Here is what I have already offered:
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=11763860&postcount=217
Wonderful article espousing the same thing I had been saying for years.
mormonnewsroom.org/article/approaching-mormon-doctrine
Originally Posted by Harold B. Lee
If anyone, regardless of his position in the Church, were to advance a doctrine that is not substantiated by the standard Church works, meaning the Bible, the Book of Mormon, the Doctrine and Covenants, and the Pearl of Great Price, you may know that his statement is merely his private opinion. The only one authorized to bring forth any new doctrine is the President of the Church, who, when he does, will declare it as revelation from God, and it will be so accepted by the Council of the Twelve and sustained by the body of the Church. And if any man speak a doctrine which contradicts what is in the standard Church works, you may know by that same token that it is false and you are not bound to accept it as truth.
The question I have most often heard is not, “What is Mormon doctrine?” (and never “What is basic Mormon doctrine?”) but “What is official Mormon doctrine?” Doctrines are teachings, and adherents of a religion are expected to be in some degree of harmony with that religion’s common doctrines. “
Official” doctrines are more authoritative. Adherents have less leeway on whether to accept those or not.
Mormons hold to doctrines not in “the standard Church works” and reject doctrines that are in them. This gets confusing - to me, as well as making them feel uncertain on some issues. It’s understandable - it’s human nature - that not all members of a religion will conduct themselves exclusively in harmony with the teachings of that religion. I accept that. But in the case of “the standard Church works,”
specifically the Mormon Creed, I believe not a single Mormon really believes it; the evidence I have seen argues they do not, not even the missionaries who visit occasionally.
The “standard Church works” as interpreted by Mormons seem to present no clear picture of the Nature of God, meaning [the *Nature of] “God” in the deeper theological sense, not in terms of sociological relationships. It is as though there is
no doctrine on the nature of God (other than that he’s a man and there are a lot of them).
(btw, I never, ever, ever, want to base my description of what others believe on my own faulty and ignorance-based assumptions. If I ever give that impression, the problem rests in misexpression or misinterpretation, for either of which I would be comfortable apologizing. All my descriptions of a person’s religious beliefs are based on what is available from that person’s religious body, including
official writings, and his
own statements, and from personal
experience with the same. If I stray from that, I apologize. “God hasn’t quite got me ‘perfect’ yet.”)