E
evanfaust
Guest
Livingwaters,Actually, the definition of God accepted by Catholics/Protestants is not confusing, illogical, nor does it lack common sense. The problem arises in caricatures of that doctrine, which are pretty common amongst LDS and other non-Trinitarian critics of the Trinity doctrine. Many LDS leaders and writers/apologists have actually criticized the heretical teaching of Modalism, and not the Trinity doctrine, which is always amusing.
The fact is that the Trinity doctrine matches more clearly the teachings of the Bible than the LDS teachings on God. The Trinity doctrine, in its simplest form, is that there is only one God, and there are three distinct Persons who are fully God. LDS believe many things about the Divine that are not Biblical, such as:
-the belief that the Son and Holy Ghost are literal spirit offspring of Heavenly Father and a Heavenly Mother
-the belief that the Father progressed to/achieved Godhood, and was therefore not always God
-the Father is married to a Heavenly Mother .
The concept of trinity, which word by the way does not exist in the bible, was an effort to keep Christianity a monotheistic religion. In order to keep in line with Judaism and Islam, Christians devised a creed to define the figure of the father, the son and the holly ghost as one God. This creed, which is accepted by majority of Christian was enacted by a group of individuals that were not apostles or prophets.
I want to make a correction on what you stated about Mormons and the Deity.
The Father and the Son have a glorified body of flesh and bones, but the Holly Ghost is a personage of spirit. We know the Son is the firstborn of the father in the spirit, but we don’t know if the Holly Ghost is offspring of God. We have no revelation about it. God has always been God. His intelligence was always a God. As far as heavenly mother…we also do not have any official doctrine about her. There are speculations and extrapolations of doctrines, but there is no official doctrine about it and we don’t teach it.