I honestly think you haven't navigated this enough. Your statement, made above, doesn't have any meat to it.
Regards,
MG
I honestly think you haven't navigated this enough. Your statement, made above, doesn't have any meat to it.
Yes. They seem as reliable as a Magic 8 Ball. The Church has learned not to call anything specifically a revelation. Sure, they’ll say that General Conference contains revelation for members, but they won’t be specific about which statements are, or aren’t “revelations”. Now it’s all just policies and pr statements. The last time anyone declared a specific thing was a “revelation” was Nelson when he declared Gays were apostates and God didn’t want their kids in His church. That was u-turned within weeks. Farcical.
This is an example of you being rude towards another poster MG. Maybe, instead of criticising Malkie personally, you could instead address his conclusion objectively, and demonstrate that Mormon god’s revelations have been reliable, and don’t need special pleadings nor excuses.
What, specifically, should I "navigate" more?
And of course, there is also the not insignificant point that for 99.99999999999% of human beings (probably even more) what 'revelation' means is 'Hey! There's this guy I met who told me he had just got a revelation from <insert name of deity>, and it all sounded pretty convincing!" .
The problem here is being reframed by you to a matter of existence. We’re not talking about existence. We’re talking about the Mormon pantheon’s action and power. You’ve told us here that Elohim acts in response to the will and decision of creatures outside of himself which means that he is fundamentally not omnipotent nor omniscient.MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 12:51 amIf you are saying that the "object" is creator/God in this instance, I would disagree. God is not mutable, He is unchanging. He is, however, subject to the will and actions of independent beings that have the agency to choose. That does not in any way dictate whether or not he exists.Mag’ladroth wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 10:47 pmSo contingency is a metaphysical term that means that an object is dependent on something other than itself for existence. This means then that the object is mutable. Mutability means that this object changes.
In the metaphysical realm of god, this means then that if Elohim the head of the Mormon pantheon of exalted men and women, is subject to the will of other beings, he is not omniscient nor omnipotent. Which means he cannot be god.
Regards,
MG
That looks to me to be an accurate reading of what MG asserted, and the logical conclusion that stems from it.Mag’ladroth wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 11:56 amThe problem here is being reframed by you to a matter of existence. We’re not talking about existence. We’re talking about the Mormon pantheon’s action and power. You’ve told us here that Elohim acts in response to the will and decision of creatures outside of himself which means that he is fundamentally not omnipotent nor omniscient.MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 12:51 amIf you are saying that the "object" is creator/God in this instance, I would disagree. God is not mutable, He is unchanging. He is, however, subject to the will and actions of independent beings that have the agency to choose. That does not in any way dictate whether or not he exists.
Regards,
MG
To a normal, intellectually honest individual that understands logic, that’s correct. Unfortunately the SLC LDS Church is neither of those things. The SLC LDS Church reserves the right to pick and choose, to be inconsistent, and to not practice what they preach - as an example they preach that members should declare their income and pay an honest and full tithe to the Church, whilst they simultaneously devised a decades-long dishonest scheme to avoid declaring their income Church’s honest income so as to avoid paying an honest tax.Also, the claim that the LDS god does not change is fundamentally contradicted by Mormon history and even current Mormon doctrine and attempts by Mormon apologists to create a synthetic and defensible Mormonism. It’s contradicted even now in this thread by the fact of the existence of this revelation.
If Taylor’s revelation on polygamy being acceptable post-polygamy ban is not valid, then neither is the First Vision.
I’m gonna lay my cards out on the table and say I’m a Presbyterian in one of the towns scheduled to receive the “gift” of a Mormon temple. I was fine to leave LDS alone and engage in good faith friendly discussion until this aggressive and confrontational tone they’ve taken everywhere and with everyone. Especially with regard to building their temples and taking that tack that anyone who disagrees with them in any form is a bigot and persecuting them.I Have Questions wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 12:27 pmThat looks to me to be an accurate reading of what MG asserted, and the logical conclusion that stems from it.Mag’ladroth wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 11:56 amThe problem here is being reframed by you to a matter of existence. We’re not talking about existence. We’re talking about the Mormon pantheon’s action and power. You’ve told us here that Elohim acts in response to the will and decision of creatures outside of himself which means that he is fundamentally not omnipotent nor omniscient.
To a normal, intellectually honest individual that understands logic, that’s correct. Unfortunately the SLC LDS Church is neither of those things. The SLC LDS Church reserves the right to pick and choose, to be inconsistent, and to not practice what they preach - as an example they preach that members should declare their income and pay an honest and full tithe to the Church, whilst they simultaneously devised a decades-long dishonest scheme to avoid declaring their income Church’s honest income so as to avoid paying an honest tax.Also, the claim that the LDS god does not change is fundamentally contradicted by Mormon history and even current Mormon doctrine and attempts by Mormon apologists to create a synthetic and defensible Mormonism. It’s contradicted even now in this thread by the fact of the existence of this revelation.
If Taylor’s revelation on polygamy being acceptable post-polygamy ban is not valid, then neither is the First Vision.
If you are looking for intellectual honesty, integrity, consistency, logic, and reason, from Church leaders or online defenders of the Church, then you’re going to come up empty. Every. Single. Time.
Yes, the SLC LDS Church equates freedom of religion to mean it can do what it wants, when it wants, where it wants, and to whomever it pleases. And if people complain, they’ll sue them into submission. And let’s, for the sake of argument that they don’t mean to be like that. They aren’t even bothered that that’s how they come across.Mag’ladroth wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 2:16 pmI’m gonna lay my cards out on the table and say I’m a Presbyterian in one of the towns scheduled to receive the “gift” of a Mormon temple. I was fine to leave LDS alone and engage in good faith friendly discussion until this aggressive and confrontational tone they’ve taken everywhere and with everyone. Especially with regard to building their temples and taking that tack that anyone who disagrees with them in any form is a bigot and persecuting them.I Have Questions wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 12:27 pmThat looks to me to be an accurate reading of what MG asserted, and the logical conclusion that stems from it.
To a normal, intellectually honest individual that understands logic, that’s correct. Unfortunately the SLC LDS Church is neither of those things. The SLC LDS Church reserves the right to pick and choose, to be inconsistent, and to not practice what they preach - as an example they preach that members should declare their income and pay an honest and full tithe to the Church, whilst they simultaneously devised a decades-long dishonest scheme to avoid declaring their income Church’s honest income so as to avoid paying an honest tax.
If you are looking for intellectual honesty, integrity, consistency, logic, and reason, from Church leaders or online defenders of the Church, then you’re going to come up empty. Every. Single. Time.
This failure to think logically, consistently, and systematically you’ve pointed out is baffling to me. The addition of arrogance and confrontational tone to this open deception practiced by them, has made me more negative towards them than apathetic as I was before.
I think I've already outlined my thoughts in regards to revelation earlier in this thread. When you say that revelations have to be reliable I'm not quite sure that what you think this means dovetails with what I think revelation (pg. 4 of this thread) is and what it entails.I Have Questions wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 5:31 amThis is an example of you being rude towards another poster MG. Maybe, instead of criticising Malkie personally, you could instead address his conclusion objectively, and demonstrate that Mormon god’s revelations have been reliable, and don’t need special pleadings nor excuses.