Catholics make a distinction between what is ordinarily normative (i.e. baptism is necessary for salvation), and extraordinary situations (i.e. baptism of desire, invincible ignorance, etc). Latter-day Saints do not believe that, and instead believe that God has provided the means through which what is normative for some can be normative for everyone.
What is “normative for everyone” is not a what, but a Who: Jesus Christ.
If you want to call Christ’s commandments “rules”, then I disagree. We are called to follow Christ and His commandments.
Reducing faith to following a set of rules is not how one lives as a disciple of Christ. This is an error of understanding, that exists among Catholics as well as Mormons.
Pope John Paul II once said (paraphrasing), the Church has nothing to say to a person until they understand the Love of God. When we love a person we do not act out of “rule following”.
The ten commandments are fulfilled in the greatest commandment of all, to love your neighbor as yourself. In this, adhering to God’s Will is taken out of “rule following” and put into its proper context.
Then what is the point of converting people to His Church? Why did He go through the trouble of establishing His Church if it isn’t necessary to be a member of it?
Mormons have a limited understanding of “Church”.
Will the Hindu continue to believe that Vishnu is the supreme Lord? Or will they change their beliefs and believe in Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior? I do understand the latest understandings of EENS though.
As we are now, our knowledge of God is indirect. Once we are dead, any knowledge we have of God is direct. It is the difference between being told about snow without having seen it, and standing in snow, touching it, feeling it, having the immediate knowledge of what it is rather than indirect knowledge that one had before. The souls of the dead, who have been judged to be with God, will stand, or are standing, in the snow. Their knowledge of God is immediate.
It is one of the glaring flaws of the Mormon “spirit world”…somehow the dead are not aware they dead?
No, we fully accept Christ’s Universal Salvation. Latter-day Saint teaching, as you are aware, does not state that those who did not hear of Christ and His Gospel in this life are lost. Instead, we believe that His atonement makes it possible for all those billions of people to hear the Gospel and accept it, whether in this life, or the next. Ordinances include covenant relationships with God, and Jesus Christ empowers them through His atonement.
The Death and Suffering of Jesus Christ wasn’t so people could hear your churches error in teaching. JESUS CHRIST IS THE GOSPEL, He is our New and Everlasting Covenant with the Father, He is our mediator, not your church.
Indeed, various Catholics, including on this forum, were in an uproar over bishops and priests allowing certain Catholic politicians to partake of the Eucharist when they support various un-Catholic views…interesting in light of this conversation of worthiness.
shrug You should read more than here. I don’t agree with the people you are referring to. They don’t know another person’s
intentions or understanding. Can a Catholic be confused? Does confusion bar a person from communion? No, it doesn’t. If it did, there would be no one receiving…the “un-Catholic view” is the one you have going.
See, this is exactly what worthiness in Latter-day Saint belief is about. It is about living a Christian life, following Jesus Christ, and belief in His Gospel. You may not call it worthiness, however we believe that if one is not allowed to enter the temple, for example, they will be instructed on temple ordinances, and will be guided in how to be prepared, and in their understanding of the Gospel, so that they can enter into sacred covenants.
We don’t call it “worthiness” because that is not what it is! No one is worthy…I don’t know why it is Mormons can’t accept or understand that.
This is very interesting since of course Evangelicals make similar arguments (re: priests interceding in the relationship of a person with God) against Catholics.
Evangelicals not understanding Catholics, the same as you are not understanding Catholics, has nothing to do with anything. Red herring?
I think we have already seen that there are similar concepts in Catholicism, which invalidates this argument.
Not so fast buddy.
Also, Latter-day Saints know, as I have already explained in another post, that worthiness is tied to that person’s relationship with God. If that person is following the commandments, believes in the Gospel of Jesus Christ, etc., they will be found worthy to enter into covenants with God. It is ultimately up to that person’s relationship with God and belief in the Gospel(which is what the questions are about anyway), and that is what it comes down to.
A person’s relationship with God is between themselves and God. A priest doesn’t intercede in this, putting a halt to this relationship, ever. A Catholic will not go up for communion, and the priest may or may no know why, but will not ask. When the person is ready they will go to confession. No one at Mass should be wondering what another person did so they aren’t worthy, as everyone sitting at Mass knows they, themselves, are not worthy. Ever.
This is made so abundantly clear at Mass I don’t know how anyone could be confused on the point. “Lord, I am not worthy to receive you, but only say the Word and I shall be healed.”
It isn’t about worthiness, so, you should really stop telling us what Catholics believe. It is about intention, and where one has ordered their own will.