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.
Act 2 Peter said unto them, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for theremission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.

3.Brethren must receive the Melchizedek Priesthood and magnify their callings in the priesthood.
1 Peter 2:5
5 Ye also, as lively stones, are built up a spiritual house, an holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ.

Rev 1
5 Unto him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in his own blood,
6 And hath made us kings and priests unto God and his Father; to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever. Amen.

4.We must receive the temple endowment.
John 20: 30 ¶And many other signs/tokens truly did Jesus in the presence of his disciples, which are not written in this book:
Ephesians 1:3
3 Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ:

5.We must be married for eternity, either in this life or in the next.
1 Cor 11:11 Nevertheless neither is the man without the woman, neither the woman without the man, in the Lord.

1 Peter 3:7 Likewise, ye husbands, dwell with them according to knowledge, giving honour unto the wife, as unto the weaker vessel, and as being heirs together of the grace of life; that your prayers be not hindered.

In addition to receiving the required ordinances, the Lord commands all of us to:
. 1.Love God and our neighbors.
. 2.Keep the commandments.
. 3.Repent of our wrongdoings.
. 4.Search out our kindred dead and receive the saving ordinances of the gospel for them. (see Mal 4:5-6)
. 5.Attend our Church meetings as regularly as possible so we can renew our baptismal covenants by partaking of the sacrament. (cont. next PM)
. 6.Love our family members and strengthen them in the ways of the Lord.
. 7.Have family and individual prayers every day.
. 8.Teach the gospel to others by word and example.
. 9.Study the scriptures.
. 10.Listen to and obey the inspired words of the prophets of the Lord.

Finally, each of us needs to receive the Holy Ghost and learn to follow His direction in our individual lives."

Do you think you can be saved without loving God and your neighbors?
 
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dzheremi

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My question was "How do you know that guy A speaks Truth as opposed to person B whom also sites scripture for his case?".

What you do not seem to be understanding is that citing scripture is not the be-all and end-all of making an argument. In fact, Marcion, one of the earlier heretics of note (in terms of the effect that his heresy had on the development of Christianity), is chiefly remembered for having put together his own Biblical canon to reflect his ideas about God. He did not believe that the God of the Old Testament was the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, and produced an edited collection to reflect this. This was c. 140s, so a few hundred years before St. Athanasius the Apostolic would lay down the standard canon in his 39th festal letter of 367.

If Christianity or the Church viewed matters as you do, then in this situation we would not be able to say with certainty whether Marcion was correct or whether his critics were. After all, he was clearly concerned with scripture and knowledgeable in it to have produced the earliest canon of it. And his views were based on that scripture which was (though edited) largely the same books as were already circulating in the Christian community at the time. So who could really know that Marcion was wrong, or whether it was just a matter of "well guy C told me that guy A was right", as you've put it?

Here, interestingly, the chief critic of Marcionism in its own day, the great Latin writer Tertullian (d. c.220), answers in his own work against Marcion with the following observation:

"Our appeal, therefore, must not be made to the Scriptures; nor must controversy be admitted on points in which victory will either be impossible, or uncertain, or not certain enough. But even if a discussion from the Scriptures should not turn out in such a way as to place both sides on a par, (yet) the natural order of things would require that this point should be first proposed, which is now the only one which we must discuss: “With whom lies that very faith to which the Scriptures belong. From what and through whom, and when, and to whom, has been handed down that rule, by which men become Christians?” For wherever it shall be manifest that the true Christian rule and faith shall be, there will likewise be the true Scriptures and expositions thereof, and all the Christian traditions." (source)

In other words, even assuming for the sake of argument that we cannot know who is right based on the fact that they can cite scripture (since guy A and guy B can both cite it, even though they disagree with one another), we can still know by examining the content of what they argue. In fact, because scripture can thus be twisted to fit this or that conception of who God is (this is, after all, what Marcion did), in the end the examination of the actual ideas is unavoidable and necessary. And in that we find that some ideas, such as Marcion's rejection of the Old Testament God and the associated scriptures, to simply not be a feature of Christianity as taught in the Church before him. It is something that he invented, as all heretics invent their heresies using bits of the truth to fashion their own falsehoods.

Also directly relevant to this conversation, Tertullian writes in the same anti-Marcion work of the feature of heresy which is relentless curiosity:

"So long, however, as its form exists in its proper order, you may seek and discuss as much as you please, and give full rein to your curiosity, in whatever seems to you to hang in doubt, or to be shrouded in obscurity. You have at hand, no doubt, some learned brother gifted with the grace of knowledge, some one of the experienced class, some one of your close acquaintance who is curious like yourself; although with yourself, a seeker he will, after all, be quite aware that it is better for you to remain in ignorance, lest you should come to know what you ought not, because you have acquired the knowledge of what you ought to know. 'Thy faith,' He says, 'hath saved thee', not observe your skill in the Scriptures. Now, faith has been deposited in the rule; it has a law, and (in the observance thereof) salvation. Skill, however, consists in curious art, having for its glory simply the readiness that comes from knack. Let such curious art give place to faith; let such glory yield to salvation. At any rate, let them either relinquish their noisiness, or else be quiet. To know nothing in opposition to the rule (of faith), is to know all things. (Suppose) that heretics were not enemies to the truth, so that we were not forewarned to avoid them, what sort of conduct would it be to agree with men who do themselves confess that they are still seeking? For if they are still seeking, they have not as yet found anything amounting to certainty; and therefore, whatever they seem for a while to hold, they betray their own skepticism, whilst they continue seeking. You therefore, who seek after their fashion, looking to those who are themselves ever seeking, a doubter to doubters, a waverer to waverers, must needs be 'led, blindly by the blind, down into the ditch.' But when, for the sake of deceiving us, they pretend that they are still seeking, in order that they may palm their essays upon us by the suggestion of an anxious sympathy, when, in short (after gaining an access to us), they proceed at once to insist on the necessity of our inquiring into such points as they were in the habit of advancing, then it is high time for us in moral obligation to repel them, so that they may know that it is not Christ, but themselves, whom we disavow. For since they are still seekers, they have no fixed tenets yet; and being not fixed in tenet, they have not yet believed; and being not yet believers, they are not Christians. But even though they have their tenets and their belief, they still say that inquiry is necessary in order to discussion. Previous, however, to the discussion, they deny what they confess not yet to have believed, so long as they keep it an object of inquiry. When men, therefore, are not Christians even on their own admission, how much more (do they fail to appear such) to us! What sort of truth is that which they patronize, when they commend it to us with a lie? Well, but they actually treat of the Scriptures and recommend (their opinions) out of the Scriptures! To be sure they do. From what other source could they derive arguments concerning the things of the faith, except from the records of the faith?"

Perhaps from this you see now why I have reacted as I have to your disingenuous questioning. Would that you would have such questioning of your own faith and by that come to doubt for it is own breaking of this rule (by, e.g., having 'modern apostles' by which nothing is ever settled). But alas "well guy C told me that guy A was right", which is apparently 'a poor epistemological methodology' when you contend that Christians are using it (though we aren't; we are looking at the ideas advanced, not only their source, so it is never a matter of guy C versus guy A; point of fact: Tertullian himself was towards the latter half of his life cast out of the Church after having fallen prey to the heresy of Montanism) is actually totally fine and commendable for Mormons, so long as 'guy C' and 'guy A' are both Mormons. Hence your whole religion is established on 'guy C' (Joseph Smith) talking about a fictional 'guy A' (Moroni), and from that comes all this "what if" nonsense.

Again, you clearly do not see it this way, which is fine, but I'm not going to pretend as though it doesn't follow the clear pattern given above some 1600 years before Joseph Smith ever existed. All heretics may be confirmed as such by similar means: Do they have this characteristic? Are they teaching something originating with them?, etc. It is most emphatically not a matter of "What does this individual guy say about them?", because individuals can be right in some things and wrong in others (e.g., Tertullian, above). There's a reason why we can talk about what is mainstream within Christianity and what is not, rather than placing all our trust in one charismatic guy. Because we are talking about a breadth of teaching that is observable as having continued from the apostles who brought it to us until today. This is why in most churches that were founded by apostles (with the notable exception of the Roman Catholic Church), there are mechanisms for removing errant patriarchs/bishops by force. This has happened as recently as the 1950s in my own church (to Pope Yusab II), and even more recently for the Greeks (their Patriarch of Jerusalem, Irenaios, was dismissed in 2005, to be replaced by the current Patriarch Theophilos). Because it's not at all about "Guy C told me guy A was right" -- it's about whether or not they are teaching and governing in conformity with the faith as it has been given to us. Lex orandi, lex credendi and all that.

Answering "well guy C told me that guy A was right" is a poor epistemological methodology. Guy C might agree with Guy A, but then person D agrees with person B. Hence, you are reduced to the redundant question of "How do you know that guy C speaks Truth as opposed to person D whom also sites scripture for his case and support of this person?" If you then cite guy E and person F for the review, the cycle the again continues relentlessly

See above. For those of us who don't believe in restorationism, matters are settled by recourse to the faith as established by the apostles, brought to us by them and/or their disciples, confirmed in the churches by what we actually do/have done throughout 2000 years of history, including the early church fathers, the councils, the synods, etc. down to this very day. It is most emphatically not a matter of endless appeal to individual ancient writers and pitting them against one another, as you have bizarrely done here to no good end. When you know what is mainstream in your own faith, those that stick out may become apparent precisely due to the degree to which they vary from what has already been accepted. Hence for instance Mormonism is not accepted, as it has never been the case that we would throw away Christ's promise that the gates of hell would not prevail against His Church in favor of the fantasy of ancient Hebrew Indians in the Americas written about by Joseph Smith. Where is the antecedent to that in the apostles, the disciples, the fathers, the councils, etc.? Nowhere. It is quite clearly from outside of the Church. And so it is rejected on that account without even having to appeal to a 'guy C' or a 'guy A'.

Hence why I am asking for something outside of this cycle. Do you or do you not have such an epistemological method?

Again, see above.

Aside-- I am not attacking you, and honestly admire your vast knowledge of a faith I know little about. [Staff edit]. I would really like to have a quality respectful conversation with you.

If this is true, then you will accept the answers I give about my faith on the basis on which I give them, and not demand that I only use sources that fit within your narrow definition of how Christianity must work, which is inherently flawed and skewed by your own religion's epistemology which reduces the holy fathers and councils and all that make up the content of 2,000 years of living history to "the opinions of sinful men", as you have been dismissing everything I have said to you to date. I'm tired of that. You cannot continue to credibly claim to be simply asking questions or seeking answers if at every turn they are used as a soapbox to spout your Mormon restoration fantasies. That's not even what this thread is about, so I would suggest to you that if you cannot take an answer as given (not saying you have to accept it as true, but accept it as the answer to your question of how my faith operates regardless) that you start your own thread to satisfy what you claim is 'curiosity' (a.k.a., a need to stealthily proselytize others, as Tertullian noted above of heretics and their endless curiosity).
 
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Jane_Doe

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If this is true, then you will accept the answers I give about my faith on the basis on which I give them, and not demand that I only use sources that fit within your narrow definition of how Christianity must work, which is inherently flawed and skewed by your own religion's epistemology which reduces the holy fathers and councils and all that make up the content of 2,000 years of living history to "the opinions of sinful men", as you have been dismissing everything I have said to you to date. I'm tired of that. You cannot continue to credibly claim to be simply asking questions or seeking answers if at every turn they are used as a soapbox to spout your Mormon restoration fantasies. That's not even what this thread is about, so I would suggest to you that if you cannot take an answer as given (not saying you have to accept it as true, but accept it as the answer to your question of how my faith operates regardless) that you start your own thread to satisfy what you claim is 'curiosity' (a.k.a., a need to stealthily proselytize others, as Tertullian noted above of heretics and their endless curiosity).

Dzheremi, I am not attacking you are your beliefs. I am honestly curious as to what your reasoning is just for the sake of understanding your reasoning. Whether I personally see such reasoning as Truth or garbage is beyond point: my views do not define your beliefs. I explained my reasoning for phrasing the question the way I did and it has nothing to do with disrespecting you or your beliefs. I am not on a soapbox nor being sneak. I would not take the time to converse with you if I was not honestly interested in what you have to say.

Again, I would like to be respectful here, but respect has to be two-way. It cannot exist in an environment where people lob random accusations and refer to another's beliefs as "fantasies". I am willing to be respectful of you and your beliefs (regardless of my passionate disagreement with them). Are you willing to do the same?
 
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dzheremi

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Dzheremi, I am not attacking you are your beliefs. I am honestly curious as to what your reasoning is just for the sake of understanding your reasoning. Whether I personally see such reasoning as Truth or garbage is beyond point: my views do not define your beliefs. I explained my reasoning for phrasing the question the way I did and it has nothing to do with disrespecting you or your beliefs. I am not on a soapbox nor being sneak. I would not take the time to converse with you if I was not honestly interested in what you have to say.

Then demonstrate it by what you post.

Again, I would like to be respectful here, but respect has to be two-way. It cannot exist in an environment where people lob random accusations and refer to another's beliefs as "fantasies".

I am not claiming now nor would I ever claim to respect Mormon beliefs. I do not respect Mormon beliefs. I respect the right of the Mormon to hold to and preach whatever belief they wish, but to be asked to respect the content of those beliefs is too much. [Staff edit]. Crucially, however, I can and do accept the answers that Mormons give as Mormon answers. You participated in my thread about Mormon hymns, did you not? Every answer given there, even those I had follow up questions about, was accepted with thanks because I was specifically looking for the/a Mormon perspective on the matter.

You, by contrast, are claiming to ask for my perspective as a Christian, and then turning around and saying "but don't tell me X, Y, or Z". Again, as Bar Hebraeus said so long ago of the Muslims, you demand an apology for my faith not from its own sources, but from those which you recognize. That is not acceptable. Again, I am not demanding that you as a Mormon argue as though you are not one. Please grant me the same courtesy, or at least cease attempting to present the problem of your own inability to accept answers that don't agree with your preconceived ideas as a lack of 'respect' on my part. I don't give a fig whether or not you respect the fathers or the councils, so long as you recognize that these are the traditional sources to which a Christian points in order to demonstrate continuity with the apostolic foundations of His Church.

I am willing to be respectful of you and your beliefs (regardless of my passionate disagreement with them). Are you willing to do the same?

That's the thing, though: You are making a two-fold error by claiming to be respectful of me and my beliefs while simultaneously barring ahead of time any reference to things you've already decided are out of bounds (again, you don't get to control the conversation this way), which is an attempt -- whether you realize it or not -- to undercut the basis by which I may argue my case, and now when confronted with your obvious chicanery you are retreating to ideas of 'respect'. [Staff edit].

That is not a game I'm willing to play with you, or anyone. Again, my responses are here, and clear enough for anyone who can find answers in the early fathers and other early writers of Christianity. [Staff edit]
 
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dzheremi

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I would add to that a corollary that lack of agreement or acceptance does not equal disrespect, but anyway...I cannot abide by this idea that it is necessary to respect the content of every belief just because someone, somewhere believes it to be true. Since that appears to be my interlocutor's precondition, this conversation is finished. I hope that someone finds the words of and references to St. Cyril, Tertullian, and so on to be useful, at any rate.
 
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BigDaddy4

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I would add to that a corollary that lack of agreement or acceptance does not equal disrespect, but anyway...I cannot abide by this idea that it is necessary to respect the content of every belief just because someone, somewhere believes it to be true. Since that appears to be my interlocutor's precondition, this conversation is finished. I hope that someone finds the words of and references to St. Cyril, Tertullian, and so on to be useful, at any rate.
Agreed. And I thought you made it clear that while you did not respect the content of mormon beliefs, you did respect her right to believe them. You supported your point with the hymns thread, which I remember as you being respectful there.

And, your knowledge of early church history and the unique perspective of the Oriental Orthodox church has always been a pleasure to read.
 
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withwonderingawe

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Why would you need a Bible when you have the book of mormon?
It appears Smith gave the Mormons all they needed to know,his self proclaimed title as Prophet of God has made his Word superior to God's Word.

Matt 18:16 "...that in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be established."

Eze 37
15 ¶The word of the Lord came again unto me, saying,
16 Moreover, thou son of man, take thee one stick, and write upon it, For Judah/the Bible, and for the children of Israel his companions: then take another stick, and write upon it, For Joseph, the stick of Ephraim/the Book of Mormon, and for all the house of Israel his companions:
17 And join them one to another into one stick; and they shall become one in thine hand.
18 ¶And when the children of thy people shall speak unto thee, saying, Wilt thou not shew us what thou meanest by these?
19 Say unto them, Thus saith the Lord God; Behold, I will take the stick of Joseph, which is in the hand of Ephraim, and the tribes of Israel his fellows, and will put them with him, even with the stick of Judah, and make them one stick, and they shall be one in mine hand.
20 ¶And the sticks whereon thou writest shall be in thine hand before their eyes.

The actual name of the book is;
The Book of Mormon Another Testament of Jesus Christ

1 Nephi 1:34
Great and marvelous are thy works, O Lord God Almighty! Thy throne is high in the heavens, and thy power, and goodness, and mercy are over all the inhabitants of the earth; and, because thou art merciful, thou wilt not suffer those who come unto thee that they shall perish!

Isa 54
"16 Behold, I have created the smith that bloweth the coals in the fire, and that bringeth forth an instrument/the Book of Mormon for his work; and I have created the waster to destroy."
 
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withwonderingawe

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[Staff edit] For every real prophet the Lord raises up the devil will raise up 10. Our responsibility as followers of Christ is to try the spirits or to test the prophets to see if they are from God. We need to look at their doctrine and compare them to scriptures do they teach that Jesus is the Son of God come in the flesh.

" Who is a liar but he that denieth that Jesus is the Christ? He is antichrist, that denieth the Father and the Son." 1John2

I feel the concept of the Trinity does this, it denies the Father Son relationship. It uses a lot of illogical arguments trying to hid the fact but it really gets rid of the Father as a greater being than Jesus.
 
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dzheremi

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[Staff edit]

The question is where did Mormonism's original God come from if every God figure in Mormonism has a father, not "What did Joseph Smith attempt to do to Christianity?". The fact that the Mormon God is not the Holy Trinity is taken as preexisting knowledge by virtue of the fact that every actual Christian knows that the statement that "God had a father, who had a father, who had a father, etc." is not within the bounds of Christian theology. So again, your objections or Joseph Smith's objections or anyone else's objections to the Holy Trinity are irrelevant to answering the question, but perhaps by incidental comparison (e.g., "Unlike the Christian concept of the Trinity, Gods in Mormonism bear the following relationship to one another...").

[Staff edit]

If he came from a father, then how can he himself be the original/first God? Are you saying that Mormonism's first God was born of a normal man who was not himself God? Or is it that you did not understand the OP? I'm legitimately confused as to how this is an answer to anything.
 
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Clearly I am, or I would not have made this thread. The point is that saying "I feel like the Trinity denies/obscures the Father-Son relationship" does not answer "Where did Mormonism's first God come from?" If there is such a direct connection between that objection and the question, it is not being made clear and explicit in the post. If a Mormon were to make a thread on why Christians make the sign of the Cross and I replied by saying "I feel like Mormonism's proxy baptisms for the dead deny the efficacy of traditional Trinitarian Christian baptism", it would be perfectly reasonable for a Mormon to reply that this has nothing to do with the question of why Christians make the sign of the cross (even though it is related in a more general way to Christian baptism, simply stating that objection does nothing to answer to the question).
 
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Jane_Doe

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Clearly I am, or I would not have made this thread. The point is that saying "I feel like the Trinity denies/obscures the Father-Son relationship" does not answer "Where did Mormonism's first God come from?" If there is such a direct connection between that objection and the question, it is not being made clear and explicit in the post. If a Mormon were to make a thread on why Christians make the sign of the Cross and I replied by saying "I feel like Mormonism's proxy baptisms for the dead deny the efficacy of traditional Trinitarian Christian baptism", it would be perfectly reasonable for a Mormon to reply that this has nothing to do with the question of why Christians make the sign of the cross (even though it is related in a more general way to Christian baptism, simply stating that objection does nothing to answer to the question).
Do you truly believe that the nature of God has nothing to do with the history of God?
 
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