Arandur, I do agree with you. Language has to convey meaning. Greek did a much better job of that than Aramaic.
What you want us to believe is that God would build his church upon a man. I just don’t buy that. God builds his church upon God, (the big Rock) not upon the arm of flesh.(Man)
Look at Revelations. The Apostles are the foundation of the Church. Jesus, who is God, is cornerstone (the first placement, the guide).
Does God have the power to protect a human from teaching error?
Does God have the power to make His Will be done–without violating human free will?
If yes to both, then He can make the Church as the Catholic Church is described. If you take the plain meaning as well as the deeper meaning of God’s Word, then He did. If you dismiss the plain meaning to justify some man-made meaning that you desire, you are not changing truth, just ignoring it.
The scriptures tell us that in many places.
It also tells us that Jesus spoke in parables, including the one about the man counting the cost to build his tower before starting it. Was Jesus the wise man who counted the cost, or the one we all laugh at who couldn’t finish? The Great Apostasy is first and foremost a declaration that Jesus was a fool and an idiot, and laughs at him and his works.
Scripture also tells us of Jesus’ parable of the wise man who built his house on a rock, not on shifting sand. Did Jesus not know the storm was coming? The Scripture passages speaking of false prophets that Mormons are so fond of pointing to (even though they apply to their founder) show that surely Jesus did; in fact, he even told his apostles.
So did Jesus prepare for the storm by building on a rock? Or did he build on shifting sand? The Great Apostasy assumes, again, that Jesus was the fool who built on sand. Who’s the wise man in that scenario? Satan, who builds on deception? He certainly has been successful in his kingdom of the world and in leading many astray.
There are many other passages that demonstrate the blasphemy of the Great Apostasy, the fact that it insults God and laughs at Him.
I think the meaning the Holy Ghost has conveyed to me as what the Lord was saying is the correct meaning. I know you disagree, and that is your right and privilege. I respect you for that. But it is also my right to council with God and learn for myself what he means, and that is what I do every day
This is relativism. If there is no external standard by which to judge your own ideas or interpretation of what you think God is telling you, then you are only worshipping yourself and your own ideas.
What about the millions of other “Christians” with their own personal interpretations and their own beliefs that God is telling them what is true? How do you know that they are wrong when they use the same standard you are using to claim that they are right and you are wrong?
And if you, and others, want to take that privilege away from me, who’s plan are you following?
Where is this coming from, and why do so many Mormons say such similar things? Who “wants to take that privilege away from” you? What are you talking about?
We are merely presenting you with the truth about God, His Church, and His Will. You are still free to accept it or reject it, to your own reward or peril.