This is what Bruce R. McConkie had to say on the subject:
Quote:
He is the First born of the Father. By obedience and devotion to the truth he attained that pinnacle of intelligence which ranked him as a God, as the Lord Omnipotent, while yet in his pre existent state. Mormon Doctrine, p. 129
Quote:
God the second is the Redeemer, and his great, infinite and eternal work is to ransom men from the temporal and spiritual death which was brought into the world by the fall of Adam. He is the Savior of the world, the Redeemer of man. He was the firstborn spirit child of the Eternal Father, and in that premortal life he advanced and progressed until he “was like unto God.” (Abr. 3:24). He served under the Father, using Deity’s power to create all things. Sermons and Writings of Bruce R. McConkie, p. 375.
I quote McConkie because he is the most authoritative person I can find on this subject. I can’t find anyone in Mormonism with any authority contradicting him.
Bart Burk,
Thanks for these quotes. They are fairly consistent with others I read as I looked at this subject, except that the following quote by Ezra Taft Benson gives a different connotation and highlights the “unchangeable” nature of Christ:
"In his Lectures on Faith, the Prophet Joseph Smith listed six divine attributes of God that men must understand in order to have faith in Him. The Book of Mormon bears constant witness that Christ possesses all these attributes.
First, God is the Creator and upholder of all things. King Benjamin said, “He created all things, … he has all wisdom, and all power.” (Mosiah 4:9.)
Second, God is distinguished by the excellency of His character, His mercy, long-suffering, and goodness. Alma testified that Christ is “full of grace, equity, and truth, full of patience, mercy, and long-suffering.” (Alma 9:26.)
Third, God changes not. Mormon revealed that “God is not … a changeable being; but he is unchangeable from all eternity to all eternity.” (Moro. 8:18.)
Fourth, God cannot lie. The brother of Jared declared, “Thou art a God of truth, and canst not lie.” (Ether 3:12.)
Fifth, God is no respecter of persons. Mormon testified that “God is not a partial God.” (Moro. 8:18.)
Sixth, God is a God of love. Of this divine attribute Nephi wrote that the Lord “doeth not anything save it be for the benefit of the world; for he loveth the world, even that he layeth down his own life.” (2 Ne. 26:24.)"
I would merge the ideas of Christ’s “unchangeable” attribute and the idea expressed by Bruce R McConkie, and accept those as conveying the same idea: Christ had an unchangeable nature at every point in eternity, of doing the exactly right thing. For me, the idea that He grew “from grace to grace” in His pre-mortal life, before we were spirits, does not contradict that He is unchangeable. He learned and grew by observation of Heavenly Father and by observation of the sphere of existence where He was. It would seem He brought an innate ability to learn extremely quickly and thus “was like unto God” when we knew Him from the very first instant that we did know Him.