Parker,
There are some serious holes in your explanation. In fact, the material you posted flatly contradicts a great many of your earlier assertions.
Cradle to Grave,
Also, just as Jesus was always perfect, Heavenly Father was and is that same way, so “perfected Him” is an incorrect view…
That’s not an incorrect view according to Elder Bruce McConkie:
Here is a great statement by Elder Bruce R McConkie in 1969:
Now we have had revealed to us knowledge about God and his work and his ministry. We understand that he is a personal being in whose image man is created; that he is glorified, perfected, and exalted; that he has a body of flesh and bones as tangible as man’s; that he has progressed and advanced through an infinite period until he has become the Creator of the universe and all things therein.
McConkie uses the same word that I used: “perfected.” This language describes a
changing God, not an eternal one. A God that can be “added to” (and, therefore, subtracted from, which makes him the opposite of omnipotent.) McConkie even speaks later on in the same quote about all the things that God has “acquired.” The God that Catholics pray to cannot “acquire” anything, and no half-serious Catholic theologian, much less a prominent one, would ever suggest that He can. He is perfect, complete in and of Himself.
Now, I can already see you typing, “Well, ‘perfected’ doesn’t really mean ‘perfected’ and ‘acquire’ doesn’t really mean ‘acquire.’” But this view, this changing, “perfected” God that McConkie describes, a God who somehow became Himself via a process outside Himself is referred to in even more starkly transitory terms by Joseph Smith in the KF Discourses:
In order to understand the subject of the dead for the consolation of those who mourn for the loss of their friends, it is necessary they should understand the character and being of God; for I am going to tell you how God came to be God. We have imagined that God was God from all eternity. [That he was not is an idea] incomprehensible to some.
…
Here, then, is eternal life–to know the only wise and true God. And you have got to learn how to be Gods yourselves–to be kings and priests to God, the same as all Gods have done–by going from a small degree to another, from grace to grace, from exaltation to exaltation, until you are able to sit in glory as do those who sit enthroned in everlasting power.
…although the earthly tabernacle shall be dissolved that dear one shall rise in immortal glory, not to sorrow, suffer, or die any more but shall be God’s heirs and joint heirs with Jesus Christ. What is it? It is to inherit the same glory, the same power, and the same exaltation until you ascend the throne of eternal power the same as those who are gone before. What did Jesus do? Why, I do the things I saw my Father do when worlds came rolling into existence. I saw my Father work out his kingdom with fear and trembling, and I must do the same; and when I get my kingdom I shall present it to my Father so that he obtains kingdom upon kingdom,
Thus you learn some of the first principles of the gospel, about which so much hath been said. **When you climb a ladder, you must begin at the bottom **and go on until you learn the last principle; it will be a great while before you have learned the last.
."
“… how God came to be God.” “… the same as all Gods have done, by going from one small degree to another.” Smith is clearly teaching, in no uncertain terms and despite your assertions to the contrary, that the “Heavenly Father” of this universe was not a perfect being from the beginning. Smith, like McConkie, is describing a being who was was “perfected” by a process - he “began at the bottom of the ladder” and then progressed “from one small degree to another,” until he “came to be God” “the same as all Gods have done.” This is the same idea McConkie expressed earlier: the notion of a “Heavenly Father” who was created imperfect and became “perfected.” McConkie’s notion of an “acquiring” God is also reflected in Smith’s “when I get my kingdom, I shall present it to my father so that he obtains kingdom after kingdom.”
And despite your assertion that the LDS church “has never taught ‘equal to’ God,” that concept is, again, as plain as day in the King Follett discourses: “It is to inherit
the same glory, the same power, and the same exaltation until you ascend the throne of eternal power
the same as those who are gone before.” That is clearly a promise of becoming equal to God.
And here is the problem with the logic of this theology: If we will still be “reliant upon” Heavenly Father (and the Son and the Holy Spirit) after we have been “perfected” by them, then Heavenly Father is still reliant on whatever being “perfected” him (via the process “by which all Gods become Gods”) then Mormons do not worship an eternal, omniscient God. They worship a transitory, subordinate God. (Remember, Heavenly Father went through the same “process by which all Gods become Gods.” And Smith is clearly teaching that we can learn and undergo this process ourselves.)
On the other hand, if Heavenly Father is not “reliant upon” the being that “perfected him” via “the process by which all Gods became Gods,” then Heavenly Father is equal to the being that “perfected” him and we can “inherit the same (non-subordinate) glory, the same (non-reliant) power and the same (completely equal) exaltation” when we become “perfected” ourselves. Boom: polytheism.