BourbonFromHeaven
Well-Known Member
Casiopeia said:As a Latter-day Saint I always understood the trinity to be made up of three distinct personages with one purpose...nothing was said to call them all Gods.
Not outright. But when I questioned to the missionaries about Joseph Smith's of seeing jesus standing next to the father, that is how I got it explained to me. The holy spirit and the son act independently of the father, are seprate from the father, but all three share one exact purpose, so they are often considered one.
I had a lengthy correspondence with a Professor from BYU, who made Apologetics a hobby. This is how he tried to explain the mormon godhead to me and that henotheism would be an appropriate title for this belief, if one wanted to make an issue of it.
To be honest, it makes sense, the way Mormon's explain it. However, I reject it outright due to the polytheistic nature of it
Rebbe peepnklown said:Odd, I have seen many Christians from this forum define it as three separate personalities with one essence, so I chalk it up to semantics.
The devil is in the detials. Christians see the three persons of the Trinity as manifiestations of god. So in christian writings, you won't see the father standing next to the son, so to speak.
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