andMag’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.MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 10:13 pm
He is subject to the agency of created beings. He's not working alone. God is love. I personally don't think or even consider that God doesn't love me. If that is something you are willing to question that does open up a can of worms.
If God is love, however, then this "contingency" thing you're concerned with having to do with agency/choice doesn't have the negative features you might otherwise throw into it.
At least that's what I think. I suppose I could change my mind if convinced otherwise
Regards,
MG
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.
The Mormon concept of God varies dramatically from that of mainstream Christianity. Mormon God, the one to which we are privy in a line stretching back in time forming an infinite regression. Mormon God is more just our most immediate forerunner. Ref. The King Follett Sermon. He may have organized earth and then organized ideas into intelligences, then into spirits. But Mormon God did not create space. Mormon God has to obey certain basics that we too deal with in our existence in the universe. Mormon God is not all powerful. Omniscient? Maybe, but not necessarily so. Benevolent? Not if you read the Book of Mormon and Old Testament. Mormon God is morally flawed, as evidenced by the inexplicable 1947 "commandment from the Lord" about continuing the denial of blacks from the priesthood and temples. Maybe it was Mormon God then that Joan Osborne sang about:Chap wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 11:10 pmI have to say that the impression I have formed from non-systematic observation of Mormon god-talk over the years is that their deity differs in essential respects from the deity of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.Mag’ladroth wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 10:47 pm... 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.
I'm not sure whether this difference is intentional on the part of Mormonism's founder, or whether it is simply what follows from trying to make overall sense out of a large number of statements made by him on particular occasions for different particular purposes.
What if God was one of us
Just a slob like one of us
Just a stranger on the bus
Tryna make his way home?