I gave it as an illustration of why
I
think that continuing revelation is more important than “once-for-all” revelation. At the Judgment, by what criteria are we going to be judged? The question “by what criteria” is a good one. Continuing revelation would not be problematic at all if it were always consistent with previous revelation. Continuing revelation wouldn’t even be a problem if it rejected other church’s beliefs, so long as it was consistent within your church community.
If a prophet is genuine, and reveals messages from the Lord, how can any subsequent prophet contradict him? Yet if a subsequent prophet brings evidence that the previous prophet’s message was truly wrong, shouldn’t we reject the original prophet’s entire message as untrustworthy?
The problem with Mormonism occurs when your prophets’ revelations contradict what your previous prophets have revealed.
– Originally black skin was a sign of God’s curse throughout all of human history. Now black people are welcome.
– Originally polygamy was condemned. Afterwards it was the highest virtue. Now it is condemned again, but only in this human life.
– Originally the sacrament was bread and wine. Now it is bread and water.
– Originally human spirits in pre-existence existed from all eternity and were co-equal with God; they had no beginning. Now pre-existent human spirits are begotten and literally born of heavenly parents.
– Originally Joseph Smith was a true prophet, and everything he revealed was God’s truth. Now the designation of “true prophet” is reserved to the current president. Joseph Smith revelations are subject to scrutiny and are God’s truth only inasmuch as they are accepted by current church authorities.
Do God’s criteria change? When continuing revelation is contradictory and today’s Solemn Truth becomes tomorrow’s misunderstanding, we can’t know what Truth to follow. You wind up trying to follow a chaotic god who laughs and says: “Guess what? I changed my mind!”
BDawg:
Personally, I think moral character and having a personal relationship with God will count more than having all correct beliefs.
Ahhh … the catch-all “personal relationship with God” which allows you to be the ultimate judge of divine truth. What happens when your relatives and friends define “moral character” differently than you?
BDawg:
So a creed that is intended to disallow further revelation on a subject could be a bad thing.
Catholics distinguish between Dogma, Doctrine, and Discipline. Mormon prophets do not.
A dogma is a divinely revealed truth. Once revealed, dogma does not change; it is never contradictory. It applies to everyone for all time. It is the cornerstone laid upon the solid rock foundation. The Nicene Creed is a dogmatic statement. This is not a bad thing.
A doctrine is an official teaching of truth by the church magesterium. Doctrine applies equally to everyone, and is also never contradictory. Only those doctrines that are also dogmatic are included in a creed. Doctrine that is not dogmatic, however, may not forsee future events, and as such is subject to clarification.
A discipline is a simply a rule for good order. However, someone can take solemn vows to follow certain disciplines permanently, even though the rule may later change for other people. Priestly celibacy is a discipline.
For Mormons, everything Joseph Smith and all subsequent prophets proclaim is given to the church as divinely revealed dogmas. This has always happened, even though in retrospect your later generations downgrade such “revelations” to doctrinal statements or set them aside altogether.
You tell me, then:
Since Mormon revelation is contradictory, by what criteria are you going to be judged?