I do not think ours was the first world. I think there may hve been a first world. And I think it was a sermon after the KFD where Joseph put forth the idea of God having a father and on and on and on. But I could be mistaken. I would have to go back and review it. But ther is no question Joseph tossed such an idea out. But here is the rub. The D&C in Section 121 talks about the possibility of many gods but then references a Head God of all other gods. I think this is why Ostler argues that the idea of an infinite regression of gods is contradicted by canon. I think he is correct. At least as far as the standard works goes I do not think tis concept is tenable.
The problem here, however, is assuming this to mean a head God that is somehow the central divine figure throughout all possible and existing cosmoses. The Father would be, of course, the head God of his spirit children who attained godhood, which, over time, would be a vast number. I see no such problem in the standard works when taken as a whole, only when certain scriptures are isolated and an attempt is made to use them as proof texts for the anti-infinite regression concept. There are veres, of course, primarily in the Old Testament, that seem to say exactly this. However, whether the full meaning and implication of those texts is available in a surface reading of those texts, if taken just at face value, is another question. To Israel, for Israel, and regarding Israel, there was no other God. None before, and none after (which would call into question the messiahship of Christ, and which, for the Jews, indeed does) There are also a number of verses in the Old Testament that declare the laws and ritual observances of the Law of Moses to be eternal, but of course, this cannot be understood to mean "permanent" in a literal sense with respect to the human race or the House of Israel. In the same manner, we have no other God, before, nor in the future, other than our Father. The bare existence of other gods equal to him in power and intelligence changes nothing regarding his Priesthood authority and its scope. If Jesus did nothing other than what he saw his Father do, then the implication must be that the Father was, at one time, a spirit son of his own Father in Heaven, existed in a preexistent state, became mortal and underwent the trials and challenges of mortality, died, was resurrected, and exalted. We are now his children and he is our Heavenly Father. If Jesus was following a pattern, and not a novel mode of existence, then the Father must have been a participant in that same patter (the plan of salvation).
Oh I am not so certian about this. The idea that there was at least One Head God seems fairly biblical. I find nothing in scripture that lends to the idea of an infinite regression of Gods.
Yes, its biblical, but the problem of interpretation still remains. The other problem, and the central problem I have with Ostler's view, is the idea that, in some manner, our Father in Heaven is ontologically unique to the degree that he somehow transcends the natural principles (development and progression from essence, to intelligence, to mortal organism, to divinity) apparently followed by all other gods
except himself. The question of the origin of God is much better served, in my view, by the ideas of the KFD (godhood understood as the outcome of a long process of development from embryonic state to fully mature state) than through speculations positing a God that in some manner transcends the principle of eternal progression itself and was, in some incomprehensible way, always just there and always is a "head god" in a way in which other "head gods" are not.
Ostler's views also, as mentioned before, evaporates the great continuity of the plan of salvation back into the endless past by making our particular Father in Heaven an absolute temporal and ontological barrier to anything proceeding himself.
The face of sin today often wears the mask of tolerance.
- Thomas S. Monson