seven7up wrote:The full context has now been provided, so everyone can clearly see what you and mittens were trying to do. It was an attempt to mislead by cutting out context and take advantage of assumptions.
Bazooka wrote:Do you believe the doctrine that 'men like us' can be come Gods and obtain all the wisdom and knowledge that God The Father has and become perfect like Him?
You are treading into the topic of exaltation/theosis, a topic which was not being addressed on this thread, ... until you tried to change subject. Mittens gave an opening post, which was related to the idea of God and whether or not God can be considered "eternal" in LDS theology; and that it contradicted the scriptures. Mittens posted the following:
Mittens wrote:"God himself was once as we are now, and is an exalted Man, and sits enthroned in yonder heavens. That is the great secret... … I am going to tell you how God came to be God. We have imagined and supposed that God was God from all eternity. I will refute that idea, and take away the veil, so that you may see. … It is the first principle of the Gospel to know for a certainty the character of God and to know...that he was once a man like us.... Here, then, is eternal life - to know the only wise and true God; and you have got to learn how to be Gods yourselves, and to be kings and priests to God, the same as all Gods have done before you... (“King Follett Discourse,” Journal of Discourses 6:3-4, also in Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, 345-346, and History of the Church, vol. 6, 305-307,)"
Mittens says: Why would we image and suppose God is God from Eternity ? because the Book of Mormon and Bible teaches it
...
2 Nephi 26:12 And as I spake concerning the convincing of the Jews, that Jesus is the very Christ, it must needs be that the Gentiles be convinced also that Jesus is the Christ, the Eternal God;
Moroni 7:22 For behold, God knowing all things, being from everlasting to everlasting , behold, he sent angels to minister unto the children of men, to make manifest concerning the coming of Christ; and in Christ there should come every good thing.
Moroni 8:18 For I know that God is not a partial God, neither a changeable being; but he is unchangeable from all eternity to all eternity.
Mormon 9:9 For do we not read that God is the same yesterday, today, and forever , and in him there is no variableness neither shadow of changing?
So, Mittens was arguing that the teachings of the LDS church, and what Joseph Smith taught, contradict the Book of Mormon. To which I responded with the following:
seven7up wrote:... let's discuss the definition of “eternal”. Do you want to use a specific option in the definitions found in modern dictionaries? Or do you want to look at the words as they were used and understood in ancient times as written in the Bible?
Perhaps your view of "eternal" is that only God is eternal, existing in some kind of simple (no parts), metaphysical, unchanging state from infinite past to infinite future, existing before anything else ever existed. However, those are leaps beyond how the Bible uses “eternal”.
All that can be said of the scriptural usage of these terms (everlasting/eternal) is that whatever is called “eternal” goes beyond our usual sense or scope of existence or beyond our experience of time. The ancient authors wrote to an audience according to their understanding, which is limited. Our understanding is limited as well. Time is relative, and anything outside time as we currently know it is beyond the human experience. We think that living 100 years is a long time. Imagine living 100 thousand or 100 million years. It is unthinkable in relation to what we see in our mortality.
God is well beyond even billions and billions of years. How can we even fathom that? Having created the Universe and time as we know it, God transcends time in our Universe, and, if we want to speculate, He may very well have created another Universe or Universes ...
Anyways, here are a few Old Testament examples of two terms which are sometimes translated as everlasting/eternal. Let's see if they fit into what you are implying to mean as “eternal”:
עוֹלָם `owlam
Deut 33:15 describes the hills/mountains as "everlasting/eternal". Yet clearly the Bible teaches that the Earth along with the hills and mountains were created.
This is the same term used in the Psalms for God being “from everlasting to everlasting”. Yet most of the time we find this word translated as “ancient”. Other examples include “ancient people” (Isa 44:7), ancient landmark (Prov 22:28), and so forth.
Similarly, we have the Hebrew wordעַד `ad
Job 20:4 "Haven't you known this from ***everlasting/eternal***, since mankind was placed on the earth?
So here, having known since the beginning of the Earth is sufficient to be considered eternal/everlasting. The meaning is "antiquity or of old'. (Interesting also that Isaiah uses this same term in 57:15 to say that God “inhabits eternity.” Almost as if eternity can also be considered a place.)
Keep in mind that this is the same term that is used in Isaiah 9:6 for the “everlasting/eternal Father”.
Lets look at some New Testament words, like Ἀΐδιος aïdios
Jude 1:6 uses the term to describe “everlasting chains” for the angels who “kept not their first estate” which they will have “unto the judgement of the great day.” So, did these chains under darkness exist (in eternal past) before God supposedly created everything Ex Nihilo, including the angels themselves?
Yet this term is the same word used to describe God's “eternal power and Godhead” in Romans 1:20.
How about another term, from which we get aeon. Αἰών Aiōn
Sometimes this one it is not just understood as long periods of time, but as “the worlds” or the Cosmos/Universe, which, as we both know, are created by God, so does not really fit your definition of something that always has been.
Finally, we have χρόνος and Αἰώνιος aiōnios ,
It is used over and over to describe both eternal salvation/redemption/inheritance as well as eternal judgment/fire/destruction.
It is also used to describe a whole host of other things, like the “eternal weight of glory” to be bestowed upon the faithful. It is used by Paul to describe an “everlasting covenant” between God and man. It is used in conjunction with another Hebrew term to say “since the world began”. It as also used to things that will exist in the future, for example, when comparing our earthly tabernacle, which is temporal, to the tabernacle we will have in the resurrection. (2 Cr 5:1).
So, again I ask you, is your definition of “eternal” consistent with how these terms were used and understood in ancient scripture? Or are you adding meaning beyond what the scripture actually says?
Have you weighed all of this against what Joseph Smith was trying to explain in relation to God?
So, as you can see, the conversation was about what "eternal" means and in what sense the God of Mormonism can be considered "eternal". We know that Mormons don't believe that Christ is created from nothing, as even regular people are considered in LDS theology to have an "intelligence" that has always existed. Anyways, you came along and tried to argue that I did not believe in LDS doctrine, and you posed the following accusation:
Bazooka wrote:Why are you trying to reinterpret what Joseph Smith clearly and explicitly stated - "God was once a man like us....".
I interpret that to mean that God was once a man like us. Which supports the Mormon notion that we can become God's.
Are you saying you don't think the teaching on this is correct?
I pointed out, for starters, that the words, "God was once a man like us..." as posted by Mittens, and again here in your accusation, were taken out of context.
In what sense is Joseph saying that God was a man like us? The completed teaching says, "If you were to see God, you would see him in the form of a man,... God was once a man like us... He lived on an Earth,
the same as Jesus Christ himself did."
Joseph Smith had a vision where he saw God, and God had the form of a human body. So, the question was, "How did God get a body?" Joseph answered, in the whole context of this sermon, that Jesus was following in the same path that God the Father had accomplished.
Concerning the question of exaltation/theosis, yes, I do believe it. As I have posted elsewhere on this forum, I believe that God has provided a way for us to become like Him, God will share everything He has with us, and while the organization isn't very clear to us, I believe that God will give us the opportunity to live the kind of life that God lives (including having spiritual children). However, God will always be our Father, Jesus will always be our savior, and "nothing will ever change the relationship that we have with them."
-7up