beastie wrote:But of course these clarifications only work if you stop there, if you don't ask the next, natural questions - these clarifications only delay the inevitable confusion and mist. Once you start probing beyond the first step - ok, but was there an original god? How did it all start? And how was Jesus God without a body, if we all need bodies? And what is the Holy Ghost? - then you realize that Mormon teachings really don't, in the end, make any more sense than traditional christianity.
It only begins to make sense when you realize that the point of religion isn't about making sense at all.
Yes, religion is irrational in that it is founded on unverifiable propositions about the world, and any religion of the Abrahamic variety is bound to have plenty of them. After all, the Old Testament is full of (to use a disparaging term) 'fairytales,' and believers feel an obligation to make sense out of the nonsense therein. So explanations that are even more nonsensical take shape in a misguided effort to save the fairytales and make them respectable.
From one perspective, this is exactly what Mormonism is. Encountering the apparent absurdity of various Christian concepts, and also a variety of unanswered questions, Joseph Smith and his colleagues sought to make sense out of it through new revelations. Some contemporary Mormons continue to struggle with the fact that
these answers still don't cut it.
The real howler in Christianity, in my opinion, has to be the atonement, which presents us with the idea that an omnipotent God was only capable of saving people from their fallen humanity by sacrificing his God-Son Jesus. First, the fact that the whole edifice is contingent upon the fairytale of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden is quite a hurdle. It also boggles the mind why an all-powerful deity would need to use such means to save his own creations, when he is capable of forgiving them himself. Mormonism shifted to the idea of a God of limited power, which would help explain why God was incapable of forgiving the sins himself (I guess), but then people like McConkie seemed to fear that a God of limited power would not be able to save anyone.
This last sentence carries the clue to why much of Mormon theology ultimately failed. The problems of Christian theology required some radical solutions. Joseph Smith and others took first steps in the direction of addressing them. Arguably Brigham Young took the initial, tentative second steps. For example, it was he who called the Garden of Eden scenario a 'fairy story' I believe. In the later 19th century some Mormons were beginning to see the illogical nature of the atonement and argue
against its necessity. In the end, however, the immense gravitational field of Christian tradition pulled them back in.
Today Mormonism sits mostly in the bathtub of garden-variety Christian belief, with a few limbs hanging out of the water. The compromise-result in some ways makes less sense than before.