M
mwok
Guest
I’m just not seeing anywhere that Christ is preparing us for “Godhood”. What I see is God’s perfect love lived out in the Incarnate Word named Jesus Christ.
Lax16,Hi Parker - You forgot this one:
Question:
Who created Heavenly Father and Heavenly Mother?
Your Quote:
They are self-existing. Answer, then, is “no one.”
My Question:
If God’s parents are self-existing, then they are the beginning. Were they gods?
Don’t you believe that God was once a man?This is my third time asking this.
Except that “His offspring” is not literal.NewSeeker,
. Latter-day Saints know that the phrase “His offspring” is literal, and means precisely what the translated words say.
From MW on-line:You still don’t seem to “get” that spirits and spirit birth are not physical, so there is no “pregnancy” implied at all beyond this life. You can rest your mind about those poor women.
Heavenly Father and Mother are physical beings if their “offspring” are not a result of the reproductive process then they are offspring in a figurative sense and not a literal one.Definition of OFFSPRING
1
a : the product of the reproductive processes of an animal or plant : young, progeny b : child
2
a : product, result <scholarly manuscripts—the labored offsprings of PhDs — Donna Martin>
b : offshoot 1a
Zaffiroborant,Except that “His offspring” is not literal.
From MW on-line:
Heavenly Father and Mother are physical beings if their “offspring” are not a result of the reproductive process then they are offspring in a figurative sense and not a literal one.
From a literal reading and understanding of Luke 1:32-35, and from Luke 2:49 and John 17:1 where Jesus says it in very plain language.ParkerD
Where do you get that Jesus is God’s “offspring”?
Brigham Young (a Mormon Prophet) believed that Adam was God the Father and that Elohiem was Adam’s Father. So Brigham Young believed that God the Father had a Father. The Mormon Church no longer teaches that Adam is God the Father, but the same concept about the hierarchy of the Gods is still a common teaching in Mormonism. Saying “I don’t know” is not really an answer. Polytheism is a “belief” in more than one God, it is not a “knowledge” of more than one God.…The underlying question I think you are getting at again, is whether God the Father had a Father, and the answer again is “I don’t know”…
Okay, I literally read those passages in my KJV that I have had ever since I was in seminary and I still don’t see how Jesus is the literal offspring of God the Father.From a literal reading and understanding of Luke 1:32-35, and from Luke 2:49 and John 17:1 where Jesus says it in very plain language.
MWOK,ParkerD
But “Bringing forth” is not the method stated in scripture about the origin of Jesus Christ.
Jesus was born of a virgin, which would not be the case if intercourse took place(which is what the mormon idea instigates physical or spiritual). We know this because not only did Mary state that she had no relations with man(she stated this by saying she did not “know” man which there are some old testament examples of people “knowing” eachother to produce an offspring{Sarah and Abraham}), but that being born of a virgin fulfilled an old testament prophecy. The angel told Mary that the Spirit of the Lord would “overshadow” her, not “know” her.
If I go to college to learn to become a teacher, the professor(master teacher) teaches me how to become a teacher, am I “aspiring” to be something other than a teacher?Mwok,
One certainly shouldn’t “aspire to be a god”. One should aspire to be a servant just as Christ taught His disciples and apostles to “abase himself” to “be exalted”. One should aspire to love with a Christ-like love, and to “be ye therefore perfect” even as Father in Heaven is perfect. One who desires to accept what Christ and John taught should feel hopeful about being a “joint heir” with Christ, and should accept that this means there will be a significant learning process to “get there”, and that Christ will be the Master Teacher.
Plus, that He has both the power and the willingness to do that teaching, as we show a willingness to do the learning.
JohnVIII,Brigham Young (a Mormon Prophet) believed …
Are you referring to God the Father, or Jesus because I got lost in the transition if there was one.MWOK,
It’s a significantly important thing, because it meant He had power over death and could resurrect Himself if He did lay down His life in death.
Mwok,If I go to college to learn to become a teacher, the professor(master teacher) teaches me how to become a teacher, am I “aspiring” to be something other than a teacher?
If I live on this earth to learn to be perfect like the Father, the Master Teacher teaches me how to be perfect like the Father, am I “aspiring” to be something other than the Father?
Mwok,Are you referring to God the Father, or Jesus because I got lost in the transition if there was one.
Okay, so how did being miraculously conceived of a virgin show that he had power over death?Mwok,
Both had those qualities, but I was specifically meaning the Son of God, Jesus Christ, in that sentence.
Yes Parker, that would be the figurative not the literal. Why is it every time the definition of words comes up (except when it comes to the definition of Christianity where you insist on the straight “dictionary” defintion) you seem to be playing something similar to 6 Degrees of Kevin Bacon.Zaffiroborant,
I understand that for you, it isn’t.
Offspring also ties to the word “progeny” which ties to the word “progenitor” which ties to the words “bring forth”. Offspring is one who has been “brought forth”, and it also means “progeny”, and there certainly can be such a thing as “spirit progeny”.
Okay, glad you caught that because I was lost!Yes Parker, that would be the figurative not the literal. Why is it every time the definition of words comes up (except when it comes to the definition of Christianity where you insist on the straight “dictionary” defintion) you seem to be playing something similar to 6 Degrees of Kevin Bacon.
Iceberg is related to snow, which is related to ice, which is related to water, which is related to rain which is related to crops, which is related to irrigation…or you make up your own definition or you refuse to use perfectly acceptable English words because you don’t like the thoughts of those who spoke the language they are derived from. You go way beyond Bill.