Hi, Arandur,
Since God is truly omnipotent, then what He “can” do is anything. What He chooses to do may be different than what He can do, and since He chooses to send Satan and the fallen spirits to outer darkness in their final outcome for all eternity, then it sounds to me like He does not “destroy” intelligences, but lets them live forever with the eternal consequences of the choices they have made, including those fallen “angels” having rejected Christ and rejected any and all truth and light. He did not “create” intelligences from nothing, but organized them and created each spirit using an intelligence as the beginning “spark of life” or “spark of living energy” or whatever one chooses to call it.
Thanks, ParkerD. For you or anyone else who believes similarly (don’t want to put all the burden on you), I have some more questions.
Sounds like you’re saying God
can destroy “intelligences,” whether He chooses to do so or not. From that I gather that intelligences are not necessary, in the sense that Catholics recognize God as the only
necessary being.
The Catholic belief stems from the logical requirement that there be a First and Necessary Cause, an unmoved mover. So I now have some further questions about these “intelligences.”
- Are intelligences eternal (no beginning and no end, unless destroyed by God or some other means)? I think you’ve answered yes before on this, but would like to be sure.
- What caused intelligences to be? Corollary: what is the purpose of their existence?
- Is there a finite number of intelligences? Corollary: can intelligences be created, and if so, by what power (if we have any suggestion of this)?
- Do intelligences differ in degree, character, greatness, or any other factor?
- “Intelligence” implies rationality and awareness, the ability to think. Do these have any such power, or is it a totally redefined term (as there seem to be several in Mormonism)?
- What does it mean for an “intelligence” to be “organized?” Is any actual creation involved, or just shaping of something existing, like manipulating clay rather than synthesizing clay or generating it ex nihilo?
- Are only humans organized intelligences (you’ve mentioned angels, but as I understand it, Mormons think angels and humans are of the same kind or species, just differing in condition or mission)? Or are all living things?
- In light of all this, what does it mean to “exist,” particularly before or after something else? “To exist” typically means to be, in the sense that there is no being until existence. By the normal understanding of this term, an intelligence and anything “organized” from an intelligence, because it is just a different form of that intelligence, can be said to always have existed; there was never a time when it did not exist, and therefore nothing came before it. Would you agree?
The most complete attempt at describing “intelligences” I’ve read is Orson Scott Card’s
aiuas from his Ender series. Are you familiar with his concepts? If so, do you think that’s pretty accurate? It’s a longshot, but that might provide a basis for discussion, as well.
As far as I have understood, the Only Begotten Son was “in the bosom of the Father” and became God’s Only Begotten Son by being begotten as a spirit from His intelligence, which was vastly superior in light, love, and affinity for truth, than all other intelligences, and the First Born Spirit by eons of time and the Only Begotten Son in the spirit world as well as on this earth. He was begotten in the flesh as the literal Son of God through the power of the Holy Ghost overshadowing Mary who conceived as a virgin and remained so until after His birth.
Okay, I think I need to delve deeper into just what you mean by “begotten” or “to beget.” I mean it in the traditional sense of to cause, produce, procreate, as a father begetting his son, a creation out of his own substance. I also mean it in the theological sense, as the Son, Jesus Christ, being
eternally begotten of the Father–“eternal” here meaning with no beginning nor end, and therefore the Son is not a
crea-ture; he was not created, but always was (see John 1). He always
existed, with God, and always
was God (singular).
In the theological sense, applied to Christ as opposed to any other creature, the only way Jesus alone can be said to be the “Only Begotten” is because he alone is like unto God, he alone is of the same substance as God. Remember that the normal understanding of the term “to beget” is procreation, where a child comes from the substance of its parent and is of that same type and substance. This is as opposed to other creation, such as building something, forming something artistically or conceptually, etc.
As you can see, using the traditional senses of the words, there is a problem with calling Jesus the “Only Begotten” if he is not of the same substance as God, is not eternally existent as and with God (i.e., he could not have started as something else and been formed or adopted, for that is not
procreated).
Do you disagree with what I have described as the “traditional” sense of “to beget?”
How would you define it, for your theology?
Do you agree that Jesus is “eternally begotten” of the Father?
If you define it differently, how do you make sense of John 1?
How do you justify the appellation “
Only Begotten?”
Oh, and for either the concept of “intelligences” as you describe them, and any differing definition of “to beget,” do you have any corroborating sources suggesting that anyone other than Joseph Smith et. al. believed or taught the same or similar? I.e., where in the Bible, non-Mormon tradition and history, do you see the same being talked about?