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Responding to the “that’s not official doctrine” deflection
Mormon Coffee (Mormonism Research Ministry) ^ | April 9, 2009 | Aaron Shafovaloff

Posted on 12/31/2010 9:42:57 AM PST by Colofornian

I spent much of the General Conference weekend downtown doing video interviews for my GodNeverSinned.com project. At one point I shot some video of the missionaries trying to neutralize (“hymn-slam”?) one of the jeerers outside the Conference Center.

I added annotations to the video as a way of sharing and advertising. One Mormon responded:

Some of the little “bubbles” displayed randomly during this singing are not true of our beliefs. But, that’s how satan teaches – by giving half-truths. Hail to the Prophet Joseph Smith!

I asked for specifics, and what follows is the conversation that ensued. She wrote:

Actually, I just watched it again and all of the bubbles contain misinformation. The Book of Mormon outdated? Still contains the gospel of Jesus Christ, which is the foundation of the church. We also believe in continued revelation. Ruling over planets? No, we don’t believe that. We believe we can become LIKE God – eternal and perfect. Not “gods” of our own planets. That especially is not doctrine. Maybe people assume that, but it is not doctrine.

God, angels, demons and humans all being the same “species”… well, in a sense, yes I guess, (except God our Father is on a whole different ‘plane’ than we are or will ever be.) God our Father created us ALL, and us “humans” in His image. There are different types of angels – spirits who have not come to earth, those who have come here and have been resurrected, those who have come to earth but not resurrected. Demons, I assume, satan’s followers – will never gain a body and were all created as spirit children of God. Just like the rest of us. They chose to follow Lucifer and were cast out along with him and will never live on this earth.

God being a sinner? I would like to see where you come up with that? We have NEVER taught that as doctrine, EVER. God is perfect, all knowing and all loving. We know the true nature of God – meaning He is a being. Where His beginning began? We don’t know. For us, He has always existed. We do not believe that, that is an absolute flat out lie. See how all these little bubbles contain mixed up truth? And even lies?? Come on. Who do you think the creator of all that IS?

Certainly not the Lord.

Whether the Book of Mormon of 1830 represents contemporary doctrine of Mormonism in 2009 is a matter of opinion. On this issue I recommend this article by a respected Mormon historian.

I live in Utah, and know lots of Mormons. If you would ever like to have lunch with us, I’ll pay for your food. My Mormon friends are very up front about the future exaltation and ruling over planets as gods. Notice on this point how I appeal to “traditional Mormonism”. I chose that language as to not stereotype Mormons.

Your point about God and demons is compatible with my bubble. They are equivalent in species but varied in states and stages of development. My bubble chose careful language on this point.

On the God-as-former-sinner issue, I invite you to see a preview of my video project on that at GodNeverSinned.com. Regardless of it not being an explicit doctrine specifically promoted from the leadership, it is a mainstream (but not uniform) belief according to my research. I chose my language carefully on this, and said “many Mormons”, not “all Mormons” or “institutional Mormonism explicitly teaches”, etc.

Please tell me what you think of the GodNeverSinned.com project. It is entirely made up of video interviews with real Mormons (most of the video work so far was done this past General Conference weekend).

Take care, I look forward to your reply,

Aaron

I do not wish to go back and forth with you. While your Mormon friends may talk about ‘being gods” and ruling over their own planet, it is still an assumption. There is no doctrine stating that, anywhere. Again, many things you point out ARE just assumptions. Not doctrine. No matter. I am sure you are very passionate in your beliefs and that is wonderful. I know the gospel is true. This knowledge has come from the Holy Ghost who testifies of truth. Have a lovely day.

I responded anyway (maybe I shouldn’t have?):

I didn’t say it was formal doctrine. On many of those things I said things like, “Many Mormons believe”. You failed to distinguish between formal doctrine and actual mainstream beliefs, conflating the two, but when I pointed out that many Mormons actually believe thus stuff, you started distinguishing the two. Does that make sense?

Take care and best wishes,

Aaron

We are free, of course, to form our own opinions… which is where you are getting your “information” it seems – from other Mormon’s opinions… and those are not doctrine. It is just interesting to me that this is how people like you like to discredit or bad-mouth the church… not focusing on the REAL doctrine, but from assumptions and opinions of members. Giving half-truths and misconceptions. I know the difference between what Mormons assume and what is doctrine, but others do not. They will read your misconceptions and take that as our “doctrine”… that is where confusion sets in. Oh well. All I can do is share my testimony of the gospel. Satan will continue to try to confuse and mislead people until Christ returns.

I know the gospel is true and that Joseph Smith was his prophet in this last dispensation, and that he restored the fullness of the gospel to the earth. I know the Book of Mormon is scripture, and that Joseph translated those ancient plates through the power and gift of Almighty God. I know Jesus Christ is my Savior and Redeemer and through Him, all things are possible.

Have a great day.

Thanks for writing back.

If a majority of church members believe something bad, and it happens to be fostered or implied by the rest of the traditional Mormon worldview, the LDS Church leadership still has a responsibility not to acquiesce to it. Otherwise they are complicit to a degree in the continuance of the belief among lay members, all the while having the ability to reverse the popular belief.

Also, what matters to outsiders like me is not merely abstract official doctrine (whichever of the varying standards you use to define that; Mormons themselves simply disagree over what constitutes official doctrine), but also what beliefs are actually held among members. I know it is embarrassing that many Mormon members believe that God the Father could have been a sinner, but the Mormon worldview and historic leadership have something to account for that. They are not off the hook just because they haven’t put it in a recent First Presidency statement, etc.,

Take care,

Aaron

Well, you are free to form your own opinions, that’s fine of course.

I have never been embarrased by what others assume – even in the LDS church. They are also free to do so. I know the doctrine and THAT, the doctrine, IS what matters. It actually doesn’t matter what other members speculate about… because it is just that, speculation.

No matter. The gospel is true.

Have a great day.


TOPICS: Apologetics; History; Other Christian; Theology
KEYWORDS: inman; lds; mormon; officialdoctrine; testimony
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To: Guyin4Os
T.P. the reason Mormonism is not Christian has nothing to do with whether Mormons sing Christmas carols.

I understand that orthodox Christianity does not accept Mormonism as Christian. And I understand that our teaching of the nature of God and our relationship to him is the key reason for this.

But you would be amazed at the examples provided on this forum as to why we are not Christian, including the aforementioned "not singing Christmas carols" along with "not attending church on Christmas day" and "not having an Easter Sunrise service" and "using water in the sacrament [of the Lord's Supper]."

Those arguments are so absurd that I usually cannot let them stand unchallenged. It also makes me wonder about the motives of those making the claims. Hence my "lies for Jesus" statement.

As for the theological differences, for the most part we have to acknowledge that they exist and attempt to correct the worst misstatements. But in the end, it boils down to who we say God is, and who (the collective) you say God is. We probably have to agree to disagree.

Having said that, I also understand the intentions of those who feel that they need to protect others from falling into the "trap of Mormonism." I just wish it could be done in a more civil, mature (and indeed, friendly) manner.

121 posted on 01/02/2011 5:19:17 AM PST by T. P. Pole
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To: ejonesie22
If, indeed, I am "straining at gnats" as you say, these are the gnats that are being flung at us as ammunition from your side of the argument. Pretty much the whole story of the anti-momonism side, sad as that is.



Yes, yes, yes, I know about the elephant in the room. :)

122 posted on 01/02/2011 5:25:24 AM PST by T. P. Pole
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To: T. P. Pole
a suggestion that Mormons refuse to sing about the cross implies something much more evil than nuances on salvation.

IMO that is a ridiculous accusation. "Nuances on SALVATION"? You may find salvation less important than words in a hymn, but Christians certainly do not.

I find your whole argument regarding "lies" on this thread unconvincing when mormonism has completely shattered the Bible's message and contrived a fiction in the Book of Mormon and the best evidence presented in your posts is such thin gruel.

123 posted on 01/02/2011 6:25:46 AM PST by greyfoxx39 (("A Leftist assumption: Making money doesn't entitle you to it, but wanting money does.")
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To: T. P. Pole
So you equate ocassional hyperbole and people trying their best to make sense out of the compelte train wreck that is Mormon doctrine and dogma with an entire work of fiction and an organization solely dedicated at taking people away from Christ and sending them on the path to the Evil one himself...

Focus on occasional stray bullets whilst ignoring the huge shells landing dead on target every day, yeah, that’ll work..

When it's all you got...

124 posted on 01/02/2011 6:42:14 AM PST by ejonesie22 (8/30/10, the day Truth won.)
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To: T. P. Pole
If, indeed, I am "straining at gnats" as you say, these are the gnats that are being flung at us as ammunition from your side of the argument. Pretty much the whole story of the anti-momonism side, sad as that is

If that is true, why the continual effort by FR mormons to censor the "anti-mormon side"? Photobucket

125 posted on 01/02/2011 7:04:49 AM PST by greyfoxx39 (("A Leftist assumption: Making money doesn't entitle you to it, but wanting money does.")
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To: T. P. Pole
I just wish it could be done in a more civil, mature (and indeed, friendly) manner.

Verbal exchanges, regardless of the level of vitriol, are much better than shootouts and ambushes where folks die, as happened in the 1800s.

But I do appreciate the fact that you acknowledge that there are differences between LDS teaching and historical Christian teaching. That's the beginning of civil conversation. A continuance of a civil conversation would be for LDS leadership to acknowledge what Joseph and Brigham said regarding the Adam-God doctrine, and then publicly repudiate it. That would not eradicate the differences, but it would make a lot of progress.

126 posted on 01/02/2011 4:52:35 PM PST by Guyin4Os (A messianic ger-tsedek)
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To: T. P. Pole

“And I understand that our teaching of the nature of God and our relationship to him is the key reason for this.”

There are more “keys” than you listed...

1. Nature of God the Father
2. Nature of Christ
3. Mormonic belief in Heavenly Mothers
4. Nature of the Gospel
5. Nature of Heaven
6. Polytheism/Henotheism
7. Preexistent intelligences and spirit
8. Becoming a god
9. 10.11.12.13.... [time limits me]

ampu


127 posted on 01/02/2011 6:21:40 PM PST by aMorePerfectUnion
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To: Spiff
Politically Conservative? Really now - Rommey, Reid, Bennett, Hatch......
128 posted on 01/02/2011 6:30:19 PM PST by svcw (God doesn't show up in our time, but He shows up on time)
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To: T. P. Pole
For what it is worth, I grew up in a "small" town (of 100k+) outside of Los Angeles. When I was on my foreign mission and people asked me where I was from, I told them "LA" and not the name of the small town that they likely never heard of before. You see, I used a reference that they were familiar with in order to facility comprehension.

There are two major problems with this explanation for the apparent error in the BOM.

First, the Jews of North America would have expected that the Messiah would be born in Bethlehem. The migration of the Jews to North America supposedly happened around 600 BC. The Book of Micah which contained the prophesy of the Messiah's birth in Bethlehem has been dated from around 740 to 700 BC. The prophesy would have been in circulation for a 100+ years before they left. Correct me if I'm wrong but didn't they have the holy scrolls with them, so they could have just looked it up. A person claiming to be the Messiah but not correctly identifying the place of birth would have been immediately discredited. If Jesus had a bank account, do you think that the bank security questions would let him use Jerusalem and Bethlehem interchangeably as an answer to the question of his place of birth? ;-)

Second, the eight miles from Jerusalem to Bethlehem today is trivial. It was not then. The typical traveler of the day would have walked and would have taken about 5.5 to 6 hours commuting time, round-trip. Given that the automobile is the most common mode of travel today, saying Bethlehem was a suburb of Jerusalem then would be the equivalent of saying that Omaha is a suburb of Kansas City or Portland is a suburb of Seattle today. Additionally, Jerusalem and Bethlehem had separate identities and historical significance.

129 posted on 01/03/2011 3:02:00 PM PST by CommerceComet
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