You argue all this word salad stuff about consubstantial. The really interesting thing is the possible belief God was man on another planet. I think that is the most problematic part if it is true they believe this.
I assume this was directed at me .
As I believe you know, I entered this thread because a LDS was being subjected to an “uncharitable ‘Gotcha.’” This “gotcha” involved the definition of the word consubstantial. I claimed the LDS point good within a wide range of definitions for consubstantial AND that Catholics didn’t understand the word anyway. I claimed Catholics would deny dogma trying to flesh it out. One did (two if you choose to believe Stephen168 denied dogma from the 4th Lateran Council).
So, I get the “word salad.” You are right. But it is Catholicism that claims it is error free and being guided toward “all truth.” Theology is not something LDS place much emphasis upon. I have said many times we seek an orthopraxy not an orthodoxy.
Now concerning your “most problematic:”
I am not sure if you have read Irenaeus, Tertullian, and Origin. Irenaeus the earliest of the bunch wrote about 150 years after Christ called a group of non-theologians to receive revelation and start a “church” outside the Jewish authority (Ciaphus). These three authors offer wildly speculative thoughts that have no place in modern Catholicism (and many thoughts that are part of Catholicism today after all these folks are the ones whose writings were preserved). It was 1250 years before St. Thomas tried to pull together Catholic thought into his Summa, but after experiencing the real God, he called his work “straw” and never wrote again.
I share this because LDS with our denial of the importance of theology are working out our theology as a secondary intellectual pursuit. I subscribe to the thoughts offered by LDS scholar Blake Ostler in his much praised 3 Volume set,
Exploring Mormon Thought. God the Father became embodied in a way analogous to Jesus Christ becoming embodied. God the Father is the one called “greater than they all” in the Book of Abraham and God the Father was fully God before, after, and during His mortal sojourn.
You will hear from Living Waters (former LDS) and Stephen168 and … many things about how Ostler’s view cannot be embraced. I have taught Ostler’s view in church and nary an eyebrow was raised. But, in the world of anti-Mormonism, only the view most likely to be rejected and reviled can be the Mormon view.
So, it is true that Joseph Smith possibly (probably not IMO) and virtually all LDS leaders until the 21st century after Joseph Smith, taught that God the Father was once a man who had to work out His salvation. Very seldom (I am not immediately aware of any) will you hear during these 180 years that God the Father ever sinned (this is one of the reasons that I view God the Father’s incarnation similar to Christ’s rather than identical to ours). I believe God the Father was fully God during his time on earth, because I believe the scripture D&C 20:17 (I quoted earlier) refers to God the Father.
Anyway, I think Catholic Answers Non-Catholic message board is a poor place to learn about Catholicism, but it is a very poor place to learn about Mormonism. I recommend
Exploring Mormon Thought by Ostler and/or a good LDS message board.
Charity, TOm****