N
NewSeeker
Guest
What Mormons fail to grasp is that the perfected love that will be experienced by all of us in heaven reflects the kind of love that God has within himself eternally, where there are no gradations or degrees. Perfect love radiates out equally and infinitely in all directions, transcending both space and time. All are loved equally and perfectly. As I understand such a mystery, the earthly idea of “I love my wife” will be meaningless in that context. Of course I will love my wife. But in the next world I will love my wife exactly the same as I love everyone else. That kind of perfect love is the kind of love that God loves us with and that is the kind of love that we will possess - once we are fully transformed into the image of Christ. This is not the kind of love we have now for our families. Marriage and family is a training ground for acquiring that kind of love, only completed through the action of the Holy Spirit. I love my wife and children. I want them with me for eternity. As I said, what will the statement “I love my wife” even mean in a context where all love is perfected and takes on the character of the love God possess within himself? Does God love His Only Begotten more than he loves us? Is God’s love for Jesus qualitatively distinct from his love for us? I don’t think so. The apostles taught us that God IS love; he doesn’t HAVE love. We have love only in finite amounts. Categories of more/less and differences in degree do not apply to infinite, perfected love, the kind of love that God has and that we will be given. Will the earthly concept of marriage even apply? In a way, it seems to me that we will all be married to each other, as all relational bonds will be perfected. The Mormon notion of eternal marriage neglects this truth. It seems it really does come down to the sex question. For Mormons, it’s all about the license to have eternal increase with your eternal spouse. Just as my marriage to my wife now allows for licit sexual relations for the sake of creating children. Food for thought: if we weren’t married but lived completely celibate lives, is there sin in living in the same house? Sharing the same room? Sleeping in the same narrow bed?Anyone who believes that Mormonism is primarily about reaching Heaven simply to procreate (“like a stapler or pencil performs a function”) has utterly and completely missed the point. Yes, we believe that we may have children after this life and we marvel at the vastness and extent of it all. But even here on this fallen Earth it should be obvious to anyone that love is what binds a family together and without it only heartache and misery remain. It is love between a parent and a child and between a husband and a wife which is magnified in the eternities.
