Jay,
Not in the slightest. I said only that records that Abraham wrote on were not passed on to the Jews generally. That has nothing to do with the Bible per se.
As to your other comment, Paul gave a good explanation of his beliefs regarding the verses in the book of Revelation, on the Book of Mormon thread. Obviously, there is no way that Catholics could even consider believing that humankind could become like God, because to them God is a Spirit and not a resurrected Person, and He can appear in whatever form He likes, besides which they teach that Adam had the audacity to believe he could become like God and that’s what caused His fall when he partook of the forbidden fruit.
Of course Catholics wouldn’t believe that (that humankind would become gods), the Jews didn’t either. That is not what Jesus (nor any of the OT prophets) taught! That’s what I don’t understand about the LDS position. Was Jesus a complete failure in His ministry that no one from that time period got the right message and everyone had to wait 1800 years to be corrected? That makes absolutely no sense to me!
Of course, then, any early “church father” who was starting to teach the Trinity doctrine and the “prideful fall of Adam” doctrine would back away from what the Savior and John taught about gaining the joy of the Lord and inheriting a throne in heaven jointly with Christ. They would have had to put some consistency into their writing to lay the groundwork for everyone accepting the more palatable doctrine (in human thinking) and the more mysterious doctrine of the Trinity.
Why in the world would they back away from teaching what Jesus actually intended? They had no problem teaching that Jesus is God and that He gave us His Body and Blood. I’m sure
that seemed radical at the time to the Jewish people - in fact many disciples turned away when Jesus said this.
This also leads me to the fact that Jesus established His church on earth and told us that the gates of hell would not prevail (I’m sure Mormons have heard this argument before.) For Jesus’ Apostles and their immediate students to get the teachings and messages so completely wrong in the way that you’re suggesting is simply mind-boggling to me.
It all works for the good of Heavenly Father’s plan, because clearly to inherit what Christ
received from the Father would put a great deal of responsibility on someone’s shoulders, and only those who can be trusted absolutely and intimately could be qualified to receive that kind of responsibility; hence the need for a sifting process and the allowance for changed teachings to get into the belief system so that only those who seek the Holy Spirit and seek sanctification truly, purely, deeply would prepare themselves through faith, hope, and continual repentance and growth, to qualify. Christ stands at the door and knocks, but only those who open that door to Him will receive personal revelation about this kind of inheritance that is promised to be granted to the faithful. Others will not “hear”. That is what John meant about “ears to hear.”
Does this actually mean that Mormons believe that everyone from the time of Christ to the 1800s went to hell unless they were baptized by proxy by Mormon descendants and that currently everyone but Mormons go to hell now?!?
How do Mormon beliefs even reconcile with the 1st Commandment?
I truly appreciate your (name removed by moderator)ut on all of my questions. I honestly and truly had absolutely no idea Catholics and Mormons were so separated in basic beliefs.