B
BartBurk
Guest
If intelligence is the same as spirit Christ would have had to have been the Only Begotten Son as an intelligence. The whole point of the term “Begotten” in Christianity with regards to Christ is that it happens outside of time and space. We don’t become begotten sons and daughters of God in a theological sense until we are baptized:Bart Burk,
Thanks for pointing out a subject I was quite unfamiliar with as to the distinction made by those such as C.S. Lewis.
The LDS scriptures certainly support that the “Only Begotten Son” was so from the beginning, and not just from the time of His gaining a physical body. He was the Only Begotten Son during His time in the pre-mortal life as the Spirit Son of God who was Jehovah.
I tend to agree that the distinction is important, in that the Only Begotten Son of God, Jehovah, had absolute qualities no other spirit had, and I can comprehend that some of those qualities were inherited by virtue of His being “the Only Begotten Son” in the spirit. He was the only perfect Spirit in the pre-mortal realm where we associated with Him. He was supremely gifted by divine inheritance as well as by His own innate goodness from His intelligence.
I disagree with Lewis’ description that about the time frame of the Son being the Son versus the time frame of the Father being the Father–since that does not possibly flow from the logic of “Begotten”.
But again, thanks for raising an area that I was glad to gain more familiarity with, to understand others’ beliefs better.
John 1:12-13
But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name:
Which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God.