L
Le_Cracquere
Guest
They are certainly non-Nicene … and that creed strikes me as the best and most useful way to distinguish “Christian” from “non-Christian.” So, in a word, no.
St. Melito of Sardis’ work, “Peri ensomatou theou, on the corporeity of God, of which some Syriac fragments have been preserved. It is referred to by Origen (In Gen., i, 26) as showing Melito to have been an Anthropomorphite, the Syriac fragments, however, prove that the author held the opposite doctrine.”Footnote 16 notes that Origen criticizes Melito’s anthropomorphism found in Gen Frg/PG 12.93A.
In the early 70’s some Mormons believed that blacks should be allowed to hold the priesthood, but that was not the position held by the Mormon Church. There are Mormons who believe the Book of Mormon is an allegory, but that is not the the position held by the Mormon Church.Not sure what cherry picking you’re referring to. The whole point of me sharing this quote is to refute TP6’s incorrect assertion in comment #60 “there is no evidence at all the early Church held to God having a body” Origen clearly states that some early Christians “supposed that God should be understood as a man, that is, adorned with human members and human appearance” in this quote.
The entry for “Mother in Heaven” in the Encyclopedia of Mormonism can be found here: http://eom.byu.edu/index.php/Mother_in_HeavenIf that’s so, can you show an LDS scripture that supports that? No. It’s not an official belief, the best you can show is an obscure line in a hymn and hymns are not scriptures. Many LDS people believe that but no one prays to her like they do to Mary. Oh wait, Mormons never pray to Mary.
If that’s so, can you show an LDS scripture that supports that? No. It’s not an official belief, the best you can show is an obscure line in a hymn and hymns are not scriptures. Many LDS people believe that but no one prays to her like they do to Mary. Oh wait, Mormons never pray to Mary.
ALL HUMAN BEINGS—male and female—are created in the image of God. Each is a beloved spirit son or daughter of heavenly parents
The early church had numerous believers in an embodied God. Augustine refused to become a Christian because Christians believe in an embodied God. Origin also witnesses to this belief.I’ve refuted you on this so many times by this point. You are confusing logical subordinationism with ontological subordinationism, of which the Church Fathers were the former. @gazelam, please just stop.
(Also, just to note, there is no evidence at all the early Church held to God having a body; all suggest he was pure Spirit.)