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GOD-MEN AND SPIRITUAL VEGETABLES: The Occult Worldview of Mormonism
Crown Rights Book Company ^ | 1995-2005 | Greg Loren Durand

Posted on 10/24/2010 9:10:56 AM PDT by Colofornian

Animism and the Transmigration of Spirit

The Cabala is a body of occult doctrine, originally Jewish, which has been adopted with enthusiasm by non-Jewish occultists since the fifteenth century.... Modern occultists are attracted to the Cabala because of its age and its mystery, and because they can draw from it the great magical principles that the universe is a unity, that it has an underlying pattern connected with numbers and planets, that man is God and the universe in miniature, and that man can develop the divine spark within him until he masters the entire universe and himself becomes God.(1)

The underlying worldview of the occult religions is monism. This philosophy states that there is only one ultimate reality or state of being, which is known to Hindus as Brahma, or the "God-source." Since everything is an emanation or part of this reality, all things, whether animate or inanimate, are of their very essence divine, and are to be distinguished from one another only in that each reflects a different stage of transmigrational development, or evolution. Simply stated, a rock is believed to be "God" just as is a cow, a bird, a human being, and so forth. A direct result of this worldview is what is known as animism — the belief that all things possess a soul or spirit, and are thus alive in some sense.

According to occultist and Thirty-Third Degree Mason Manly P. Hall, the occult initiate knows that the essence of divinity — the "Life Principle" or "Spark of God" — is found in every "plant, animal, mineral, and man," and therefore "recognizes the oneness of life manifesting through the diversity of form."(2) Albert Pike, another Masonic authority, cited the Indian Vedas as proof of the universal antiquity of this teaching:

One great and incomprehensible Being has alone existed from all Eternity. Everything we behold and we ourselves are portions of Him. The soul, mind or intellect, of gods and men, and of all sentient creatures, are detached portions of the Universal Soul, to which at stated periods they are destined to return. But the mind of infinite beings is impressed by one uninterrupted series of illusions, which they consider as real, until again united to the great fountain of truth. Of these illusions, the first and most essential is individuality. By its influence, when detached from its source, the soul becomes ignorant of its own nature, origin, and destiny. It considers itself as a separate existence, and no longer a spark of the Divinity....

The dissolution of the world... consists in the destruction of the visible forms and qualities of things; but their material essence remains, and from it new worlds are formed by the creative energy of God; and thus the Universe is dissolved and renewed in endless succession....

Thus, the soul of everything that breathes being a fraction of the universal soul, none perishes; but each soul merely changes its mould and form, by passing successively into different bodies. Of all forms, that which most pleases the Divine Being is Man, as nearest approaching His own perfections. When a man, absolutely disengaging himself from his senses, absorbs himself in self-contemplation, he comes to discern the Divinity, and becomes part of Him.(3)

Here are two related concepts that have gained wide acceptance in modern society via the New Age Movement and other esoteric systems: spiritual reincarnation and biological evolution. Just as reincarnation teaches that souls are evolving toward spiritual perfection with each lifetime, evolution is based on the idea that biological perfection is attainable via the passage of eons of time. Evolution, in some form or another, has always been the underlying theme of occultism, as the ancient pagans sought to work their way "up from the beasts and on their way to the gods."(4) In the words of spirit medium Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, "[Evolution] is 'Satanic'... for it is owing to the prototype of that which became in time the Christian Devil — to the Radiant Archangel who wanted Man to become his own creator and an immortal god — that men can reach Nirvana and the haven of heavenly divine Peace.... The Kabalistic axiom, 'A stone becomes a plant; a plant a beast; a beast a man; a man a God,' holds good throughout the ages...."(5)

In Blavatsky's worldview, the universe is a living organism — a macrocosm which contains within itself a microcosm of evolving spiritual hierarchies. Energy is constantly progressing through each hierarchy on its way upwards toward absorption into the Absolute (Brahma). This evolutionary process began in the distant past when the "Planetary Spirit" of this world incarnated itself into the material sphere, and thus found itself "finally imprisoned within a physical skin."(6) The earth is itself a macrocosm of still more individual "entities," which appeared initially as simple-celled creatures and then progressed on to somewhat more complex organisms. As the planet moved through each of its seven stages of development, these "sparks of spirit" likewise evolved through a continuous cycle of death and subsequent rebirth until they had passed through a corresponding seven levels of their own. These ranged from the plant kingdom to the animal kingdom. Finally, advancement into the human kingdom was made possible eighteen million years ago when the earth entered its fourth (Atlantean) age. It was then, under the guidance of Lucifer, that "angelic monads from higher spheres had incarnated in, and endowed [man] with understanding,"(7) thereby placing mankind on the path of evolution to godhood.

The Transmigration of Spiritual Vegetables

One does not have to look very far to find basically the same occult teachings in the writings of early Mormon leaders. Orson Pratt, for example, wrote:

The Gods are one in qualities and attributes. Truth is not a plurality of truths, because it dwells in a plurality of persons, but it is one truth, indivisible, though it dwells in millions of persons. Each person is called God, not because of his substance, neither because of the shape and size of the substance, but because of the qualities which dwell in the substance. Persons are only tabernacles or temples, and TRUTH is the God, that dwells in them. If the fulness of truth dwells in numberless millions of persons, then the same one indivisible God dwells in them all. As truth can dwell in all worlds at the same instant; therefore, God who is truth can be in all worlds at the same instant....

When we worship the Father, we do not merely worship His person, but we worship the truth which dwells in His person. When we worship the Son, we do not merely worship His body, but we worship truth which resides in Him. So, likewise, when we worship the Holy Ghost, it is not the substance which we alone worship, but truth which dwells in that substance. Take away truth from either of these beings, and their persons or substance would not be the object of worship. It is truth, light, and love that we worship and adore; these are the same in all worlds; and as these constitute God, He is the same in all worlds; and hence, the inhabitants of all worlds are required to worship and adore the same God.(8)

Not only are we told by Pratt that this spirit essence of "truth" dwells in "numberless millions of persons," but apparently the same particles of spirit, which Manly P. Hall referred to as the "Life Principle" or the "Spark of God," and the late Mormon historian B.H. Roberts identified as the "spark of Deity" or "manifestations of the Divine,"(9) are also inherent in both animal and plant life as well.(10) Joseph Smith taught that this spirit essence, also known as "intelligence" or the "light of truth,"(11) has eternally co-existed with God, and is, in fact, the very substance of which he (or it) is composed:

Element had an existence from the time [God] had. The pure principles of element are principles which can never be destroyed; they may be organized and re-organized, but not destroyed. They had no beginning, and can have no end....

We say that God himself is a self-existent being. Who told you so? It is correct enough; but how did it get into your heads? Who told you that man did not exist in like manner upon the same principles?...

The mind or intelligence which man possesses is co-equal with God himself....

Is it logical to say that the intelligence of spirits is immortal, and yet that it had a beginning? The intelligence of spirits had no beginning, neither will it have an end.... There never was a time when there were not spirits; for they are co-equal with our Father in heaven....

...God never had the power to create the spirit of man at all. God himself could not create himself. Intelligence is eternal and exists upon a self-existent principle. It is a spirit from age to age, and there is no creation about it.(12)

Furthermore, early Mormon apostles taught that, due to the essential equality of all "intelligence," even vegetables could eventually attain a "celetialized" state of godhood through a process that is suspiciously similar to the transmigration of souls in Hinduism, as summarized above by Albert Pike. Even much the same terminology, such as "disorganization" and "reorganization" of spirit, for instance, is present in the following excerpt of the writings of Orson Pratt:

That vegetables as well as animals have spirits, is clearly shown from the fact that they have capacity for joy and rejoicing.... We are compelled to believe that every vegetable, whether small or great, has a living intelligent spirit capable of feeling, knowing, and rejoicing in its sphere....

This is the origin of spiritual vegetables in Heaven. These spiritual vegetables are sent from Heaven to the terrestrial worlds, where, like animals, they take natural tabernacles, which become food for the sustenance of the natural tabernacles of the animal creation. Thus the spirits of both vegetables and animals are the offspring of male and female parents which have been raised from the dead, or redeemed from a fallen condition....

If [these particles of spirit] were once organized in the vegetable kingdom, and then disorganized by becoming food of celestial animals, and then again reorganized in the form of the spirits of animals which is a higher sphere of being, then, is it unreasonable to suppose that the same particles have, from all eternity, been passing through an endless chain of unions and disunions, organizations and disorganizations, until at length they are permitted to enter into the highest and most exalted sphere of organization in the image and likeness of God?

...[H]ere, then, is apparently a transmigration of the same particles of spirit from an inferior to a superior organization, wherein their condition is improved, and their sphere of action enlarged. Who shall set any bounds to this upward tendency of spirit? Who shall prescribe limits to its progression? If it abide the laws and conditions of its several states of existence, who shall say that it will not progress until it shall gain the very summit of perfection, and exist in all the glorious beauty of the image of God?(13)

Other early Mormon leaders, such as Brigham Young, who, like Joseph Smith, was himself a Mason, also taught that "the Earth is a living creature," and that the tides are actually caused by the planet's breathing.(14) According to Heber C. Kimball, also a Mason, the earth is the offspring of "parent earths" and is itself undergoing an evolutionary "salvation" as is the rest of creation.(15) Orson Pratt explained in The Seer that once resurrected from the dead and thus redeemed, the earth will become a "celestialized" being, or a great sun, as its parents had done before it.(16) Joseph Smith also taught that the earth, in its "sanctified and immortal state," will be transformed into "a globe like a sea of glass and fire."(17)

The Occult Reversal of God and Satan

In the occult, Satan (or Lucifer) has traditionally been associated with the sun, the harbinger of spiritual light. Esoteric philosophy teaches that it is this "great being," not the God of the Old Testament, that was the true redeemer and benefactor of mankind in the Garden of Eden and who later possessed the body of Jesus of Nazareth to rescue the Jews from their idolatrous worship of Ilda-Baoth (Jehovah), and to instruct them in the truth of man's inherent or potential divinity. For example, occult medium Helena P. Blavatsky wrote in her book, The Secret Doctrine:

Once the key to Genesis is in our hands, it is the scientific and symbolic Kabbala which unveils the secret. The Great Serpent of the Garden of Eden and the "Lord God" are identical....(18)

Stand in awe of him, and sin not; speak his name with trembling.... It is Satan who is the god of our planet and the only god....

When the Church, therefore, curses Satan, it curses the cosmic reflection of God....

In this case it is but natural... to view Satan, the Serpent of Genesis as the real creator and benefactor, the Father of Spiritual mankind. For it is he who was the "Harbinger of Light," bright radiant Lucifer, who opened the eyes of the automaton [Adam] created by Jehovah, as alleged; and he who was the first to whisper, "In the day ye eat thereof, ye shall be as Elohim, knowing good and evil" — can only be regarded in the light of a Saviour. An "adversary" to Jehovah... he still remains in Esoteric Truth the ever loving "Messenger"... who conferred on us spiritual instead of physical immortality....

Satan, or Lucifer, represents the active... "Centrifugal Energy of the Universe" in a cosmic sense.... Fitly is he... and his adherents... consigned to the "sea of fire," because it is the Sun... the fount of life in our system, where they are purified... and churned up to re-arrange them for another life; that Sun which, as the origin of the active principle of our Earth, is at once the Home and the Source of the Mundane Satan....(19)

In Morals and Dogma, Albert Pike, an avowed Luciferian, wrote:

To prevent the light from escaping at once, the Demons forbade Adam to eat the fruit of "knowledge of good and evil," by which he would have known the Empire of Light and that of Darkness. He obeyed; an Angel of Light induced him to transgress, and gave him the means of victory; but the Demons created Eve, who seduced him into an act of Sensualism, that enfeebled him, and bound him anew in the bonds of matter....

To deliver the soul, captive in darkness, the Principle of Light, or Genius of the Sun, charged to redeem the Intellectual World... came to manifest Himself among men.... It but put on the appearance of a human body, and took the name of Christ in the Messiah, only to accommodate itself to the language of the Jews. The Light did its work, turning the Jews from the adoration of the Evil Principle, and the Pagans from the worship of Demons. But the Chief of the Empire of Darkness caused Him to be crucified by the Jews (emphasis in original).(20)

According to Pike, it was the demons, not God, that barred Adam from the Tree of Knowledge, thereby perpetuating his spiritual ignorance (compare to Genesis 2:15-17). However, an "Angel of Light" persuaded him to rebel against the "demonic" command (compare to Genesis 3:1-4), and, as a result, Adam was "enlightened" and initiated into the "true religion," which, of course, is supposedly that of Freemasonry. This "Angel of Light" later assumed the appearance of a man (compare to John 1:1, 14) in order to act as redeemer of mankind, turning the world from its worship of the Edenic "demons." Elsewhere in the same volume, Pike wrote, "Lucifer, the light-bearer! Strange and mysterious name to give to the spirit of darkness! Lucifer, Son of the Morning! Is it he who bears the Light, and with its splendors intolerable, blinds feeble, sensual or selfish souls? Doubt it not!" (emphasis in original).(21) According to the Apostle Paul, this angel is none other than Satan himself.

Consistent with this occult reversal of God and Satan, and the accompanying belief that Adam's "fall" was actually an inititation into the "mysteries," it is interesting to find the same doctrine in Mormon theology. Brigham Young stated, "The devil told the truth.... I do not blame Mother Eve. I would not have her miss eating the forbidden fruit for anything in the world...."(22) Joseph Fielding Smith, tenth LDS president, went even further: "The fall of man came as a blessing in disguise.... I never speak of the part Eve took in this fall as a sin, for do I accuse Adam of a sin. We can hardly speak of anything resulting in such benefits as being a sin...."(23) More recently, Sterling W. Sill commented, "Adam fell, but he fell in the right direction... toward the goal.... He fell upward."(24) Directly contradicting Romans 5:12-20, Adam's fall in Mormonism is seen as a "blessing in disguise" because "the devil told the truth" in the Garden of Eden. Mormons have accepted the same lie that is the foundation of all pagan religion — that man may attain godhood through initiation into the "mysteries." More will be discussed on this subject later.

We can also find traces of this occult reversal in Joseph Smith's purported translation of the Bible. For example, in his version of Matthew 4:1, we read, "Then Jesus was led up of the Spirit, into the wilderness, to be with God." Compare this with what Matthew 4:1 really says: "Then was Jesus led up of the spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil." Much the same confusion exists in Matthew 4:5, in which it is the Holy Spirit, not the devil, who sets Christ on the pinnacle of the temple, as well as verse 8 of the same chapter, in which it is again the Spirit, not Satan, who takes Him onto a high mountain and shows Him the kingdoms of the world (see also Luke 4:5 and 4:9 in the Inspired Version).

Furthermore, in light of the occult belief that Satan, the ancient god of the pagan sun-worshippers, dwells in a "sea of fire," as taught by Blavatsky, it is interesting to note that Joseph Smith taught that the Mormon god also dwells in "everlasting burnings," as will all faithful Mormon males who eventually ascend into the Celestial Kingdom.(25) In the Temple Endowment ceremony, which is believed to be a necessary stepping stone for exaltation, patrons are instructed at one point to don embroidered fig-leaf aprons which are earlier associated with the "power and priesthood" of Lucifer.(26) Furthermore, when later offering a prayer to God, Adam is answered by Lucifer, who then identifies himself as "the god of this world."(27) In the henotheism of Mormonism, there are an infinite number of "Holy Personages," and yet LDS worship is reserved for "Elohim," the "god of this world," whom both 2 Corinthians 4:4 and the Endowment ceremony identify as the devil. This corresponds to Brigham Young's statement that the God of Christendom is the Mormon devil.(28) The following words of Joseph Smith are a fitting conclusion to this discussion: "Hell is by no means the place this world of fools suppose it to be, but on the contrary, it is quite an agreeable place...."(29)

Mormon Astrology, Necromancy, and Magic

The ancient worship of the heavenly bodies eventually evolved into the occult science of astrology and the belief that the sun, moon, and stars influenced earthly events and human personality. This is the doctrine of "as above, so below." There is strong evidence to suggest that the Tower of Babel was built specifically for astrological purposes, in that it provided the necessary elevation above the dusty atmosphere of the Babylonian desert to permit a clear view of the stars and to thus enable the builders to chart their progress across the heavens. Occult expert Richard Cavendish wrote, "Astrological considerations have always been extremely important in magic. Magicians link the planets with the great forces which move the universe, as in the Cabala, because the ancients identified the planets with the gods. To control the planetary influences is to control the driving impulses beneath the surface of things."(30)

It has been documented that the Smith family was heavily involved in witchcraft and necromancy, and that they possessed numerous occult parchments and talismans.(31) One of these was the magical "Jupiter talisman" which was discovered on Joseph's body after he fell to his death from the second story of the Carthage jailhouse.(32) This medallion indicated a belief in the occult art of astrology, since Jupiter was the "ruling planet" of his birthdate. Several of the magical parchments, amulets, and other paraphernalia owned by the Smith family, which are still in the possession of the LDS church today, were also replete with astrologial symbolism.(33) According to Brigham Young, Joseph Smith had even made an attempt, probably during the Nauvoo period, to establish astrology as an official institution of the Mormon church.(34)

Necromancy, or communication with the dead, has also played an important role in Mormon history, beginning with Smith's earliest "visions." Mormon leaders have traditionally taught that he was actually a spirit medium. For example, in an 1853 sermon, LDS elder Parley P. Pratt revealed that Mormonism is founded entirely on the practice of necromancy, and that the spiritualist movement of the Nineteenth Century, which had begun only five years earlier, actually aided the cause of the LDS church:

Who communicated with our great Prophet, and revealed through him as a medium, the ancient history of a hemisphere, and the records of the ancient dead? Moroni, who had lived upon the earth 1400 years before....

Who revealed to him the plan of redemption, and of exaltation for the dead who had died without the Gospel and the keys and preparations necessary for holy and perpetual converse with Jesus Christ, and with the spirits of just men made perfect?... Those from the dead!...

Shall we, then, deny the principle, the philosophy, the fact of communication between worlds? No! verily no!

Editors, statesmen, philosophers, priests, and lawyers, as well as the common people, began to advocate the principle of converse with the dead, by visions, divination, clairvoyance, knocking, and writing mediums, etc., etc. This spiritual philosophy of converse with the dead, once established by the labors, toils, sufferings, and martyrdom of its modern founders, and now embraced by a large portion of the learned world, show a triumph more rapid and complete — a victory more extensive, than has ever been achieved in the same length of time in our world.

An important point is gained, a victory won, and a countless host of opposing powers vanquished, on one of the leading or fundamental truths of "Mormon" philosophy, viz. — "that the living may hear from the dead."(35)

According to Ezra Taft Benson, the spirit world "is very close," and the veil between it and the physical realm "can be very thin."(36) Other LDS sources indicate that spirits often make contact with the living to give counsel, offer comfort, obtain or give information, or to prepare men for death.(37) Others appear to faithful Mormons to testify that they have converted to Mormonism "on the other side," and to request baptism by proxy so they can advance to godhood. Mormonism also places great emphasis on baptism for the dead, and spiritual visitations are said to be commonplace with the Temples: "The living are thus authorized, under prescribed conditions, to act for the dead, and the fathers and spirit world look to the children in the flesh to perform for them the works which they were unable to attend to while in the body.... This glorious doctrine... regulates the communion of the living with the dead.... The temple where the ordinances can be administered for the dead, is the place to hear from the dead."(38)

Other evidence of the occult foundation of the Mormon church is the involvement of its early leaders in crystal-gazing,(39) astral projection,(40) automatic writing,(41) the usage of divining rods,(42) and ritual magic.(43) Ironically, Bruce R. McConkie admitted that necromancy is practiced by "apostate people," and is therefore "an abomination."(44) A recently published doctrinal manual of the LDS church likewise stated, "Mediums, astrologers, fortune tellers, and sorcerers are inspired by Satan even if they claim to follow God. Their works are abominable to the Lord.... We should avoid all associations with the powers of Satan."(45)

Demonic Activity and "Burning Bosoms"

The records of early Mormonism are replete with accounts of activity from the spirit world. According to John Whitmer, who was the official Church Historian in Joseph Smith's time, some converts to the new religion would "act like an Indian in the act of scalping," or would "slide or scoot on the floor with the rapidity of a serpent...."(46) During the ordination ceremony of Harvey Whitlock as a high priest in 1831, he was seen to have "turned as black as Lyman was white," his fingers "were set like claws," and, unable to speak, he went about the room with eyes "as the shape of oval Os...."(47) On another occasion, one man, who weighed over 200 pounds, was thrown through the air by an unseen force, and another "began screaming like a panther...."(48)

Temple dedications were often the scenes of such mysterious occurrences. Joseph Smith wrote of "many strange visions" that were seen when the first temple was dedicated at Kirkland, Ohio on 27 March 1836. It was noted that men would run about "under the influence," while others would "speak in a muttering, unnatural voice and their bodies [would] be distorted...."(49) Mormon writer Joseph Hienerman likewise described such things as personages of light, auras of light around some of the speakers, strange music, and other manifestations during the dedication of the Mormon temple in Manti, Utah.(50)

So frequent were these supernatural occurrences that Heber C. Kimball suggested the following as a means of protection against harrassment by evil spirits:

Now I will tell you, I have about a hundred shots on hand all the time — three or four fifteen-shooters, and three or four revolvers, right in the room where I sleep; and the Devil does not like to sleep there, for he is afraid they will go off half-cocked.

If you will lay a bowie knife or a loaded revolver under your pillow every night, you will not have many unpleasant dreams, nor be troubled with the nightmare, for there is nothing that the Devil is so afraid of as a weapon of death.(51)

Not all of the spirit manifestations in early Mormonism, however, were seen as works of the Devil. Just as in Masonic lore, Mormon literature is filled with references to "angels of light." The foremost of these is Moroni, the golden figure which may be seen atop every Mormon temple today. The visitation of Moroni to Joseph Smith on 21-22 September 1823 bears undeniable similarities to magical incantations and conjuring of spirits in the occult arts.

In astrology, certain days correspond to the ruling planet of the occult practitioner: Sunday is ruled by the sun, Monday by the moom, Tuesday by Mars, Wednesday by Mercury, Thursday by Jupiter, Friday by Venus, and Saturday by Saturn. Furthermore, the successive hours of both day and night are also ruled by the various planets according to the following: The ruling planet of the particular day would also rule the first hour after sunrise, each hour thereafter being ruled by every other planet in a reversal of the above sequence. The first hour after sunset is ruled by the planet which is fifth in order from the ruling planet of the day. For example, a magician whose ruling planet is Jupiter would begin to cast a spell or conjure up a spirit sometime between Sunday night, beginning one hour after sunset, and Monday morning, two hours after sunrise. A full moon is also believed to increase the effectiveness of the incantation, which is to be repeated three times.(52)

It is therefore no coincidence that Joseph Smith, whose ruling planet was Jupiter, chose Sunday, 21 September 1823 — the autumn equinox when the moon had reached it maximum fullness — to contact the spirit of Moroni. Martin Harris noted that Smith had spent the earlier part of the evening in an unsuccessful dig for buried treasure near his home.(53) According to Oliver Cowdery, Smith began praying about eleven or twelve "to commune with some kind of messenger."(54) So precise was he in following the instructions for conjuration, that he "had full confidence in obtaining a divine manifestation...."(55) His ritual was indeed successful. The "angel" Moroni appeared to him three times during the night and told him the location of the golden plates on which the Book of Mormon text was allegedly inscribed, giving him instructions regarding their retrieval, and a fourth time early the next morning to repeat his message.(56)

Smith's description of Moroni was as follows:

...I discovered a light appearing in my room, which continued to increase until the room was lighter than at noonday, when immediately a personage appeared at my bedside, standing in the air, for his feet did not touch the floor. He had on a loose robe of most exquisite whiteness. It was a whiteness beyond anything earthly I had ever seen.... Not only was his robe exceedingly white, but his whole person was glorious beyond description, and his countenance truly like lightning. The room was exceedingly light, but not so very bright as immediately around his person.(57)

This description is nearly identical to those given by New Agers and other occultists of similar encounters with spiritual entities.(58) Whether Smith really did experience the manifestation of such an entity is open to question. However, that it could not have been an angel of God is evident from the fact that the visitation was the result of an attempt to conjure up the dead according to occult formulae. This practice is forbidden in Scripture (Deuteronomy 18:9-12; Isaiah 8:19).

It is also interesting to note that this entity was originally identified in the earliest accounts of the visitation as "Nephi."(59) This name and its derivatives have played an important role in the occult arts. For instance, "Nephiomaoth" was one of the magical names of God used by the "Christian" Gnostics of the First Century.(60) According to the Jewish Kabbalah and other occult texts, "Nephes," "Neph," or "Nephum" was used to signify "that which is called out by Magicians and Necromancers" (emphasis in original).(61) "Moroni" itself also was associated with the occult.(62)

It is this spirit who, via the Book of Mormon, has instructed millions of Mormons and prospective converts to the LDS church to do the following: "And when ye shall receive these things, I would exhort you that ye should ask God, the Eternal Father, in the name of Christ, if these things are not true; and if ye shall ask with a sincere heart, with real intent, having faith in Christ, he will manifest the truth of it unto you, by the power of the Holy Ghost. And by the power of the Holy Ghost ye may know the truth of all things."(63) This "manifestation" of the "power of the Holy Ghost" is further described in Doctrine and Covenants: "...[B]ehold, I say unto you, that you must study it out in your mind; then you must ask me if it be right, and if it be right I will cause that your bosom shall burn within you; therefore, you shall feel that it is right. But if it be not right you shall have no such feelings, but you shall have stupor of thought that shall cause you to forget the thing which is wrong...."(64)

Mormons rely upon this promised "burning of the bosom" experience as a testimony of the truthfulness of their church and its prophet. However, the folly of obeying the instructions of an entity, that, if indeed real, was actually a demonic spirit conjured up by a modern sorceror should go without saying.

Early Mormonism's Acceptance of Evolution

In light of the preceding information, it is obvious that the philosophical and theological foundations of Mormonism are far removed from the biblical worldview of a personal Creator-God who is transcendent and therefore separate from the creation. Instead, Joseph Smith and the other LDS leaders of the early 1830s were heavily influenced by the very same philosophies which have undergirded the pagan religions throughout human history.

The doctrine which we will now examine is the Mormon belief that matter, or "element," is eternal and therefore uncreated. According to Smith, "Element had an existence from the time [God] had. The pure principles of element are principles which can never be destroyed; they may be organized and re-organized, but not destroyed. They had no beginning, and can have no end...."(65) Citing what he referred to as the "Eternal Duration of Matter,"(66) Smith insisted that "no part or particle of the great universe could become annihilated or destroyed."(67) On this subject, Parly P. Pratt wrote:

First. There has always existed a boundless infinitude of space.

Second. Intermingled with this space there exists all the varieties of the elements, properties, or things of which intelligence takes cognizance; which elements or things taken altogether compose what is called the Universe.

Third. The elements of all these properties or things are eternal, uncreated, self-existing. Not one particle can be added to them by creative power. Neither can one particle be diminished or annihilated.(68)

Charles W. Penrose agreed: "...[T]he elements... never had a beginning — the primal particles never had a beginning. They have been organized in different shapes; the organism had a beginning, but the elements... of which it is composed never had."(69)

According to second LDS prophet Brigham Young, matter "can be organized and brought forth into intelligence, and to possess more intelligence, and to continue to increase in that intelligence."(70) As we have seen, such a concept is strikingly similar to the worldview found in various forms of the occult, specifically Freemasonry, Rosicrucianism, Kabalism, Hinduism, etc. The belief that the universe is eternal and its components are constantly progressing to higher levels of existence is also very much in line with the theory of evolution that is propagated in the public schools today.

Of course, since modern Mormonism attempts to portray itself as just another Christian denomination, it has become customary for LDS apologists to downplay the blatantly occultic teachings of their early leaders and to attempt to rid their religion of any connection with evolutionary concepts. Hence, since the mid-Twentieth Century, Mormon literature has been increasingly devoted to attacking Darwinian evolution and contrasting it with "latter-day revelation":

I say most emphatically, you cannot believe in this theory of the origin of man, and at the same time accept the plan of salvation as set forth by the Lord our God. You must choose the one and reject the other, for they are in direct conflict and there is a gulf separating them which is so great that it cannot be bridged, no matter how much one may try to do so.

If you believe in the doctrine of the evolutionist, then you must accept the view that man has evolved through countless ages from the very lowest forms of life up through various stages of animal life, finally into the human form.(71)

What Joseph Fielding Smith condemned above is exactly what early LDS leaders such as Orson Pratt taught. Some Mormon writers have admitted that Joseph Smith "did not accept the dogma of Creationism..."(72) For Smith, there could not have been a single beginning of all things, because his doctrine of eternal progression rested upon the assumption that limitless generations of gods had evolved from mortal men in a limitless number of universes previous to ours.

The Biblical Doctrine of Creation

In keeping with Joseph Smith's teachings, modern Mormonism has continued to deny that God created the universe ex nihilo, or "out of nothing":

To create is to organize. It is an utterly false and uninspired notion to believe that the world or any other thing was created out of nothing or that any created thing can be destroyed in the sense of annihilation.(73)

We should emphasize that the word "created" which some men have interpreted as "being made from nothing" really comes from a Hebrew word which means "to organize." In other words, the Lord's power of creation is really his organizing power. Even with God there is no such thing as making something from nothing.(74)

Solomon was quite correct when he wrote, "There is nothing new under the sun" (Ecclesiastes 1:9). As is the case with all heresies, Mormonism's cosmology should be quite familiar to those studied in Church history. In the early years of the Third Century, Tertullian's treatise entitled Against Hermogenes was devoted to refuting the teaching that God organized the universe out of pre-existent and eternal substance known as "Matter." Tertullian drew this teaching out to its logical conclusion by noting that if God required matter to create, then God is to that extent subservient to matter: "For if He drew His resources from it for the creation of the world, Matter is already found to be the superior, inasmuch as it furnished Him with the means of effecting His works; and God is thereby clearly subjected to Matter, of which the substance was indispensable to Him.... On this principle, Matter itself, no doubt, was not in want of God, but rather lent itself to God, who was in want of it.... [God was] one who was, I suppose, too small, and too weak, and too unskilful, to form what He willed out of nothing."(75)

Contrary to the claims of Mormonism, the Christian Church has historically insisted that God created ex nihilo. Time, space, and matter are only viewed as eternal inasmuch as they existed as ideas within the mind of God; otherwise, they had a definite beginning (Isaiah 41:4 64:4; Romans 16:25; 2 Timothy 1:9; 2 Thessalonians 2:13; Titus 1:2; 2 Peter 3:4). This concept of creation ex nihilo is primarily drawn from Genesis 1:1: "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth." Charles Hodge commented on this important verse:

The proof of the doctrine of a creation ex nihilo... is plain from the fact that no mention is ever made of any preexisting substance out of which the world was made. The original creation is never represented as a moulding of matter into form and inbuing it with life. Nor do the Scriptures ever represent the world as an emanation from God, proceeding from Him by a necessity of His nature. Much less does the Bible ever identify God and the world. In thus ignoring all other doctrines, the Scriptures leave us under the necessity of believing that God created the world out of nothing.(76)

Of particular interest to our discussion is the Hebrew word barah, which is translated "created." In the context of Genesis 1:1, this word is to be distinguished in meaning from yatsar, which is used to describe the formation of man's body from the already existing materials of the earth (Genesis 2:7), chuwl, which refers to the structuring of the formless earth of Genesis 1:2 (cf. Psalm 90:2), and asah, which carries essentially the same meaning as chuwl (Genesis 2:3). Though barah may at times carry the meaning of the forming of already existing materials, as in the case of the creation of mankind (Genesis 1:27, 5:1; Deuteronomy 4:32; Isaiah 45:12), it should be noted that in each of these cases, the verb is coupled with an accusative noun. In other words, the Scripture clearly mentions the material which is being acted upon. In Genesis 1:1, the absence of an accusative noun is significant to show that there was, in fact, no substance involved in the initial creation of "the heavens and the earth."

The Agency of the Word in Creation

The very wording of the first chapter of Genesis itself rules out the possibility that God merely "organized" pre-existing and eternal matter. For instance, in verse three we read, "Then God said, Let there be light; and there was light." This is reiterated in 2 Corinthians 4:6, where we are told that "God... commanded light to shine out of darkness...." In other words, God spoke of light where there was no light, and thus brought it into existence. Light was not derived from a pre-existing substance called "darkness," for the darkness that was in the beginning was the absolute absence of light and was therefore nothing.

Therefore, the origin of all things was the divine Word, or fiat, of the eternal God. Though it is certainly beyond the capacity of our limited minds to comprehend, the relationship of the Father and Son is described in terms of the thinker and his thought, and the speaker and his words. Tertullian wrote:

For before all things God was alone — being in Himself and for Himself universe, and space, and all things. Moreover, He was alone; for He had with Him that which He possessed in Himself, that is to say, His own Reason. For God is rational, and Reason was first in Him; and so all things were from Himself. This Reason is His own Thought (or Consciousness) which the Greeks call logos, by which term we also designate Word or Discourse....

For although God had not yet sent out His Word, He still had Him within Himself, both in company with and included within His very Reason, as He silently planned and arranged within Himself everything which He was afterwards about to utter through His Word....

I may therefore without rashness first lay this down (as a fixed principle) that even then before the creation of the universe God was not alone, since He had within Himself both Reason, and, inherent in Reason, His Word, which He made second to Himself by agitating it within Himself...."(77)

Then, therefore, does the Word also Himself assume His own form and glorious garb, His own sound and vocal utterance, when God says, "Let there be light." This is the perfect nativity of the Word, when He proceeds forth from God — formed by Him first to devise and think out all things under the name of Wisdom... then afterward begotten, to carry all into effect.... Thus does He make Him equal to Him: for by proceeding from Himself He became His first-begotten Son, because begotten before all things; and His only-begotten also, because alone begotten of God, in a way peculiar to Himself, from the womb of His own heart — even as the Father Himself testifies: "My heart," says He, "hath emitted my most excellent Word."(78)

It is apparently in this sense of "speaking" forth His "Reason" or "Wisdom" in the form of the Word that the Son was "eternally begotten" of the Father, who is the "fountain of the Godhead."(79) In the preamble of John's Gospel, the Son of God is designated as "the Word" who was "in the beginning with God" (John 1:1-2), and through whom "all things were made" (verse 3). Thus, to quote Tertullian once again, "[T]he Father acts by mind and thought whilst the Son, who is in the Father's mind and thought, gives effect and form to what He sees."(80) We see this concept taught in the book of Hebrews: "By faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God, so that the things which are seen were not made of things which are visible" (Hebrews 11:3). The Greek word phainomenon, translated as "things which are visible," is a present adjectival participle, which carries the characteristics of both a verb and a noun.(81) From this word, we have our English word "phenomenon." In essence, what the writer of Hebrews was attempting to convey is that what can be seen was not made of anything that had the potential to appear of itself, either to us or to God. Another clear passage in this regard is Romans 4:17, which states that God "calls those things which do not exist as though they did." In other words, the universe was made out of nothing.

That barah, as it appears in Genesis 1:1, must refer to creation ex nihilo is also plain from the fact that such act of creation left the earth "without form, and void" (Genesis 1:2). It would be absurd to suggest that God's re-organization of pre-existing materials merely resulted in additional chaos, for He "did not create [the world] in vain... [but] formed it to be inhabited" (Isaiah 45:18). Thus, we are drawn to the conclusion that there were two stages involved in the creation: first, God created the substance of matter, or "primeval dust of the world" (Proverbs 8:26), out of nothing through the instrumentality of His Word, and second, He organized this created matter into the present world (kosmos). Regarding a possible objection to this doctrine, Reformed theologian Robert Lewis Dabney wrote, "It is objected that a creation out of nothing is a contradiction, because it makes nothing a material to act on, and thus, an existence. We reply that this is a mere play upon the meaning of the preposition; We do not mean that 'nothing' is a material out of which existences are fashioned; but the term from which an existence absolutely begins. God created a world where nothing was before."(82)

The Historical Testimony of the Fathers

Consistent with the claim that the Mormon religion is "restored Christianity," LDS apologists have repeatedly attempted to find support for their doctrines in the writings of the early Church fathers. However, although they may find scattered and obscure references in these early writings to such things as "deification,"(83) they are very hard-pressed indeed to locate any endorsement of the postulation that matter is eternal. For example, in the Second Century, Ireneaus was very clear in denouncing as "infidelity" the denial that "God... formed all things... out of what did not previously exist" and that "God... created matter itself."(84) He went on to write, "While men, indeed, cannot make anything out of nothing, but only out of matter already existing, yet God is in this point pre-eminently superior to men, that He Himself called into being the substance of His creation, when previously it had no existence."(85) Tertullian, writing in the late Second and early Third Centuries, was even more clear:

The object of our worship is the One God, He who by His commanding word, His arranging wisdom, His mighty power, brought forth from nothing this entire mass of our world, with all its array of elements, bodies, spirits, for the glory of His majesty; whence also the Greeks have bestowed on it the name of Kosmos.(86)

This authority of Scripture I claim for myself even from this circumstance, that whilst it shows me the God who created, and the works He created, it does not in like manner reveal to me the source from which He created. For since in every operation there are three principal things, He who makes, and that which is made, and that of which it is made, there must be three names mentioned in a correct narrative of the operation — the person of the maker, the sort of thing which is made, and the material of which it is formed. If the material is not mentioned, while the work and the maker of the work are both mentioned, it is manifest that He made the work out of nothing. For if He had had anything to operate upon, it would have been mentioned as well as the other two particulars.... What, therefore, did not exist, the Scripture was unable to mention; and by not mentioning it, it has given us a clear proof that there was no such thing: for if there had been, the Scripture would have mentioned it.(87)

In the early part of the Third Century, Hippolytus, who is believed to have been a disciple of Ireneaus, wrote, "The first and only (one God), both Creator and Lord of all, had nothing coeval with Himself, not infinite chaos, nor measureless water, nor solid earth, nor dense air, nor warm fire, nor refined spirit, nor the azure canopy of the stupendous firmament. But He was One, alone in Himself. By an exercise of His will He created things that are, which antecedently had no existence, except that He willed to make them."(88) In the Fifth Century, Aurelius Augustine championed the doctrine of creation ex nihilo as well: "...God made all things which he did not beget of himself, not of those things that already existed, but of those things that did not exist at all, that is, of nothing.... For there was not anything of which he could make them."(89)

The Philosophical Problems of an Eternal Universe

Not only is the Mormon doctrine of the "Eternal Duration of Matter" untenable from a scriptural standpoint and without historical support, but it fails to stand up to philosophical scrutiny as well. Christian doctrine declares that God alone is self-existent and eternal; as the "unmoved Mover," He is necessary in His existence and therefore incapable of change (Malachi 3:6), whereas the creation is contingent and in a constant state of flux.

Change, or motion from one state of being to another, involves the passage of time. Now, time is a finite measurement and can have no meaning in the context of infinity. For example, there can be no measurement of time known as a day contained within the definition of eternity, for no amount of finite days may ever equal eternity. The finite and the infinite are as incompatible as night and day. Each successive day is dependent, or contingent, upon the passage of the preceding day. Therefore, each day is not self-existent for it draws its existence from the one preceding it. Merely extending the series back ad infinitum does not solve the dilemma of the necessary relation of the contingent to the cause. As Robert Lewis Dabney noted, "[A] series composed only of contingent parts must be, as a whole contingent. But the contingent cannot be eternal, because it is not self-existent."(90)

It is apparent that Mormon apologists, much like advocates of the humanistic concept of an eternal universe, have not given careful thought to the problems that arise from their founder's ideas of "Eternal Duration." For example, in his book, Mormon Doctrine, Bruce R. McConkie applied this concept to what is known in Mormonism as "eternal progression": "Endowed with agency and subject to eternal laws, man began his progression and advancement in pre-existence, his ultimate goal being to attain a state of glory, honor, and exaltation like the Father of spirits.... This gradually unfolding course of advancement and experience — a course that began in a past eternity and will continue in ages future — is frequently referred to as a course of eternal progression" (emphasis in original).(91) McConkie's talk of a "process that began in past eternity and will continue in ages future" is entirely nonsensical. Simply put, the fact that said process "began" shows that it is temporal, not eternal. McConkie further confused the matter by defining "endless time" as "eternal, unending duration of time"(92) on the one hand, and then by defining "eternal" as "the opposite of that which pertains to time...."(emphasis in original)(93) on the other, and by even defining "eternity" as the antithesis of the "realm of time."(94)

Such confusion is the necessary product of a false belief system that attempts to place matter on the same footing as God. The Mormon simply cannot develop a coherent cosmology from such a faulty basis. The following lengthy quotation from J.P. Moreland's book, Scaling the Secular City, may be helpful in further illustrating this point:

Suppose a person were to think backward through the events in the past. In reality, time and the events within it move the other direction. But mentally he can reverse that movement and count backward farther and farther into the past. Now he will either come to a beginning or he will not. If he comes to a beginning, then the universe obviously had a beginning. But if he never could, even in principle, reach a first moment, then this means that it would be impossible to start with the present and run backward through all of the events in the history of the cosmos. Remember, if he did run through all of them, he would reach a first member of the series, and the finiteness of the past would be established. In order to avoid this conclusion, one must hold that, starting from the present, it is impossible to go backward through all of the events in history.

But since events really move in the other direction, this is equivalent to admitting that if there was no beginning, the past could have never been exhaustively traversed to reach the present moment (emphasis in original).(95)

Time involves, and in fact relies upon, the passage of its units from future to past, but such terms as these are meaningless when speaking of eternity, which contains no future and no past. The very fact that time passes is a clear indication that its cause is outside of itself. The belief that "eternity is a long time"(96) is therefore an oxymoron (a contradiction in terms), as is "eternal progression." This is borne out by the Scripture itself when it speaks of "the beginning, before there was ever an earth" (Proverbs 8:23), and is perhaps what is meant when we are told that God "divided the light [day] from the darkness [night]" (Genesis 1:4-5), and later created "lights in the firmament of the heavens" to provide for "signs and seasons, and for days and years" (verse 14).

Can it be said that time was indeed created, but that matter is eternal? Not at all. Mormons believe that matter has eternally existed in a series of organizations and reorganizations. According to McConkie, "An infinite number of worlds have come rolling into existence at [God's] command."(97) However, this process implies motion, and, as stated above, motion cannot exist independent from the passage of time.

Finally, the very existence of the doctrine of creation ex nihilo presents an insurmountable problem for the proponents of an eternal universe. Since a true infinity can contain no contingents, how can the existence of such an allegedly false doctrine be explained? If one declares that it originated in the mind of man, then an element of contingency has been introduced into that which is claimed to be eternal, thereby destroying the claim to eternality. However, the idea that such a doctrine has itself existed eternally is likewise problematic. Can falsehood be said to be eternal, being as it is a perversion, and therefore a derivative or contingent, of truth? Such questions as these simply cannot be answered within the scope of Mormonism or any other non-Christian belief system which denies the biblical account of creation.

Scripture Discounts the Doctrine of Pantheism

We have also seen that Mormonism has historically embraced what is known philosophically as monism (that all things are but manifestations of one reality or Being), and more specifically, pantheism (that "God is all and all is God"). Granted, most Mormons today would object vehemently to being labelled as pantheists. However, that this is precisely what Orson Pratt had in mind when he deified "Truth" and insisted that all things partake of it is an indisputable fact. Joseph Smith taught the same thing, though he used the term "intelligence" in place of Pratt's "Truth" to describe that which even God is made of. In other words, "God came from the universe; the universe did not come from God...."(98)

The occult doctrine of an eternal substance, by whatever name it is called, from which even "God" derives his/its existence is entirely at odds with the teachings of the Bible. God's distinction from His creation is seen throughout the Scriptures, and contrast is frequently made between His eternality and the temporality of the creation:

Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever You had formed the earth and the world, even from everlasting to everlasting, You are God (Psalm 90:2).

Lift up your eyes to the heavens, and look on the earth beneath. For the heavens will vanish away like smoke, the earth will grow old like a garment, and those who dwell in it will die in like manner; but My salvation will be forever, and My righteousness will not be abolished (Isaiah 51:6).

Heaven and earth shall pass away, but My Word will by no means pass away (Matthew 24:35).

The distinction between Creator and creation can especially be seen in the plan of redemption. In John 3:16, we are told that "God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son." Though this verse is misunderstood by many to teach that God's love is directed toward each and every human being in history, whom He earnestly desires to save, others have more accurately interpreted this verse to be speaking of the creation-order. According to Greg L. Bahnsen and Kenneth L. Gentry, "The word 'world' refers to the world as the orderly system of men and things. That is, the world that God created and loves is His creation as it is intended to be: a world in subjection to God. Thus, God loves His created order of men and things, not for what it has become (sinful and corrupted), but for what He intended" (emphasis in original).(99) The fact that creation itself will one day benefit from Christ's atoning sacrifice is made clear in Romans 8:19-22: "For the earnest expectation of the creation eagerly waits for the revealing of the sons of God. For the creation was subjected to futility, not willingly, but because of Him who subjected it in hope; because the creation itself also will be delivered from bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God. For we know that the whole creation groans and labors with birth pangs together until now."

Since we read that the creation has been "subjected to futility," from which it will someday be delivered, the only logical conclusion is that it is distinct from God. After all, God is a perfect Being, and, with the exception of the unique event of the Incarnation, He can never be said to suffer "futility," nor can He be "delivered from bondage of corruption." God is self-sufficient, whereas the creation is dependent upon the decree and power of the Creator for its continued existence: "God... has in these last days spoken to us by His Son, whom He has appointed heir of all things, through whom also He made the worlds; who being the brightness of His glory and the express image of His person, and upholding all things by the word of His power, when He had by Himself purged our sins, sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high...." (Hebrews 1:2-3) Again we see here the importance of the divine fiat — God's Word created the world, and God's Word sustains the world. The clear distinction between Creator and creatin is abundantly evident throughout the Scriptures. Therefore, we must conclude that pantheism is not so much false as it is an outdated concept. Quite simply, there was once a "time" when nothing but God existed, since He alone is self-existent and eternal (Psalm 90:2). Either God created the universe out of nothing, or He created it out of Himself. Because of this, the historic Church has always taught that God created ex nihilo, as we have seen. It was the first-century Gnostic heretics who attempted to introduce their pantheistic views into the Church, as they are again seeking to do via Mormonism and similar cults.

The Bible Condemns Occult Activity

We have seen extensive evidence that nearly all early Mormon leaders were heavily involved in the occult arts, and that Mormonism itself is rooted firmly in occultic ideology and practice, particularly necromancy. All involvement in occult practices, including attempted communication with the spirits of the dead, is strictly forbidden in the Bible. When coming into the Promised Land, the Israelites were given the following prohibition:

When you come into the land which the LORD your God is giving you, you shall not learn to follow the abominations of those nations. There shall not be found among you anyone who makes his son or his daughter pass through the fire, or one who practices witchcraft, or a soothsayer, or one who interprets omens, or a sorceror, or one who conjures spells, or a medium, or a spiritist, or one who calls up the dead. For all who do these things are an abomination to the LORD, and because of these abominations the LORD your God drives them out from before you (Deuteronomy 18:9-12; cf. Leviticus 19:31, 20:27).

The main reason that the Bible takes such a strong stand against spiritism is that the contacted spirits are not at all what they seem to be, but are actually demonic entities. Though seldom appearing as such, their true identity may be discerned from the anti-Christian theology that is consistently delivered through seances, Ouija boards, automatic writing, and other occultic channels (1 John 4:1-3). Demons are immortal beings of more ancient origin than man, and have unlimited access to the files of human history. As it suits their evil purposes, they utilize this knowledge to masquerade in a variety of forms, sometimes as a departed loved one, depending upon the emotional needs of the inquirer.

The Bible records only two incidents of communcation with the dead — both of them divinely ordained. The first of these is described in 1 Samuel, chapter 28. Here, King Saul disobeyed God by invoking the spirit of the prophet Samuel through the medium of Endor (verses 7-8). Much to the surprise of the medium, what appeared was not her familiar spirit as intended, but Samuel himself (verse 12). The dead man then prophesied in the name of the Lord concerning Saul's defeat and death at the hands of the Philistines, which was fulfilled the following day (1 Samuel 31:6). That this was not a masquerading demon is clear from the nature of the given prophecy (Deuteronomy 18:21-22).

Mormon apologists have attempted to use such passages as this to show that godly men and women may communicate with the dead, and thereby to justify their leaders' involvement in necromancy. However, it should be pointed out that Saul by this time had become completely apostate and it was because of his attempt to communicate with the dead prophet that he lost his life: "So Saul died for his unfaithfulness which he had committed against the LORD, because he did not keep the word of the LORD, and also because he consulted a medium for guidance" (1 Chronicles 10:13).

The second account of communication with the dead is given in the seventeenth chapter of Matthew's gospel. In this case, Jesus Christ was transfigured into His true heavenly glory, and was seen by three of His disciples to speak with Moses and Elijah (verse 2). The possibility that demonic spirits were in operation here must also be ruled out, for not only was the contact initiated by Christ, but God the Father also approved of His Son's actions (verse 5). As Creator, God obviously has both the power and the right to communicate with whomever He wishes, whether they are living or dead. However, Scripture makes it quite clear that contact with the "other side" is off limits to humans. When men begin to seek spiritual information from sources other than God's Word, deception inevitably occurs and the person is led to a false concept of himself and his relationship to his Creator. Therein lies the greatest danger of the practice of spiritism. Mormons, therefore, would do well to heed the words of the prophet Isaiah: "...[W]hen they say to you, 'Seek those who are mediums and wizards, who whisper and mutter,' should not a people seek their God? Should they seek the dead on behalf of the living?" (Isaiah 8:19-20).

Endnotes

1. Richard Cavendish, The Black Arts (New York: G.P. Putnam Publishing Group, 1967), page 81.

2. Manly P. Hall, The Lost Keys of Masonry (Los Angeles, California: Hall Publishing Company, 1924), pages 93-94.

3. Albert Pike, Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry (Washington, D.C.: Supreme Council of the Southern Jurisdiction, Thirty-Third Degree, 1962), pages 604-605.

4. Ken Wilber, Up From Eden (New York: Doubleday Publishing Company, 1981), page 1.

5. Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, The Secret Doctrine (Pasadena, California: Theosophical University Press, 1963), Volume II, pages 245, 258.

6. Vera S. Alder, The Initiation of the World (New York: Samuel Weiser, Inc., 1968), page 34.

7. Blavatsky, Secret Doctrine, Volume II, page 267.

8. Orson Pratt, The Seer (Liverpool, England: S.W. & F.D. Richards, 1853-1854), February 1853, page 24.

9. B.H. Roberts, quoted in Joseph Fielding Smith (editor), The Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith (Salt Lake City, Utah: Deseret Book Company, 1976), page 347 (footnote).

10. Joseph Smith, in Smith, ibid., page 34.

11. Doctrine and Covenants 93:29.

12. Joseph Smith, in Smith, Teachings of the Prophet, pages 351-354; see also Bruce R. McConkie, Mormon Doctrine (Salt Lake City, Utah: Bookcraft, 1966), page 751; B.H. Roberts, article: "The Immortality of Man," Improvement Era, April 1907, pages 401-423.

13. Pratt, The Seer, March 1853, pages 34, 38; July 1853, pages 102-103; see also Doctrine and Covenants 77:1-4.

14. Fred C. Collier (editor), The Teachings of President Brigham Young (Salt Lake City, Utah: Colliers Publishing Company, 1987), Volume III, page 241.

15. Heber C. Kimball, Journal of Discourses (Liverpool, England: F.D. and S.W. Richards, 1855), Volume VI, page 36.

16. Pratt, The Seer, February 1853, page 23.

17. Doctrine and Covenants 77:1, 130:7-9; see also Brigham Young, Journal of Discourses, Volume IX, page 87.

18. Blavatsky, Secret Doctrine, Volume I, page 414.

19. Blavatsky, ibid., Volume II, pages 234, 235, 243, 245.

20. Pike, Morals and Dogma, page 567.

21. Pike, ibid., page 321.

22. Brigham Young, Deseret News, 18 June 1873, page 308.

23. Joseph Fielding Smith, Doctrines of Salvation, Volume I, pages 113-115.

24. Sterling W. Still, Deseret News, 31 July 1965, page 7.

25. Joseph Smith, Journal of Discourses, Volume VI, page 4; see also Smith, Teachings of the Prophet, pages 346-347.

26. Charles Sackett, What's Going On in There? (Thousand Oaks, California: Sword of the Shepherd Ministries, Inc., 1982), page 28.

27. Sackett, ibid., page 33.

28. Brigham Young, Journal of Discourses, Volume V, page 331.

29. Joseph Smith, quoted in Nauvoo Expositor, 7 June 1844.

30. Richard Cavendish, Black Arts, page 222.

31. Reed C. Durham, No Help For the Widow's Son (Salt Lake City, Utah: Martin Publishing Company, 1980); Mormon Miscellaneous, October 1975; D. Michael Quinn, Early Mormonism and the Magic World View (Salt Lake City, Utah: Signature Books, 1989). Dr. Durham delivered this information before the Mormon History Association on 20 April 1974. For this he was severely criticized by other Mormon scholars and officials for his frankness and was even confronted by then-president Spencer W. Kimball himself. As a result of the negative response to his research, Dr. Durham felt it necessary to write an immediate letter to the General Authorities, reaffirming his faith in Joseph Smith as a prophet of God and the Mormon church as the only true church. D. Michael Quinn, on the other hand, was not so fortunate. As a result of the publication of his book, he lost his job as Professor of History at Brigham Young University, and eventually was excommuncated. Obviously, this is one important aspect of the "prophet's" life that the LDS hierarchy does not want either the members of their church or the general public to know.

32. Quinn, Early Mormonism, pages 66-72.

33. Jerald and Sandra Tanner, Mormonism, Magic, and Masonry (Salt Lake City, Utah: Utah Lighthouse Ministry, 1983), page 11.

34. Brigham Young, Young's Office Journal, 30 December 1861; see also Quinn, Early Mormonism, page 58.

35. Parley P. Pratt, Journal of Discourses, Volume II, pages 44-46.

36. Ezra Taft Benson, The Teachings of Ezra Taft Benson (Salt Lake City, Utah: Bookcraft, 1988), page 31.

37. Duane S. Crowther, Life Everlasting (Salt Lake City, Utah: Bookcraft, 1988), page 151.

38. Charles W. Penrose, Mormon Doctrine (Salt Lake City, Utah: Juvenile Instructor's Office, 1888), pages 40-41; see also Wilford Woodruff, Journal of Discourses, Volume XIX, page 229.

39. David Whitmer, An Address to All Believers in Christ (self-published, 1887), page 12; W.D. Purple, Reminiscence (Kirkham, 1951), Volume II, page 365.

40. Heber C. Kimball, Journal of Discourses, Volume IV, pages 135-136.

41. Solomon F. Kimball, Improvement Era, October 1929, pages 583-585.

42. Doctrine and Covenants 8:8; Isaac Butts, affidavit in Arthur C. Deming, Naked Truths of Mormonism (Oakland, California: Deming and Company, 1888), page 2.

43. Quinn, Early Mormonism, pages 53-77.

44. McConkie, Mormon Doctrine, page 526.

45. Gospel Principles (Salt Lake City, Utah: Corporation of the President, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 1988), page 142.

46. John Whitmer, John Whitmer's History (Salt Lake City, Utah: Modern Microfilm Company, n.d.), Chapter Six.

47. Max H. Parkin, Conflict at Kirtland: A Study of the Nature and Causes of External and Internal Conflict of the Mormons in Ohio Between 1830 and 1838 (Salt Lake City: Max Parkin, 1966), pages 79-80.

48. Parkin, ibid.

49. Joseph Smith, Times and Seasons, 1 April 1842, page 747.

50. Joseph Heinerman, Spirit World Manifestations: Accounts of Divine Aid in Genealogical and Temple Work and Other Assistance to Latter-day Saints (Salt Lake City, Utah: Joseph Lyon and Associates, 1986), pages 94-97.

51. Heber C. Kimball, Journal of Discourses, Volume V, page 184.

52. Cavendish, Black Arts, pages 222-224.

53. John A. Clark, Gleanings By the Way (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: W.J. and J.K. Simon, 1842), page 225.

54. Oliver Cowdery, letter to W.W. Phelps, printed in Latter Day Saints' Messenger and Advocate, February 1835, page 79.

55. Joseph Smith, History of the Church (Salt Lake City, Utah: Deseret Book Company, 1964), Volume I, page 11.

56. Smith, ibid., pages 11-14.

57. Smith, ibid., page 11.

58. Will Baron, a former devotee of the writings of New Age occultist Alice A. Bailey, described a vision of the "Ascended Master" Djwhal Khul in his book, Deceived by the New Age:

Suddenly, a physical force that I had never felt before seemed to come upon me. Brilliant light filled my whole being, as if my whole body had become an incandescent lamp. I felt and perceived this sphere of light to be encompassing me and permeating every cell of my body. My brain, especially, was flooded with light, as if a thousand-watt bulb had been switched on inside of my head.... Suddenly, a man radiating intense golden-white light stood before me. My first perception was that the mysterious, shining figure looked just like Jesus Christ. Immediately a strong intuitive thought, or "knowingness," surfaced that told me this person was Djwhal Khul, the high-ranking member of the White Brotherhood of Masters. He was the master who had dictated to Alice Bailey the contents of the metaphysical books she had published under her own name. He appeared to be surrounded by so much brilliance that I could not make out any background scenery. All I could see was his kingly form surrounded by light as he stood motionless before me. I noticed his curly golden hair resting upon his shoulders. He wore a long white robe. His arms hung at his side, and his feet were hidden by the light that enshrouded his entire being. Even though I had difficulty distinguishing his facial features because of the intensity of light that seemed to emanate more strongly from his face, he looked very handsome and dignified ([Boise, Idaho: Pacific Press Publishing Association, 1980], pages 62-63).

59. Times and Seasons, 15 April 1842, page 753; Lucy Mack Smith, Biographical Sketches of Joseph Smith the Prophet and His Progenitors For Many Generations (London: S.W. Richards, 1853), page 79.

60. G.R. Mead (translator), Pistis Sophia: A Gnostic Gospel (London: Theosophical Publishing Society, 1896), page 378.

61. John Beaumont, An Historical, Physiological, and Theological Treatise of Spirits (London: D. Brown, 1705), page 90.

62. Quinn, Early Mormonism, pages 131-132.

63. Book of Mormon, Moroni 10:4-5. Two important questions must be asked regarding this passage of Mormon "scripture." First, does not the fact that Mormons follow the instructions given in the Book of Mormon logically presuppose that they have already accepted it as being true prior to praying? Also, the wording of Moroni 10:4 is interesting: "[A]sk God, the Eternal Father, in the name of Christ, if these things are not true..." If Moroni's words are to be taken literally, would not a subsequent "testimony" indicate that the Book of Mormon is "not true"?

64. Doctrine and Covenants 9:8.

65. Joseph Smith, Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, page 351.

66. Joseph Smith, History of the Church, Volume IV, page 182.

67. Joseph Smith, quoted by Hyrum L. Andrus, God, Man, and the Universe (Salt Lake City, Utah: Bookcraft, 1968), page 146.

68. Parley P. Pratt, Key to Theology, page 43.

69. Charles W. Penrose, Journal of Discourses, Volume XXVI, page 27.

70. Brigham Young, ibid., Volume VII, pages 2-3.

71. Joseph Fielding Smith, Doctrines of Salvation (Salt Lake City, Utah: Bookcraft, 1954), Volume I, pages 141-142.

72. Andrus, God, Man, and the Universe, page 300.

73. McConkie, Mormon Doctrine, page 169.

74. W. Cleon Skousen, The First 2000 Years (Salt Lake City, Utah: Bookcraft, 1953), page 19.

75. Tertullian, Against Hermogenes, Chapter VIII; in Alexander Roberts and James Donaldson (editors), The Ante-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdman's Publishing Company, 1951), Volume III, page 481.

76. Charles Hodge, Systematic Theology (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdman's Publishing Company, 1993), Volume I, pages 558-559.

77. Tertullian, Against Praxeas, Chapter V; in Roberts and Donaldson, Ante-Nicene Fathers, Volume III, page 600.

78. Tertullian, ibid., Chapter VI; in Roberts and Donaldson, ibid., page 601.

79. Tertullian, ibid., Chapter XXIX; in Roberts and Donaldson, ibid., page 625.

80. Tertullian, ibid., Chapter XV; in Roberts and Donaldson, ibid., page 610.

81. Ray Summers, Essentials of New Testament Greek (Nashville, Tennessee: Broadman Press, 1960), page 90.

82. Robert Lewis Dabney, Systematic Theology (Carlisle, Pennsylvania: Banner of Truth Trust, 1985), page 248.

83. Daniel C. Peterson and Stephen D. Ricks, article: "Comparing LDS Beliefs With First-Century Christianity," The Ensign, March 1988, page 8.

84. Ireneaus, Against Heresies, Book II, Chapter X:2-3; in Roberts and Donaldson, Ante-Nicene Fathers, Volume I, page 370.

85. Ireneaus, ibid., Book II, Chapter X:4; in Roberts and Donaldson, ibid.

86. Tertullian, Apology, Chapter XVII; in Roberts and Donaldson, ibid., Volume III, page 31.

87. Tertullian, Against Hermogenes, Chapter XX; in Roberts and Donaldson, ibid., page 489.

88. Hippolytus, The Refutation of All Heresies, Book X, Chapter XXVIII; in Roberts and Donaldson, ibid., Volume V, page 150.

89. Aurelius Augustine, Concerning the Nature of God, Chapter XXVI.

90. Dabney, Systematic Theology, page 20.

91. McConkie, Mormon Doctrine, pages 238-239.

92. McConkie, ibid., page 225.

93. McConkie, ibid., page 233.

94. McConkie, ibid., page 239.

95. J.P. Moreland, Scaling the Secular City (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Book House, 1987), page 29.

96. M. Lynn Bennion and J.A. Washburn, Principles of the Restored Church at Work (Salt Lake City, Utah: The Deseret Sunday School Union, 1954), page 3.

97. McConkie, Mormon Doctrine, page 169.

98. Frank J. Beckwith, article: "The Philosophical Problems With the Mormon Concept of God," Christian Research Journal, Spring 1992, page 27.

99. Greg L. Bahnsen and Kenneth L. Gentry, House Divided: The Break-Up of Dispensationalism (Tyler, Texas: Institute for Christian Economics, 1989), pages 201-202.


TOPICS: Apologetics; History; Other Christian; Religion & Culture
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To: DelphiUser
since then, I use the KJV, and if you quote from anything else, I won't accept it, I'll respond with KJV.

Then YOU must be the only MORMON that knows which verses are MIS-TRANSLATED* in it!

Could you POST that list so others can get up to speed?



*

The Articles of Faith
of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
 
 

  1. We believe in God, the Eternal Father, and in His Son, Jesus Christ, and in the Holy Ghost.
  2. We believe that men will be punished for their own sins, and not for Adam's transgression.
  3. We believe that through the Atonement of Christ, all mankind may be saved, by obedience to the laws and ordinances of the Gospel.
  4. We believe that the first principles and ordinances of the Gospel are: first, Faith in the Lord Jesus Christ; second, Repentance; third, Baptism by immersion for the remission of sins; fourth, Laying on of hands for the gift of the Holy Ghost.
  5. We believe that a man must be called of God, by prophecy, and by the laying on of hands by those who are in authority, to preach the Gospel and administer in the ordinances thereof.
  6. We believe in the same organization that existed in the Primitive Church, namely, apostles, prophets, pastors, teachers, evangelists, and so forth.
  7. We believe in the gift of tongues, prophecy, revelation, visions, healing, interpretation of tongues, and so forth.
  8. We believe the Bible to be the word of God as far as it is translated correctly; we also believe the Book of Mormon to be the word of God.
  9. We believe all that God has revealed, all that He does now reveal, and we believe that He will yet reveal many great and important things pertaining to the Kingdom of God.
  10. We believe in the literal gathering of Israel and in the restoration of the Ten Tribes; that Zion (the New Jerusalem) will be built upon the American continent; that Christ will reign personally upon the earth; and, that the earth will be renewed and receive its paradisiacal glory.
  11. We claim the privilege of worshiping Almighty God according to the dictates of our own conscience, and allow all men the same privilege, let them worship how, where, or what they may.
  12. We believe in being subject to kings, presidents, rulers, and magistrates, in obeying, honoring, and sustaining the law.
  13. We believe in being honest, true, chaste, benevolent, virtuous, and in doing good to all men; indeed, we may say that we follow the admonition of Paul—We believe all things, we hope all things, we have endured many things, and hope to be able to endure all things. If there is anything virtuous, lovely, or of good report or praiseworthy, we seek after these things.

Joseph Smith

 
 
 



Extra points question:

Why is the BoM 'translated' into other languages than 1611 English?



 

421 posted on 11/20/2010 5:28:04 AM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 362 | View Replies]

To: DelphiUser; Colofornian; ejonesie22; MHGinTN; aMorePerfectUnion; greyfoxx39; Elsie; reaganaut; ...
So, here is a link now, before you go all "supporting "bad" sites" on me, I only read the one article, and I don't even agree with all of it, but it does have links and quotations from Concordances and lexicons and I don't want to cut and paste without attribution... Thus, lexicons give expressions such as: divinity, deity, godhead, divine nature, divine being. But what do these expressions mean? An examination of some English dictionaries reveals that the meanings of these words is considerably broader than some Trinitarians would like them to be.

Not surprising you duck into a JW site – bias anti-Trinitarian. I see you are parroting their argument and while your attempt may appear to you to be valiant, your ignorance on the teachings of JWs is apparent (I am an equal opportunity anti and JWs are an area of study besides mormonism) If you took a moment to look, the only translation of “divine quality” is from the NWT and if you are not aware of it, the New World Translation is the JW edition of the bible. None of the Lexicons they cite refer to “divine quality”. Their dictionary ‘definitions’ only fined ‘quality’ the third iteration down – not inherent to the original Greek word. Throw in some other misdirections and THEY infer that divine “quality” is preferred.

Face it DU, you are borrowing someone else’s theology to try to disprove mine. Is the lack of scholarship within mormon realms that poor that you have to rely on JWs? Further, even a JW ‘divine quality’ argument works against the mormon definition of the Godhead.

So, I'm not alone, now I'm sure my critics will jump all over that this is a Jehovah's Witness site, but hey, they expected me to go read an anti Mormon site, right? so fair is fair, go read it and deal with it as an argument, not as a "non-christian" site.

Dealt with it above. You’ve now made it perfectly clear that mormon scholarship is so lacking that it must rely upon a competitor in the cult market for its arguments.

You might also enjoy this: The Apologists Bible Commentary

Wonderful source – both JWs and mormons take a pounding. Godzilla, note that to me "one God" does not denote a singular being, "God" does not denote to me a singular being.

Lets take the last reference you gave to the Apologist Bible Commentary. While you can ‘think’ what you like, that doesn’t necessarily change what the Greek words and their usage in the Bible refer to. Nor does it change mormon doctrine. The point is made clear -

The standard Geek lexicons - both classical and Biblical - define theos as an individual God or god
BAGD, Louw & Nida, Thayer, Moulton & Milligan, LSJ.

Lets take the word "Clergy" Clergy is generally considered to be a plural word, we speak of the clergy of the church, and mean everyone, I have also heard it used to mean the local pastor, singular.

And ‘moose’ can mean one or more moose. But it becomes apparent that in those instances, the numerical quantity (singular or more than one) is derived from the context of the passage. Further, if the word form is not like clergy or moose, then the spelling is changed to reflect that there is more than one. Since we are dealing with Greek in this instance, the plurality of the words used is known. As stated above, theos is an individual (singular) God or god, if referring to plural would be the plural form, which it is not in these passages.

God means one or more members of the Godhead. It really does not matter, they are all "one"...

Sorry Du, flawed logic as well as poor Greek. Theotēs is not a plural form, nor does the context support a plural interpretation. Since I see that you are struggling with the basic concept of theotēs you have another hurdle to over come – that is the fullness (plērōma) of the theotēs resided in Jesus. Pleroma brings with it the fullness or abundance. Thus you must further from the greek provide proof that the mormon concept of the ‘godhead’ which at that moment during Jesus’ life the fullness or abundance of the father (composed of flesh and bone) as well as the Holy Ghost could dwell at the same time WITHIN the body of Jesus

As for your comment on standards, I thought the RM said not to talk about that anymore. I do note that you'd rather talk about that, or anything else for that matter, than the reality of the Bible's support (or lack thereof) for the Trinity.

You have made an issue even earlier regarding ‘scholarship’ and ‘sources’. The issue is no longer the site in question, but is symptomatic of ‘scholarship’ presented to me in general now. Just look how you have to go to a JW site to challenge the use of theotes. Consistent symptom of a persistent problem.

We are not confused, obviously if you don't understand it well enough not to be confused by it, you should be reading, not writing, but so far it seems you think you are an expert in everything. (Ancient metal working, Greek, Latin, archeology, Geology, genetics, map making... just a few things you have tried to "educate" me on that turned out badly in the past.)

LOL, far more than you have displayed so far DU.

GZ A general salvation to all, courtesy of the atonement, just meaning everyone will get a body at the resurrection.
[du] OK, let's see what the bible says: 1 Corinthians 15:20-22 20 But now is Christ risen from the dead, and become the firstfruits of them that slept.
21 For since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of the dead.
22 For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive.
It's a simile, I know you have a problem with those, so let me translate for you.

LOL, this ought to be interesting.

Adam brought death into the world, so a man, Jesus Christ, brought resurrection into the world. There is no condition listed here, all will be resurrected. Don't believe me, fine, we'll argue about it after we're both resurrected. If one of us in not there to argue, I'll concede your point immediately.

Easy to see where you diverge.

There is a reason we have different words for Resurrection, and salvation... ever wonder why?

I have many thoughts, from ad hoc development of theology to obfuscation on becoming gods and points inbetween.

Read the Bible much? Revelations 20:12-13
Please explain to me just exactly what is meant by that scripture in the Bible, since you say the Bible is inerrant, and complete, I expect nothing but Bible references, good luck, you'll need it not to agree with us, and not to contradict those verses (which would make one of them an error).

I read the bible – do you bother to read my answers? Lurkers will note: this is shooting ducks in a barrel. I won’t even have to leave the chapter in Rev.

Rev 20:4 KJV - And I saw thrones, and they sat upon them, and judgment was given unto them: and [I saw] the souls of them that were beheaded for the witness of Jesus, and for the word of God, and which had not worshipped the beast, neither his image, neither had received [his] mark upon their foreheads, or in their hands; and they lived and reigned with Christ a thousand years.
Rev 20:5 KJV - But the rest of the dead lived not again until the thousand years were finished. This [is] the first resurrection.
Rev 20:6 KJV - Blessed and holy [is] he that hath part in the first resurrection: on such the second death hath no power, but they shall be priests of God and of Christ, and shall reign with him a thousand years.

Notice DU that the bible in Rev 20 is speaking about two resurrections. From vs 5-6, the first resurrection involves all of the righteous from all time (blessed and holy). Now remember the highlighted phrase regarding the ‘second death’. A thousand years pass then -

Rev 20:11 KJV - And I saw a great white throne, and him that sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away; and there was found no place for them.
Rev 20:12 KJV - And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God; and the books were opened: and another book was opened, which is [the book] of life: and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works.
Rev 20:13 KJV - And the sea gave up the dead which were in it; and death and hell delivered up the dead which were in them: and they were judged every man according to their works.
Rev 20:14 KJV - And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire. This is the second death.

Rev 20:5-6 is the first resurrection, then what is listed in Rev 20:11-14 is a second resurrection. So the ones in the first resurrection are not included among those here.

Rev 20:15 KJV - And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was cast into the lake of fire.

Any evidence of those resurrected being “blessed”? No, all in this resurrection are condemned to the lake of fire. No verses contradicted, Bible upheld, DU’s mormon interpretation fails once again.

Please cite your reference for where Paul "Clearly Taught" (You can't interpret unclear scriptures, it has to say it) that the commandments did not need to be kept to be saved. (Crickets)P> Lurkers will note the persistent fail to comprehend the bible.

Eph 2: 8* For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God:
9 Not of works, lest any man should boast.

Eph 3: 27* Where is boasting then? It is excluded. By what law? of works? Nay: but by the law of faith.
28* Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law.
Ro 3:21* But now the righteousness of God without the law is manifested, being witnessed by the law and the prophets; Ro 3:22* Even the righteousness of God which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe: for there is no difference:
Ro 3:23 For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God;
Ro 3:24* Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus:
Ro 5:8* But God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.
Ga 2:16* Knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ, even we have believed in Jesus Christ, that we might be justified by the faith of Christ, and not by the works of the law: for by the works of the law shall no flesh be justified.
Ga 3:2* This only would I learn of you, Received ye the Spirit by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith?
Ga 3:5* He therefore that ministereth to you the Spirit, and worketh miracles among you, doeth he it by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith?
Ga 3:10* For as many as are of the works of the law are under the curse: for it is written, Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the law to do them.

Your projecting...

Observing your posts.

See my challenge above, I believe you need Faith and Grace, shew me thy faith without thy works, and I will shew thee my faith by my works

Again, what comes first works or faith. If works, then there is no grace. If faith, then works display a true faith as an outgrowth – not commandment.

Please show where Paul says you don't need works to be judged by. (Remember revelations above and don't contradict it!)

Already done, salvation is independent of works. Revelation already confirms – because they are not in the book of life at that SECOND resurrection of the damned. A lot of good their ‘works’ did for them.

So, let me unwind your spin here. Grace is all that's needed. Grace comes from Faith. Faith results in Works. You don't need "works" to be saved, even though the Bible says you will be judged by your works, got it.

Once again Lurkers will note the bogus comparison on the subject. DU is the one that insists upon contradicting the scripture. Here it is once again -

Eph 2: 8* For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God:
9 Not of works, lest any man should boast.

LOL! thanks, but you're having enough trouble with the Bible, leave the interpretation of our doctrine to those of us who study it more. First you need faith in Jesus, then the work of Baptism should follow, then comes the Gift of the Holy Ghost. More study of the Gospel, increasing in faith, which is followed by works, then as you keep the laws you learn, you are justified by Jesus, and when you die, being on "the right track"

Lurkers will note the incredible spin put out here and AOF 3 bouncing on the road in front of the bus. What does AOF 3 state again -

3. We believe that through the Atonement of Christ, all mankind may be saved, by obedience to the laws and ordinances of the Gospel.


Lurkers will note once again that this salvation is conditional (may be saved) and what is the prerequesite – obedience to the laws and ordinances (ie works). DU even confirms that it is by the law you are justified. Once again that gospel of the Bible speaks against this mormon doctrine -

Ro 3:20* Therefore by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight: for by the law is the knowledge of sin.
Ro 3:28* Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law.
Ga 2:16* Knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ, even we have believed in Jesus Christ, that we might be justified by the faith of Christ, and not by the works of the law: for by the works of the law shall no flesh be justified.
Ga 3:11* But that no man is justified by the law in the sight of God, it is evident: for, The just shall live by faith.
Ga 5:4* Christ is become of no effect unto you, whosoever of you are justified by the law; ye are fallen from grace.

(since perfection in this life is impossible for you) that's all you can do, Jesus applies Grace and you are saved.

Lurkers one again should note – this is not what mormon doctrine teaches -

MORONI 10:32: “Yea, come unto Christ, and be perfected in him, and deny yourselves of all ungodliness; and if ye shall deny yourselves of all ungodliness, and love God with all your might, mind and strength, then is his grace sufficient for you, that by his grace ye may be perfect in Christ; and if by the grace of God ye are perfect in Christ, ye can in nowise deny the power of God.”

Lurkers will note – DU is slopply with his explanation of the application of mormon ‘grace’ when compared to mormon doctrine. According to the doctrine above, you must have removed ALL ungodliness from your life – THEN Jesus can apply the grace.

Lurkers will also note DU avoids the use of the term “repentance” from his discription as well – which under mormon doctrine is the COMPLETE abandonment of sin from one’s life.

One of the things you leave out of your equation is that Mormons only believe you are responsible to obey the laws you know.

LOL, what a loop hole big enough to drive a truck through. Do mormons like DU fully and totally follow the 10 commandments – basic law? Betchya DU has snuck some looks at well endowed ladies throughout his life – and as James states “For whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of all.” (JAMES 2:10). Mormons also won’t tell you its doctrine states -
DOCTRINE AND COVENANTS 82:7: “And now, verily I say unto you, I, the Lord, will not lay any sin to your charge; go your ways and sin no more; but unto that soul who sinneth shall the former sins return, saith the Lord your God.”

I dare say that it is impossible for anyone, let alone mormons, to keep even the laws they know, let alone the ones they don’t.

Ro 3:20* Therefore by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight: for by the law is the knowledge of sin.

"Orthodox Christianity" damns innocent babies who die unbaptized to hell and rewards degenerate murderers with salvation because they received the last rites.

Bearing false witness is one of the commandments.

GZ Lurkers it would be interesting to see if DU can find an actual reference that quotes Paul saying that one must become righteous BEFORE qualifying for salvation. Were Du to actually study the matter, he would find that righteousness is automatically imputed by God to the individual at the same time the person is saved (see above), ie righteousness FOLLOWS salvation – not as a precursor as is demanded in mormonism.

DU then cites Rom 2:1-6. Lurkers will note that there is absolutely NOTHING wihin the passage that shows one must be righteous BEFORE salvation. Instead he attempts to use the passage as a personal attack – will it work?

Romans 2:1-6 1 Therefore thou art inexcusable, O man, whosoever thou art that judgest: for wherein thou judgest another, thou condemnest thyself; for thou that judgest doest the same things. 2 But we are sure that the judgment of God is according to truth against them which commit such things. 3 And thinkest thou this, O man, that judgest them which do such things, and doest the same, that thou shalt escape the judgment of God? 4 Or despisest thou the riches of his goodness and forbearance and longsuffering; not knowing that the goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance? 5 But after thy hardness and impenitent heart treasurest up unto thyself wrath against the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgment of God; 6 Who will render to every man according to his deeds:

Therefore thou art inexcusable O Godzilla whosoever thou art that judgest: for wherein thou judgest another, thou condemnest thyself; for thou that judgest doest the same things. Applies rather nicely doesn't it, oh don't forget this part "Who will render to Godzilla according to his deeds"

LOL, Lurkers will note the blatant pulling out of context this is. Du, I feel real bad for you having to stoop to twisting the scripture in this fashion to use against me. For starters Paul was addressing Jewish prejudice against Gentiles – read Chapt 1 – its that context thing again.

Are you comfortable with that? I am when I put my name in there. You see Paul did believe in judging by deeds or Works as it is rendered elsewhere.

Lurkers will note – the challenge was to PROVE works were necessary for salvation. What does this show ? Were DU to show evidence of biblical scholarship, he would have also read in Romans -

Rom 3: 19* Now we know that what things soever the law saith, it saith to them who are under the law: that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become guilty before God. 20* Therefore by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight: for by the law is the knowledge of sin. 21* But now the righteousness of God without the law is manifested, being witnessed by the law and the prophets; 22* Even the righteousness of God which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe: for there is no difference: 23* For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God; 24* Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus: 25* Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God; 26* To declare, I say, at this time his righteousness: that he might be just, and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus. 27* Where is boasting then? It is excluded. By what law? of works? Nay: but by the law of faith. 28* Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law.

One must ask – where now are all these works and following the law that DU touted above as being necessary before salvation? Paul destroyed that claim and then some.

Do you ever tire of being wrong about the Bible? Just curious.

Lurkers will note – as with the above example, just WHO is wrong about the bible? It has been said that just about any quirky doctrine can be created by citing scripture out of context. That is exactly what DU did above. In fact, just about EVERY scripture du has thrown out here is out of context and generates a false interpretation when the scripture is placed within just the simplest of contexts. Is this deliberate or just ignorant? I don’t know, but it has been brought to Du’s attention many, many times now, so you’d think he’d learn something by now.

We do not celebrate Satan in the Temple ceremonies, he is a historical figure, part of the story of Adam and Eve, indeed, he tells everyone there that if they do not keep the commandments of God they will be in his power.

Lurkers can be reminded here of what mormon doctrine reveals about satan’s deceptions

"Adam fell that men might be; and men are, that they might have joy". (11 Nephi 2:25)
"Blessed be the name of God, for because of my [Adam's] transgression my eyes are opened, and in this life I shall have joy, and again in the flesh I shall see God” (Moses 5:10)
“Were it not for our transgression we never should have had seed, and never should have known good and evil, and the joy of our redemption, and the eternal life which God giveth unto all the obedient” (Moses 5:11)

Come on DU, mormons refer to this as the “fall upward” don’t they.

Hardly a celebration...

"Properly understood, it becomes apparent that the fall of Adam is one of the greatest blessings ever given of God to mankind" (McConkie, NWAF, p. 87).

you accuse me of intellectually dishonest, actual dishonesty, I'm just glad you didn't get around to marital dishonesty, or my wife might start posting and then you'd be in for it!!! I'm not even going to bother with your intellectually dishonest accusations that I am intellectually dishonest.

Ever look at a woman in a lustful manner? See Mt 5:28

Not going to even look, the JOD online link has been sent to you several times, there must be a reason you don't want to go to an authoritative source, as for poisoning the well, it's an anti Mormon site! We are discussing Mormon beliefs there is no need to poison the well of objectivity there, the dead bodies floating in the water will do nicely.

LOL, if Lurkers desire, they can go back upthread and see that I gave DU the link (and had used it) PRIOR to ‘getting’ it from Du. Of course DU will avoid sites like MRM – contrary arguments that DU can only avoid.

I don't care how many people you have saying the earth is flat, . . .

Red herring

then you launch in your polytheist name calling again...

Since the shoe fits. . . . .

Atonement -- Yep, reconciliation with God, so? I know you think this is big, but I knew that atonement was based on reconciling with God, apparently, you see a problem I don't, maybe it's your interpretation stuff getting in your way again.

Lurkers will note – still nothing showing any scholarship.

Godhead and Atonement, in the Bible, Trinity and saved by grace alone no works needed, not in the Bible.

Lukers note – these things have already been dealt with. I don’t know what bible du is using, but it must not contain most of the NT

GUIDE TO THE SCRIPTURES God, Godhead

Been there, linked it. Says nothing more than I’ve already been stating- a group of three gods forming a committee. I’ll wait for DU to deal with Theotēs from above.

Actually, you don't know that speed reading actually increases comprehension,

Still waiting to see evidence of comprehension in our discussions

A novel you can speed read, a well written book you can speed read, comments broken up by web markups and pictures, not so much. I never said it was a panacea. You never said to read all the comments, you said to read the articles, I did.

What part of STUDY did you fail to “comprehend”, woops, speed reading was suppose to improve that huh.

I have a certificate of graduation, and a wallet card that identifies me as a Buddhist seminary graduate. they would be recognized by other monasteries in Taiwan, and that's about it. Both had his Chop stamped over his signature, and make great souvenirs.

Course of study being?????? Receivable in a couple week period???? Yep souvenir all right.

I did not blow it off, I had already prayed about this as a youth, I have an answer. Did you not understand that? Maybe you should learn to read faster.

Lurkers will note – no evidence of earnest effort, not a question of clarification – only obscure websites of dubious nature.

I have have been saying Authoritative, not authorized...

Will be nice to see you follow your standard in light of recent posts.

as for my TR interview, just had one, it'll be awhile and they already know I do apologetic work on line... not a problem with my Bishop, it's a problem with me, I don't want to waste time there.

Hardly an endorsement.

I really don't care if you find "evidence", you are not my judge. but JFTR, I pray about "everything" I can think of to pray about, and that includes the Trinity, did that as a youth. Not good enough for you , tough.

So why throw out the challenge to ‘prove’ the trinity? You’ve had you ‘revelation’ (what ever in the world that was – a spicy burrito?).

You didn't like my personal defintion, remember?

No, I said yours was contrary to mormon doctrine. Personally, it was a belly laugh.

It's the definition of one God, that we disagree on. and there is a bid difference between believing that more than one god exist and worshiping more than one God. The Bible itself speaks of other Gods . . . .

Lurkers will note – where ever these other ‘gods’ are spoken of in the bible – the context is very clear, they are FALSE gods. Now tell us DU, do you believe that Baal, Ishtar, Anat, and Molech (just to name a few) are real gods? They meet your standard – spoken of in the bible.

You mean like all the protestant religions out there? They use the KJV, and they split off from the Catholic Church because it was considered apostate by them...

LOL, Lurkers will note – Luther didn’t HAVE a KJV bible at the time. Incase history or speed reading has passed it by, Luther was German, KJV was a English production much past Luther’s time. Yep, that mormon Jesus must have spoken in KJV English eh?

Prequalify for worthiness? ROTFLOL! God's grace is available to all everywhere, it's like prayer, you can't restrict it, so I have no idea what you are saying here.

It is available but lurkers will note from earlier (MORONI 10:32) that it only becomes available AFTER becoming perfect (godly).

If you are insinuating the we worship Joseph smith then I have to say in the strongest terms allowed by this site that you are misrepresenting, misstating, misleading and all around not being honest about the true state of affairs.

Come on Du, grow up. If mormons worshipped smith today it would be a big turnoff to mass marketing. That said, Prophet Joseph Fielding Smith, Prophet Brigham Young, Apostle George Q. Cannon and Apostle Orson Hyde strongly indicate something different.

So unmerited, meaning no faith or works needed? or just faith (in spite of the fact that the Bible says you need both)

Reading comprehension again DU. What is the definition of ‘unmerited? What have I cited Paul writing over and over again here (Lurkers will note the increasing density on some obvious subjects here.) Unmerited means you don’t do any work for it. Pretty simple concept, once you through the chains of mormon dogma away.

No further light an knowledge, special clothing, you mean like a ya-mica, or prayer shawl, or the collar the priests wear, or the habit a nun wears?

Lurkers will note the depths of absurdity of this argument. Mormon undies – special magical clothing never to be removed is compared to these articles of clothing. Come on get real Du.

No rules! Yes, salvation for everybody! hey steal! Lie! cheat! kill! It's all good just say you believe once, and then go about your life, God doesn't care, you said the magic words, you don't need to change the commandments are there for people who need that kind of stuff, but you don't actually have to OBEY them! LOL salvation is free!!!!!!

Lurkers will note that DU throws out another red herring that dishonestly represents what I’ve posted so far. Even Paul agrees with me. However, in an effort to deflect from his epic fail du has posted this. Perhaps his bishop should pull him off the apologetics to give him time to really learn what the bible stays – but then if that happened DU would realize the snake oil he has been sold – so I don’t expect that to happen either.

Thanks DU, your bleats have been as challenging as shooting ducks in a barrel. Now take some time to learn about context – even in daily life – you’ll be better for it.

422 posted on 11/20/2010 1:14:38 PM PST by Godzilla (3-7-77)
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To: Godzilla

Still playing with your food I see!


423 posted on 11/20/2010 1:27:17 PM PST by MHGinTN (Some, believing they can't be deceived, it's nigh impossible to convince them when they're deceived.)
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To: MHGinTN

lol


424 posted on 11/20/2010 5:03:53 PM PST by Godzilla (3-7-77)
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To: Godzilla

MEGO


425 posted on 11/21/2010 5:23:24 AM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going.)
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To: Colofornian

Get a life!!!


426 posted on 11/22/2010 8:13:42 AM PST by lawsone (Al)
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To: lawsone

You might take that advice to heart, Mormon, and be born again, now, this day, before it’s too late for you. Being a good Mormon carries no more weight before Christ than being a good Zoroastrian or a good Buddhist or a good Muslim. Without new life in you you’re none of His.


427 posted on 11/22/2010 10:15:37 AM PST by MHGinTN (Some, believing they can't be deceived, it's nigh impossible to convince them when they're deceived.)
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To: MHGinTN

You folks sound familiar, like the extreme political left wing radical. It is attack, attack, attack. Do you do this with love? Is this going to get you closer to Our Heavenly Father??


428 posted on 11/22/2010 2:19:50 PM PST by lawsone (Al)
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To: lawsone; MHGinTN
You folks sound familiar, like the extreme political left wing radical. It is attack, attack, attack. Do you do this with love? Is this going to get you closer to Our Heavenly Father??

LOL, from a supporter of a church that in order to win converts must convince them that there is only one true church and that any other church is the whore of babylon and an abomination before God. Sweet.

429 posted on 11/22/2010 2:47:07 PM PST by Godzilla (3-7-77)
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To: lawsone
If by 'Our Heavenly Father' you're referring to the god of Mormonism, as defined in the following quotes from your founding conmen, then I don't expect my inviting you to get saved now will get me closer to your Mormonism god. And son/daughter, if this is the god you are entrusting your eternal destiny to, you better wake up! Mormonism is not from the God of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and Judaism:

"I learned a testimony concerning Abraham, and he reasoned concerning the Gods of heaven. '...Intelligences exist one above another, so that there is no end to them.' If Abraham reasoned thus--If Jesus Christ was the Son of God, and John discovered that God the Father of Jesus Christ had a Father, you may suppose that He had a Father also. Where was there ever a son without a father? And where was there ever a father without first being a son? Whenever did a tree or anything spring into existence without a progenitor? And everything comes in this way. Paul says that which is earthly is in the likeness of that which is heavenly. Hence if Jesus had a Father, can we not believe that He had a Father also? I despise the idea of being scared to death at such a doctrine, for the Bible is full of it. I want you to pay particular attention to what I am saying. Jesus said that the Father wrought precisely in the same way as His Father had done before Him. As the Father had done before? He laid down His life, and took it up the same as His Father had done before. (Joseph Smith, Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, p. 373)

I will go back to the beginning, before the world was, to show what kind of a being God is. What sort of a being was God in the beginning? Open your ears and hear, all ye ends of the earth; for I am going to prove it to you by the Bible, and to tell you the designs of God in relation to the human race, and why he interferes with the affairs of man. God himself was once as we are now, and is an exalted Man, and sits enthroned in yonder heavens. That is the great secret. (Joseph Smith, Journal of Discourses, Vol. 6, p. 3, 1844)

In the beginning, the head of the Gods called a council of the Gods; and they came together and concocted a plan to create the world and people it. (Joseph Smith, Journal of Discourses, Vol. 6, p. 5, 1844)

"Jesus was the bridegroom at the marriage of Cana of Galilee...We say it was Jesus Christ who was married, to be brought into relation whereby he could see his seed [children] before he was crucified (Orson Hyde, Journal of Discourses, vol. 2, p. 82).
"There was a marriage in Cana of Galilee; and on a careful reading of that transaction, it will be discovered that non less a person that Jesus Christ was married on that occasion. If he was never married, his intimacy with Mary and Martha an the other Mary also whom Jesus loved, must have been highly unbecoming and improper to say the best of it." (Orson Hyde, Journal of Discourses, vol. 4, p. 259).
"In the Church councils, it was spoken of: "Joseph F. Smith_ He spoke upon the marriage in Cana of Galilee. He thought Jesus was the bridegroom and Mary and Martha the brides."(Journal of Wilford Woodruff, July 22, 1883).
"The grand reason of the burst of public sentiment in anathemas upon Christ and his disciples, causing his crucifixion, was evidently based upon polygamy, according to the testimony of the philosophers who rose in that age. A belief in doctrine of a plurality of wives caused the persecution of Jesus and his followers. We might almost think they were Mormons (Jedediah Grant, Journal of Discourses, vol. 1, p. 346).


430 posted on 11/22/2010 3:11:15 PM PST by MHGinTN (Some, believing they can't be deceived, it's nigh impossible to convince them when they're deceived.)
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To: MHGinTN
I said "Skipping all your "quotations", because they are actually irrelevant to your point."

MHG said "To the mind lost in the mormonism hive, the quotes from your founders which prove the heretical beliefs at the heart of Mormonism do look irrelevant and such an mind isn't likely to even read them. But readers need to see the true nature of the Mormonism cultic teaching, so here we go again. BTW, the god of Mormonism is not the God of the Bible, but I can see why mormonism apologists want to float that deceit:"

OK, I'll explain it again, and I'll try to use smaller words this time.

You don't have the basic understanding of our doctrine required to go into the discussion you are trying to have.

You do not have the scientific knowledge required to understand the answers to the questions you are asking.

How do I know what? Easy, you keep asking questions that tell me how much you know.

I know, I just offended you, sorry. I just can't think of a tactful way of telling you this, maybe it's my autism. Logic is easy for me. Tact is not.

Let's just look at your first question after this as an example of wrong thinking.

You start with Who is God's God's God..."So on ad infinitum" as if that has any bearing on God's authority over you. God is your God, he is your creator, he has ultimate authority over you by virtue of the fact that he created you. You cannot appeal to his Creator, or to his creator's creator. Such questions are so far out of scope that I can see that you lack the basics to even discuss it.

An Example: In programming, if you have an object that has a value stored in a variable,you can access it, no problem. If you want to access a variable in another object, you can't by normal means. What do I mean normal means? Three requirements need to be met in order for you to access that value stores in another object. 1) the object has to have made the value accessible to functions outside of that object. 2) You have to have a pointer to that object. and 3) You have to be in the same "scope", or memory space.

You cannot "access" any God but yours. They are not structured that way. They are not in the same scope.

The very fact that you are asking the questions you are, shows you are not ready to have the conversation.

Let's try another example. I am faced with an algebra 1 student who is insisting that he can do calculus, and wants to challenge established formula with questions that make no sense.

Here is an article that I read here on FR, that I see as Science beginning to understand the reality I have known spiritually for a long time :Have we found the universe that existed before the Big Bang?

Remember this from my post?
I understand that your mind can only comprehend time, my religion however does not limit itself to the abnormal space in the eternities known as "time".
        <
>      
Eternity
time
You are here.
Eternity


Again, I'm skipping a bunch of nonsense questions, because you are saying it's blasphemy to speak of more than one God. When Jesus told some of the Jews, I and my Father are one., they wanted to stone him for Blasphemy. Jesus then spoke of all men who received the word of God as being gods. Here, read it yourself.

34 Jesus answered them, Is it not written in your law, I said, Ye are gods?
35 If he called them gods, unto whom the word of God came, and the scripture cannot be broken;
36 Say ye of him, whom the Father hath sanctified, and sent into the world, Thou blasphemest; because I said, I am the Son of God?
So, Jesus says we are gods if we receive God's word. It's in the Bible. You may not interpret the Bible that same way I do, and that's OK. Your wrong, but I'll try not to rub your face in it too much.

Thus all your posturing, all your grandstanding about Mormon "Gods" is just further proof that you don't even understand the Bible, let alone our teachings and doctrine.

Now, let's cut to your conclusion: If there is no ultimate beginning, then there is no ‘Alpha‘, which of course contradicts what God said of Himself as The Alpha and Omega. That is one big heresy at the heart of Mormonism, but the mormonism apologists want you to ignore these heresies and focus elsewhere, anywhere, so long as the truth about this heretical cult is not exposed!

Sigh, it's hard enough to explain calculus, but when someone does not want to understand and instead of learning, they want to prove it wrong with algebra, well it's sad and funny at the same time.

So, what is the Beginning speaking of in the Bible? God's beginning? Certainly not. The beginning of time? Possibly, The beginning of Mortality? Also possibly. It's definitely a beginning for us as mortals. So that is our scope, we exist inside of "time" The article I linked to above talks about how time has no meaning before the "Big Bang" and will have no meaning after the "Big Crunch". Thus my model above, here, let me repeat it for you.
                     <
>              
Eternity
Big Bang
The Beginning
Alpha
time
You are here.
Eternity
Big Crunch
The End
Omega

The alpha cannot apply to a being with no beginning, so your definition of Alpha cannot apply to God, but to our relationship with him. God the Father is unchanging from Eternity to all Eternity, he is the Alpha and Omega. Again, your misunderstanding of the realities of Christianity stems from the Trinity, a small change to the understanding of the nature of God has profound impact on the understanding of Men. It is too bad that change was made in 325 AD. Now, as when Jesus tried to restore truth, the bearers of God's truth are called heretics and sinners.

God bless and open your eyes MHG, God bless you this day, may you give thanks for the truths you know and open your heart to receive further light and knowledge from God that he may teach you. Either way, I hope you have a wonderful Thanksgiving.

Delph
431 posted on 11/25/2010 9:53:49 AM PST by DelphiUser ("You can lead a man to knowledge, but you can't make him think")
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To: Godzilla; greyfoxx39
OK, find a particular article at MRM and show us this pure hate. Be VERY specific DU, simple opposition to mormon dogma does not qualify. Please show us the obscene language, advocating or encouraging violent acts or crimes of hate, etc.

Oh and are opposing views welcome or allowed on www.lds.org (or any other lds owned sites) - didn't think so.


Fine, haven't gotten there yet, but I'll see how well you like looking all over the JW site I quoted from. IF you'll read all of it, then I'll spend time on the MRM, No? Double standards, again.

As for opposing views, none are allowed on the Catholic encyclopedia online and it's not a hate site, but an authoritative source for Catholics and a site that contains many authoritative sources on historical documents. I use it all the time.

BTW, Happy Thanksgiving!

Delph
432 posted on 11/25/2010 10:00:08 AM PST by DelphiUser ("You can lead a man to knowledge, but you can't make him think")
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To: Godzilla
The total definition of polytheism is met - the WORSHIP of more than one god as well as believing that there is MORE THAN ONE god.

No more than the Trinity meeting that definition.

Double standards have been talked about a lot on this thread. Declaring a religion to be polytheistic because it interprets a scripture differently than yours, and disallowing them from saying the same about yours is well, a double standard.

The definition of "ONE" as used int eh Bible has been amply presented here, and never addressed by your side. Can you, or can you not prove from the scriptures, without "interpreting" scripture, that God meant one substance, not one in heart might mind and strength?

Put up or shut up, time, prove it to me.

I double dog dare you. (Christmas story reference)

Delph

P.S. Happy Thanksgiving!
433 posted on 11/25/2010 10:07:19 AM PST by DelphiUser ("You can lead a man to knowledge, but you can't make him think")
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To: DelphiUser; Colofornian; greyfoxx39; MHGinTN; ejonesie22; Elsie; aMorePerfectUnion
No more than the Trinity meeting that definition.

Fail again DU. The only way is for you to use your perverted 'definition' of the Trinity.

Declaring a religion to be polytheistic because it interprets a scripture differently than yours, and disallowing them from saying the same about yours is well, a double standard.

There is 'interpreting' and there is blatant misrepresentation. When the "interpretation' doesn't match the underlying Greek/Hebrew is intellectually dishonest. And were it just interpreting a scripture passage - but this isn't just about that, but the open preaching and teaching of your religion. That adds a whole new component.

AFA 'disallowing' one to say the same - it is a function of the dishonest mormon representation. But then your 'scholarship' is still too thin to understand theos and theotes are singular and represent a singular God - not a committee of multiple gods.

The definition of "ONE" as used int eh Bible has been amply presented here, and never addressed by your side.......
Put up or shut up, time, prove it to me.

Joh 10:30* I and my Father are one.

Joh 8:58* Jesus said unto them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Before Abraham was, I am.

Col 2:9* For in him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily.

John 1:1* ¶ In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.

Guess you are going to have to eat crow and not turkey then DU.

434 posted on 11/25/2010 11:13:23 AM PST by Godzilla (3-7-77)
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To: DelphiUser
God bless and open your eyes MHG, God bless you this day, may you give thanks for the truths you know and open your heart to receive further light and knowledge from God that he may teach you.

I don't need any more:

Matthew 5:14-16

You are the light of the world. A town built on a hill cannot be hidden. Neither do people light a lamp and put it under a bowl. Instead they put it on its stand, and it gives light to everyone in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven.


435 posted on 11/25/2010 8:18:36 PM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going.)
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To: Elsie
Similarities:

In Shi'a Islam, the word "Sunnah" means the deeds, sayings and approvals of Muhammad and the twelve Imams who Shi'a Muslims believe were chosen by Muhammad to lead the Ummah—the world Muslim community.

In the context of biographical records of Muhammad, sunnah indeed often stands synonymous to hadith as most of the personality traits of Muhammad are known through descriptions about him, his sayings and his actions, after becoming a prophet at the age of forty.

 


From WIKI

436 posted on 11/26/2010 6:07:25 AM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going.)
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To: DelphiUser; Godzilla; greyfoxx39; aMorePerfectUnion; SZonian; Tennessee Nana; restornu; ...

 Islamic tradition holds that previous messages and revelations have been changed and distorted over time.

 

HMmmm...
Sounds VERY familiar!

 

As mentioned in the introductory chapter of Muhammad Manzoor Nomani's book "Maariful Hadith", the teachings of "wisdom" have been declared to be a function of Muhammad along with the teachings of the scripture. For a better understanding of the meaning of word "wisdom" or "hikmah", one can refer to the Quran in various ayat.

For example, verse 4:113 states "Allah revealeth unto thee the Kitab (Scripture) and Hikmah (wisdom), and teacheth thee that which thou knewest not. The Grace of Allah toward thee has been very great." 

(From WIKI)

 

God bless and open your eyes MHG, God bless you this day, may you give thanks for the truths you know and open your heart to receive further light and knowledge from God that he may teach you.
--DelphiUser

437 posted on 11/26/2010 6:22:13 AM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going.)
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To: DelphiUser

Tyical gobbledy goop nonsense. If you can’t address the posred quotes did you think your Mormon spin cycle would obfuscate your conmen founders from readership exposure. You worship in a cult of arrogant self-aggrandizement. Your posts must seem so intellectual to your Mormon mind, but you’re just another servant of the spirit of anti-Christ with your defense of the heretical garbage of your founders. Have a nice weekend ...


438 posted on 11/26/2010 7:35:57 PM PST by MHGinTN (Some, believing they can't be deceived, it's nigh impossible to convince them when they're deceived.)
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To: Religion Moderator; DelphiUser; Stourme

jesus-is-savior.com is not allowed on Free Republic at all.

I agree when it is discovered some sites are racist and should not be lump in with regular mainstream Christians.

Also it should be the same if some other groups want to pose as LDS when they are not recognized by the president of the Church.

It would be the same if some groups want to be known as Catholics when they are not recognized by the Pope.


439 posted on 11/27/2010 10:00:28 AM PST by restornu
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To: restornu
Also it should be the same if some other groups want to pose as LDS when they are not recognized by the president of the Church.

Like maxwell/FARMS, FAIR, Kerry shirts, bom answerman, etc.

440 posted on 11/27/2010 10:02:01 AM PST by Godzilla (3-7-77)
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