Blasphemy or Biblical?

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_Themis
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Re: Blasphemy or Biblical?

Post by _Themis »

gdemetz wrote:Yea, it is definitely a teaching of the church, and I have to admit that I myself sometimes get irritated by those in the church who seem hesitant to "tell it like it is" in their efforts to polish the image of the church, as if some of those observing would not be intelligent enough to see right through what they are trying to do!


You may notice that what bothers many is not that the church teaches it, but that sites meant for PR purposes are not being honest about it and some other doctrines. Personally I think it is one of the better doctrines, even if not true. I guess being LDS I may not understand well how other Christian groups react so negatively.
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_gdemetz
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Re: Blasphemy or Biblical?

Post by _gdemetz »

Are you LDS?!
_Bond James Bond
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Re: Blasphemy or Biblical?

Post by _Bond James Bond »

gdemetz wrote:One of the main reasons, if not the main reason, that the chuch has been verbally attacked is our belief that a man may become a god. The enemies of the chuch have said that this is not Biblical and that it is blasphemy. However, I contend that it is a Biblical teaching. Psalms 82:6 clearly and simply states: "Ye are gods and all of you are the children of the most high." Christ used this scripture to defend Himself against this very charge of blasphemy as recorded in John 10:33: "Isn't it written in your law, I said, ye are gods." Also, to show that this means much more than simply being an immortal being, Christ states, as recorded in Revelation 3:21: "To him that overcometh willI grant to sit with me in my throne even as I overcame and am sat down with my Father in His throne."


Most secular critics are more concerned that not a lick of evidence exists to support the Book of Mormon's historical accuracy.
Whatever appears to be against the Book of Mormon is going to be overturned at some time in the future. So we can be pretty open minded.-charity 3/7/07

MASH quotes
I peeked in the back [of the Bible] Frank, the Devil did it.
I avoid church religiously.
This isn't one of my sermons, I expect you to listen.
_gdemetz
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Re: Blasphemy or Biblical?

Post by _gdemetz »

It is an "adulterous generation" that seeketh for a sign.
_Drifting
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Re: Blasphemy or Biblical?

Post by _Drifting »

gdemetz wrote:It is an "adulterous generation" that seeketh for a sign.


Here is an example of an organisation teaching it's "adulterous generation" to seek for signs...

Gospel Principles Chapter 43: Signs of the Second Coming

http://www.LDS.org/manual/gospel-princi ... g?lang=eng
“We look to not only the spiritual but also the temporal, and we believe that a person who is impoverished temporally cannot blossom spiritually.”
Keith McMullin - Counsellor in Presiding Bishopric

"One, two, three...let's go shopping!"
Thomas S Monson - Prophet, Seer, Revelator
_Themis
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Re: Blasphemy or Biblical?

Post by _Themis »

gdemetz wrote:Are you LDS?!


If you mean me, the answer is yes.
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_Themis
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Re: Blasphemy or Biblical?

Post by _Themis »

Drifting wrote:
gdemetz wrote:It is an "adulterous generation" that seeketh for a sign.


Here is an example of an organisation teaching it's "adulterous generation" to seek for signs...

Gospel Principles Chapter 43: Signs of the Second Coming

http://www.LDS.org/manual/gospel-princi ... g?lang=eng


Would asking God if the Book of Mormon is true mean you are a sign seeker, and therefore part of this adulterous generation?
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_Gentile Persuasion
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Re: Blasphemy or Biblical?

Post by _Gentile Persuasion »

Please excuse the following outburst of pedantry, but this is kind of a complicated issue.

One of Christianity's most challenging problems is how to reconcile monotheism with the belief that Jesus is the Son of God. Traditional Christianity does this through trinitarianism, which holds that there are three separate persons in one God.

Historically, there are two periods when non-trinitarianism was relatively popular. The first was during early Christianity when trinitarian beliefs were not yet fully formed. The second was the Age of Reason in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Some of the alternatives to trinitarianism are unitarianism (though Jesus was the Son of God, he wasn't really God, as believed by Unitarians, Deists, and early on by Ebionists), modalism (God's three persons are not actually separate, but are simply different manifestations of the one God, as suggested by some passages in the original Book of Mormon), and henotheism (Jesus is a separate God from God the Father, but is by nature subordinate to God the Father, as believed by Mormons, Jehovah's Witnesses, and early on by Arians, or is dominant over God the Father, as believed by Marcionists).

Henotheism is a form of polytheism, which leads to the question: If there can be more than one God, why can't there be many, and why can't we become gods ourselves? Some cultures, such as ancient Greco-Roman culture, accepted the belief that people could be raised to become gods. As D. Michael Quinn has pointed out, this is the closest historical parallel to Mormon belief.

This belief differs from the idea of theosis in traditional Christianity, which is that people can acquire many of the virtues that are personified by God without either becoming gods themselves (as in Greco-Roman religion) or losing their individual identities by being merged into God (as in some forms of Hinduism and Buddhism). The metaphor used for traditional Christian theosis is that an individual can become like a perfectly clean window through which God's light can shine.

But here's my point: The reason people get so exercised about this is because there's no simple, intuitive answer. Proof-texts can be culled to support any of these positions. It's an argument with no solution that can be reached by research or discussion.
_Franktalk
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Re: Blasphemy or Biblical?

Post by _Franktalk »

Gentile Persuasion wrote:Please excuse the following outburst of pedantry, but this is kind of a complicated issue.

One of Christianity's most challenging problems is how to reconcile monotheism with the belief that Jesus is the Son of God. Traditional Christianity does this through trinitarianism, which holds that there are three separate persons in one God.

Historically, there are two periods when non-trinitarianism was relatively popular. The first was during early Christianity when trinitarian beliefs were not yet fully formed. The second was the Age of Reason in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Some of the alternatives to trinitarianism are unitarianism (though Jesus was the Son of God, he wasn't really God, as believed by Unitarians, Deists, and early on by Ebionists), modalism (God's three persons are not actually separate, but are simply different manifestations of the one God, as suggested by some passages in the original Book of Mormon), and henotheism (Jesus is a separate God from God the Father, but is by nature subordinate to God the Father, as believed by Mormons, Jehovah's Witnesses, and early on by Arians, or is dominant over God the Father, as believed by Marcionists).

Henotheism is a form of polytheism, which leads to the question: If there can be more than one God, why can't there be many, and why can't we become gods ourselves? Some cultures, such as ancient Greco-Roman culture, accepted the belief that people could be raised to become gods. As D. Michael Quinn has pointed out, this is the closest historical parallel to Mormon belief.

This belief differs from the idea of theosis in traditional Christianity, which is that people can acquire many of the virtues that are personified by God without either becoming gods themselves (as in Greco-Roman religion) or losing their individual identities by being merged into God (as in some forms of Hinduism and Buddhism). The metaphor used for traditional Christian theosis is that an individual can become like a perfectly clean window through which God's light can shine.

But here's my point: The reason people get so exercised about this is because there's no simple, intuitive answer. Proof-texts can be culled to support any of these positions. It's an argument with no solution that can be reached by research or discussion.


You are correct that scripture is open enough for many interpretations. I personally believe that Jesus and the Holy Ghost are separate and my reasoning stems from what Christ said on the cross.

Mat 27:46 And about the ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud voice, saying, Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani? that is to say, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?

But of course God could be so complex that my reasoning does not apply.

Now we do have many examples of beings being called a god yet we know that they are not in the classic sense. More of a title because of the powers they can command. So can someone be called a god and demand worship even though the powers of that being can be taken away? From my perspective there is just not enough data and I will just wait and find out. No matter what the reality turns out to be it will not change the course I find myself on.
_Gentile Persuasion
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Re: Blasphemy or Biblical?

Post by _Gentile Persuasion »

Mormons and trinitarian Christians agree that Jesus and the Holy Ghost are separate from God the Father. They differ on whether Jesus, the Holy Ghost, and God the Father are separate Gods, or whether they are separate persons who are united in one God.

Franktalk wrote:So can someone be called a god and demand worship even though the powers of that being can be taken away? From my perspective there is just not enough data and I will just wait and find out.


As I understand it, the idea that "God would cease to be God" under some circumstances is a uniquely Mormon belief. The publishers of the Nauvoo Expositor didn't like the fact that Joseph Smith apparently taught it, but it was apparently accepted by John A. Widtsoe and Cleon Skousen, among others.

As I heard Skousen explain it, this possibility is due to the belief that God is necessarily subject to at least some natural laws, and also the belief that what he called "little intelligences" pervade the universe, including otherwise inanimate matter. Skousen said that if God acts in a way that is excessively merciful, this will be perceived as unjust by enough of the intelligences that they will essentially vote God out of office. This is why the Atonement required Christ's suffering and crucifixion before humanity's sins could be forgiven.

I don't know how mainstream this idea is within current Mormon thought. Maybe some of the other folks on this board could enlighten me.
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