1
1holycatholic
Guest
I have always wondered how the LDS could defend their polytheism in the realm of Natural Theology.LDS (and its offshoots) degenerated from Protestantism into a non-Christian polytheistic fertility cult.
I have always wondered how the LDS could defend their polytheism in the realm of Natural Theology.LDS (and its offshoots) degenerated from Protestantism into a non-Christian polytheistic fertility cult.
Thank you, an excllent scripture confirming the LDS doctrine of pre-existence.Jeremiah 1:5
â Before I formed you in the womb I knew you; Before you were born I sanctified you; I ordained you a prophet to the nations.â
Very well said. And I see no âlistening earsâ around here:Mark 4:9
And He said to them, âHe who has ears to hear, let him hear!â
You missed out the âsâââinsaneâ as your crazy quotes!I meant profane but inane equally applies.
Any source that reasons correctly and provides accurate citations is s credible source.Wikipedia isnât a very credible source.
Nonetheless, it does say:
I didnât say that their theology of the Apostasy is identical to ours; but they did believe in an Apostasy, which you denied.Doesnât sound like early onset apostasy as you claim.
If you are going to cite anything about the LDS please cite material published on lds.org. When citing Catholic Church teaching please cite from vatican.va, usccb.org or newadvent.org (online Catholic encyclopedia with Imprimatur & Nihil Obstat.)
I cite from any source I consider to be credible. You can accept or reject it as you wish.A blog or Wikipedia isnât an credible source.
I did have a look; but your citation was not very relevant to the point you were making. What I (and the Protestants) call the Apocrypha, is what you call the Deutrocanonicals. A more relevant article to refer to would have been this one:You didnât bother to read what I wrote about the Apocrypha and Deuterocanonical books. It cited a source that the Church indicates is free from doctrinal and moral error. You cited a personal blog. :tsktsk:
Thatâs not accurate. You wrote this earlier in the thread:I didnât say that their theology of the Apostasy is identical to ours; but they did believe in an Apostasy, which you denied.
That is what I disagree with. You have refuted yourself.We agree with the Protestants in one thing, that an Apostasy occured in the early Christian church
From the Newadvent link you provided:I did have a look; but your citation was not very relevant to the point you were making. What I (and the Protestants) call the Apocrypha, is what you call the Deutrocanonicals. A more relevant article to refer to would have been this one:
newadvent.org/cathen/03267a.htm
As you can see from this article, the Deutrocanonicals were not always regarded on an equal standing with the rest of the biblical books by the Catholics. It is only in the Council of Trent of 1546, and the Vatican Council of 1870, that they gained full acceptanceâand that only as a reaction to the Protestantsâ rejection of them. But they have not always been so accepted in Catholic history.
No, those are not the keys. That is the power to forgive sins through confession.Just a little side note, that is not actually correct. All the Apostles possessed those keys, not just Peter. Peter was the chief of the Apostles, and presided over the Twelve; but the keys were possessed by all the Apostles. Here is the quote:
John 20:
21 Then said Jesus to them again, Peace be unto you: as my Father hath sent me, even so send I you.
22 And when he had said this, he breathed on them, and saith unto them, Receive ye the Holy Ghost:
23 Whose soever sins ye remit, they are remitted unto them; and whose soever sins ye retain, they are retained.
zerinus
This is amusing. This is fundamentally the same as those that simply say, âread catholic.comâ. It doesnât indicate that Zerinus has the answers, only that as he finds one that promotes his position, he posts it on the blog.I would have no objections if you did. But the criticisms that you are making of LDS are stock criticisms that have been made millions of times over, and replied to millions of times over. Why should I regurgitate the same answers over again when hundreds of readymade answers already exist elsewhere?
zerinus
Thank you. I was wondering when someone point that out. And the word âkeysâ are not even mentioned in the quote, so I fail to see how the LDS can even get âJesus giving the apostles keysâ from that quote.No, those are not the keys. That is the power to forgive sins through confession.
And if I wrote the Book of Gene, I could also place the âgates of hellâ in it and define it as I wanted to as well. Not evidence, except that Joseph Smith wanted Scripture to mean what he, through his evolution of desire, wanted it to mean.Well, I canât accept that interpretation either. The expression âgates of hell . . .â occurs more often in LDS scripture than in the New Testament, with the same meaning; and it is obvious from the context that it means that the powers of darkness or the devil will not prevail against them.
zerinus
Sorry Prodigal, if my insufficient answers canât help you, anything else I say will not be of any help to you.Sorry Prodigal, I had a look, and I think that all of your objections have been addressed. If you canât see it, then anything else I say will not be of any help to you.
zerinus
If you mean, were there people in the early Church who would agree with your position, then yes. Was that Church position, then no.I think that you are wrong. Try this link.
I think you are wrong about this one too. I donât have the time right now to search for the information on the Internet; but I believe originally the Catholic Church did not regard the Apocrypha to be on a par with the rest of the biblical books.
zerinus
That and 75 cents will buy you a real cheap cup of coffee.Unheard of in the Bible!
We have the Council of the Twelve Apostles, which Paul says is the âfoundationâ of the church. The fact that you lack this basic understanding, indicates your lack of Christianity.
LDS are the only true Christian. All the rest are Apostate Christians!
zerinus
Sorry, but once again, a non-Catholic, and non-Christian, attempted to interpret the actual Church of Jesus Christ. When King Henry VIII decided he didnât like the Church, he made his own. Joseph Smith did the same.Lack of Twelve Apostles makes for Apostate Christianity.
zerinus
A few posts later, Z said they believe only one person can hold the keys at a time. So Jesus canât have given keys to the apostles as a group. This quote is a red herring that proves apostolic authority, but is mute on the keys.Thank you. I was wondering when someone point that out. And the word âkeysâ are not even mentioned in the quote, so I fail to see how the LDS can even get âJesus giving the apostles keysâ from that quote.
Since the LDS are polytheists âfalse godsâ would be more apropos.LDS is a false religion, with a false god. There are many good people there, but they are simply misguided.
:doh2:If then many gods existed, they would necessarily differ from each other. Something therefore would belong to one which did not belong to another. And if this were a privation, one of them would not be absolutely perfect; but if a perfection, one of them would be without it. So it is impossible for many gods to exist.
To qualify as a christian one must believe in Jesus Christ. The trinity is not a qualification for christian belief. Many lds live good christian lives because they attempt to keep the commandments and to live according to the word of god. They also believe Jesus to be the savior. I am not sure that it is correct to define a christian according to the trinity. Many mormons would be considered great âcatholicsâ by the way they live their lives.I beg to differ.
LDS are not Christian. To qualify as a Christian, one must believe in the Trinity: One God but Three Divine Persons â Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. In fact, this is why Morman baptism is not recognized as valid in the Catholic Church. Valid Baptism must contain the words: âI baptize you in the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.â
As to the New Testament, LDS have the habit of re-writing Scripture to suit their ideology. Therefore, they follow the New Testament as per their own interpretation.
I am not saying that many LDS are not good people, or that many arenât leading good lives. However, sadly, their system of beliefs do not meet the qualifications to be considered a Christian religion.
Which is one reason that when a catholic is baptized lds, he or she has no problems in coming back to the catholic church. Since both churches do not recognize the other baptisms, a catholic/mormon can do both religions without much of a problem.Catholics do not recognize an LDS baptism. See vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_20010605_battesimo_mormoni_en.html