I'm not being facetious. But according to McConkie:
Apostle Bruce R. McConkie:
Nothing is more absolutely universal than the resurrection. Every living thing and being will be resurrected. "As in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive." (1 Cor. 15:22.)....
Every "living thing", which presumably includes the streptococcus germs in your throat?
Ray A wrote:I'm not being facetious. But according to McConkie:
Apostle Bruce R. McConkie:
Nothing is more absolutely universal than the resurrection. Every living thing and being will be resurrected. "As in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive." (1 Cor. 15:22.)....
Every "living thing", which presumably includes the streptococcus germs in your throat?
Comments?
Do viruses count? How about cancer cells?
That's General Leo. He could be my friend if he weren't my enemy. eritis sicut dii I support NCMO
The First Presidency (Joseph F. Smith, John R. Winder, Anthon H. Lund):
He made the tadpole and the ape, the lion and the elephant but He did not make them in His own image, nor endow them with Godlike reason and intelligence. Nevertheless, the whole animal creation will be perfected and perpetuated in the Hereafter, each class in its 'distinct order or sphere,' and will enjoy 'eternal felicity.' That fact has been made plain in this dispensation (D&C 77:3). - Church First Presidency Message, Christmas greetings, Dec. 18, 1909
Will tadpoles evolve into frogs in the afterlife? Or do they remain tadpoles for all eternity, in eternal bliss?
asbestosman wrote:Do viruses count? How about cancer cells?
All viruses and cancer cells will live in eternal bliss. McConkie says so. So it must be so. After all, he says it. It's all in Mormon Doctrine. So it must be true.
"I can only tell you what the scriptures say about it," Daddy replied. "Usually, when we talk about the resurrection, we think of people. But the scriptures teach us that man, the earth, and all the life upon it will be resurrected, mentioning especially the beasts, the fowls of the air, and the fishes of the sea. The Savior gave His life so that everything would rise from the dead, even lizards and robins." - "Will Robins Go to Heaven?" - Church Friend, Apr. 1982, p. 39
Actually your OP idea is why the resurrection seems strange to me.
The idea of physical bodies coming back to life doesn't make sense given the fact that our bodies are really made up of material from other living things. With each breath we inhale material from virtually every other living thing who has existed on the earth (If we take a really deep breath), so what is one's physical body? And, at each moment our bodies are sloughing off material so we are constantly changing. Even the cancer that invades a body today will be different cells tomorrow... ya know?
The whole idea of a physical resurrection just doesn't work for me. Oh well...
Also, gramps.... I'm guessing that you won't be with your animals unless you are sealed to them. I mean if you will not be with your human loved ones unless a sealing takes place I highly doubt you will be with your animals. But I'm just guessing.
My dog was hit in the night. My hubby found him on the road as he went to work this morning. I'm feeling a tad blubbery right now, and opened this website to find "Do cockroaches go to heaven?" Guess what? My answer right now is an unqualified "yes". Cockroaches (and dogs) cannot sin. Thus they are given a free pass.
Or... maybe multiple mortal probations was correct, and we all start out as viruses and then move up the food chain until we're finally resurrected as people.
Or... maybe the law of Karma is right, and we're rewarded in the next life according to our deeds in this one. So if you're a good virus, you get to come back as an amoeba the next time.
Will they all go to the CK? Or will some go to the lower kingdoms? What criteria could be used to judge which kingdom they go to? Do they have to get baptized? Take out their endowments?