Because Rory helped and you reminded me, here is a council’s statement:
“First, then, the holy Roman church, founded on the words of our Lord and Saviour, firmly believes, professes and preaches one true God, almighty, immutable and eternal, Father, Son and holy Spirit; one in essence, three in persons.”
-----Council of Florence, Ecumenical XVII, Session 11, 4 Feb., 1442, (EWTN website)
Yes, like I said The Catholic Church, like St. James, says that God is immutable, but does not define or explain what the Church means by the word immutable. I think the fact we believe God created would indicated that the Catholic Church does not share your God is a rock definition; therefore your Post #18 does not reflect the teaching of the Catholic Church. It reflects an invention in your own mind.
It seems that most people here do not have any concern over this issue. I do not completely understand that, but it sure seems to be the case.
Because we know God loves us and hears our prayers. Losing sleep over the lack of definition of a word seems like a waste of time. Maybe it is only worthwhile for someone who needs an axe to beat the Catholic Church with.
Let me try this parallel.
Wearing garments does not disturb me in the least (and I do not care to talk more about it BTW), but trying to use thoughts from Weinandy to align worshiping an impassible God instead of a passible God does. To the extent that Weinandy deals with and dulls this issue it will still be a mark against me being Catholic IMO.
Again, it is your problem invented by you, not the Catholic Church; therefore the Catholic Church cannot solve it for you. And immutable and impassible are not synonyms.
Now, the origins of the BOA does disturb me some. So I can sympathize (unlike the impassible God BTW ) with Catholics and former-Mormons who have no desire to pick up the concerns they would have for the BOA. Perhaps you can think of your Mormon issue that creates the most stress for you. It is quite unlikely that I have not already thought about this and few of them bother me.
Again, the “I’ve heard it before illusion of answers” defense doesn’t hold any water with me. Science has shown the B0fA to not be what Joseph Smith claimed it to be.
Why would I pick up an impassible God theology when I have a passible God who interacts with me regularly?
There is only one God and the God you interact with is impassible.
Code:
And the other parallel I have already drawn it the two papyri theory as an explanation of the BOA. I doubt many non-LDS find that so convincing that the issue becomes unimportant. Rory’s answer (and I love Rory) & Robyn’s answer (and it was nice) do not address this as well as Weinandy or Gavrilyuk IMO. And I think Weinandy and Gavrilyuk present God as less worship worthy than God in LDS thought (at least as it is outlined by Blake Ostler).
I prefer to worship the God of all creation. You make the god invented by Joseph Smith to be just a regular guy; like Adam. I reject that because it is irrational.
I would rather worship the real God who is the modalistic monstor that is presented in the mis-characterizations of the Trinity, then the false God who meets with my personal approval.
Yes, I think you are looking for a god that meets your personal approval; see your Post #76. You know the immutable God is not a rock, you want a Father that will jump up and play with you at your command instead of continuing to love you while he finishes watching the game.
Code:
But God as presented by Ostler verses the God of the councils has the added benefit IMO that He is in better alignment with the Bible. He is in better alignment with how I experience God in my life. So, I think it more likely that God’s true characteristics are closer to those presented by Ostler within a LDS framework than those presented by the councils of the Catholic Church.
Yes, I am familiar with Mormon eisegesis. For example:
I find it likely they used “immutable” in a way similar to Aquinas and other Catholic thinkers.