T
TOmNossor
Guest
I again disagree. In fact, I believe the departure from creation ex materia was what resulted in the radical ontological separation between God and man. To become One as John 17 states is certainly to become one in purpose, but I would suggest it is much more than we can observe in human purpose-unity. God became man so that we may become God and gods. The unity and the distinctness that exists in the Trinity is in my opinion the prototype of our relationship with the Trinity. The major difference is that God must lift us up, because we cannot do this on our own.Indeed it cannot, for according to the D&C, we all (and God as well) are uncreated Intelligences that could not be created, just as they cannot be destroyed. As such, and as we maintain our individuality (as there is no sufficient room in LDS doctrine for a enw-age Panteistic scheme), we are eternally separate from God, just as God is from Himself (the Father from the Son from the Spirit). Thus, why the church can only claim that they are “one in purpose”, they cannot be one in the sense known to Catholics.
My questions and answers:Same mind/purpose, and made of the same clay; but still nothing more, at best, than a bundle of wires transmitting the same signal: In a limited sense “one”, but each fully independant and, ultimately, self sufficient. We are not emanations from a single Soul, or even springing from the creative Mind of God
Do God the Father and God the Son have two wills? My answer is, “yes both possess a will, but the Son freely and completely subordinates His will to God the Father’s will.” So there is a threeness and a oneness in just this tiny aspect of God.
I suggest that as we unite with the Triune God we do not loose our individuality just as Christ does not loose his individuality as part of the Trinity.
I am unaware of a Catholic salvation paradigm that would suggest that we loose our individuality. Certainly the idea of the beatific vision does not include this, but I would suggest the idea of uniting with God and becoming divine also does not include a loss of our individuality.
And I think BJRumph hints at my solution to the solution to the Heavenly Father vs. co-eternal intelligences paradigm, but I would express it differently AND I would acknowledge that perfect knowledge of this is not been revealed.
Well, the “wiggling of toes” metaphor suggest to me an irreverent and overly simplistic way of expressing something that I have thought before (and I think expressed on either Fair or ZLMB or both). Again though this is not something we have perfect knowledge about.Of course, I have never hear any mormon explain it this way, but it is the end result of what is taught in their “official” doctrine.
“Wiggling toes” and the seemingly authoritative “this is the way it is” were the only things I found off-putting. There is a tendency to just disagree with anything a non-LDS says about LDS, but this is fairly universal as I have seen in here as a non-Catholic.Funny, if I had expressed it this way in a mormon board, it would be accepted as insightful (if trite); but I suspect here it will just be more “hateful lies” and “diatribe.” Oh well; hopefully I can at least add a new spin to the endless Circle.
Charity, TOm