…Continued
I don’t see why Mormon history, or Catholic history can’t be discussed or even debated. There are facts and then there’s speculation. If there is speculation then both sides should own up to it. On the other hand facts are facts. i.e President Hinckley flat out denied that Mormons believe that men can become Gods. That’s a fact and open to debate and even criticism.
Ok I guess I understand what your are saying now. To be honest, I totally misunderstood this post. I didn’t recocognize that this quote was from those “Mormon Stumpers”.
The reason I was so flippant about them was that I personally feel I have an understanding of this issue and for me, the stumpers are not stumpers. I have my questions to be sure, but I have resolved those questions for myself. You may disagree with my persepctive, but nevertheless I will present it. I also have to apologize because frankly most of us here have been rehashing the same old stuff for quite a while now, and I forget who was in on what conversation.
That is one of the reasons I am unresponsive to the others here – we have been over it so many times before, and the time to spend here is not infinite.
Now you come in, and it’s kind of like sitting in the dining room with two old people who have been bickering 40 years and you have no clue why they are being so hostile when they ask the other to say, “pass the milk”. It is some problem that happened 40 years ago that they have not gotten over. It’s kinda like that here, but you get to be the newcomer. Sorry.
So why does all this one God/several god thing appear so inconsistent? That is what I will try to answer.
It IS inconsistent to talk about the problem because basically it involves a linguistic paradox that APPEARS to be a real paradox.
Before I get into the theology, let me do some ground work.
There is a paradox called the “liars paradox”. There was a philosopher named Bertrand Russel who did some work on this in a sophisticated way, and his work added to our understanding of some logical issues.
Here is a link to a site that explains it very well:
http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~cfs/305_html/Deduction/Liar’sParadox.html
And if you want to get into it a little further:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liar_paradox
What the liar’s paradox shows is that to solve it, it is necessary to CHANGE THE CONTEXT of the question. It is necessary to ask the question in the right way. In fact, there is a Mormon video which has been circulated which has had a distorted title put on it called “lying for God” which makes this exact point.
Those who do not understand the need for asking questions IN CONTEXT misinterpret the video. Those who understand it, have no problem. So this is what I hope to do here, though I have done it before elsewhere. As I have said to Rolltide, CONTEXT IS EVERYTHING
So now the question is: do Mormons believe there is One God or many gods? The paradoxical answer is “yes”! If you look at quotes in which you do not understand the CONTEXT you will get this impression. “But it’s paradoxical!! How can you say that?? Why is it that Joseph and pres Hinckley in one place say there is one God and in others that there are many gods? Are they lying?”
No, not at all
To me, the answer has to do with time. Let’s think of the classical Christian view of God. Timeless, transcendent, the creator (we would say organizer) of time. God is eternal, He always was and always will be. He is one. It says that multiple times in the Book of Mormon. We believe that is true.
Paul dupre who posts here, is an ex-mormon catholic who believes that the Mormon and Catholic conception of the “trinity” are resolvable (Paul I know you will read this, so if I get this wrong, I know you will correct me) if we think in terms of a “family” of three persons, separate and distinct, but one. Mormons would say “one in purpose” catholics would say “one in being”, which I am not sure what that means, but ok. I think they say “three whos and one what”, and I am sure I will get corrected on that one. I think that ultimately the Mormon and the Catholic concept of the trinity are pretty close, but I am sure they will disagree.
But what about this “man was once God stuff?”
This is where we need to change the context to talk about God in a different way.
Suppose there are multiple universes about which we in principle cannot know? I don’t even know if the word “universe” is big enough. I have talked before about multiple “big bangs”
What happend “before” the big bang? If time and space started with the big bang, It doesn’t really even make sense to talk about what happened “before” time. It is like the “liar’s paradox”. You can only get out of the paradox by having your language jump to a different context. It’s like that video game that is it’s own world. You can buy a house, have a family, do all kinds of things and have an entire life that is only really a video game. Who is God for those "people"in the video game? Is he two dimensional and made of electrons on the screen? But to those “people” he is God. He is infinite and eternal. And he really is in that reality. IN THAT CONTEXT he is God. This is only an analogy.
But when we step outside that context, our perspective changes.
(Continued in next post)