Maybe a better thought would be, why are we here? Do you think that the purpose of man was different before Christ came into the world than after he came?
Was not the purpose for man upon the earth the same from the beginning? Are we not all God’s Children?
Where did we come from? Why are we here? Where are we going?
To look at things only from our personal perspective instead of from the Eternal perspective that God looks at things takes us away from God instead of helping us get closer to him.
And, with that being said, I do not want an answer here to these, just ponder them and if someone wants to discuss further, let’s start a new topic on this. Let’s discuss here the question of the title of this discussion.
MEgus
That doesn’t answer the question that I posed against your premise, a premise upon which your claim of authority and apostasy relies.
Your questions are, IMO, irrelevant to the question I put to your premise. The purpose of our lives can remain constant while things change throughout history.
The purpose of our lives, by the way, is essentially: “God made me to know him, to love him, and to serve him in this world and to be happy with him forever in the next.” Here, in just 26 words, is the whole reason for our existence. Jesus answered the question even more briefly: “I came so that [you] might have life and have it more abundantly” (John 10:10)."
Or, in St. Ignatius of Loyola’s words: “The human person is created to praise, reverence, and serve God Our Lord, and by doing so, to save his or her soul.
All other things on the face of the earth are created for human beings in order to help them pursue the end for which they are created.
It follows from this that one must use other created things, in so far as they help towards one’s end, and free oneself from them, in so far as they are obstacles to one’s end.”
This purpose is constant through the ages, but this constancy does not imply that our faith journeys or God’s work among His children is in any way static.
Things obviously change–we experience life through time, and God interacts with us through time. Christ’s life
happened in a discrete point in time, and it mattered. If it mattered, how does that change things? Why did Jews and Christians alike believe that souls of the dead essentially waited for Christ’s death and resurrection if something did not change after that event? Why was the Incarnation special? Why was Christ’s sending of the Holy Spirit special?
If you look through history, you see distinct patterns in how God interacted with His children, to shepherd us and raise us through Salvation History. It went from Family (Noah) to Tribe (Abraham) to Nation (Israel) to Kingdom (Saul/David) to the whole World (with the welcoming of Gentiles in, finally, making the Church finally
Catholic, or “universal”).
The Mormon claim of a full Christian church unchanged but for apostasies has to contend with these patterns and with its own definition of “continuing revelation” to demonstrate who it can be a complete church while changing things, and if changing things, how a complete church?