LDS: Jesus always God?

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Paul,

From the standpoint of Joseph Smith’s teaching, then “there never was a time when there wasn’t God”. There was no beginning, no “very first God” besides Alpha and Omega.

Nor did Joseph Smith ever say that God the Father was an “intelligence” in an earlier universe. I don’t think of God the Father as having “progressed”. As far as I’m concerned, He has always, forever backward in time, been God the Father, the Supreme Ruler of the universe, forever omnipotent backward in time.
If that’s true, then where did the “council of gods” come from, if Jesus was “Eternal Father’s” firstborn son? Don’t you see a problem with believing in both of those concepts? It’s a little like “which came first, the chicken or the egg”.
 
Paul,

From the standpoint of Joseph Smith’s teaching, then “there never was a time when there wasn’t God”. There was no beginning, no “very first God” besides Alpha and Omega
If I understand what you are saying (which I’m assuming because of the original question, the mormon belief that there are other gods and God the father lived on another planet, and you saying "there was never a time when there wasn’t God) , then you are impling that there have always been gods and there has been no “first” God which would be similar to the orthodox teachings about God the Father. So, i’m going to assume you are implying an infinite regress of gods and universes made to create new gods. This view would be logically wrong, though. There has to be a beginning and a start for anything to exist.

For example, because of the nature of existence/time, to be here now, you need something that is self-sufficient. So, let’s take a dog( Dog A). Dog A is there because of its parents giving birth to that dog (Dog B). The parents came about through another set of parents giving birth( Dog C). Now logically, if you don’t have a first set of parents giving birth to a dog, then you have an infinite regress and an infinite set of requirements that need to be met before our Dog A can be born. And how can you meet an infinite amount of requirements, when they are by definition, infinite and therefore never attainable. You need something that is self-sustaining, a superdog who did not need other dogs to give birth to it. So, if God is reliant on an infinite amount of things for Him to exist, then he would not exist. This is similar to if I had an infinite amount of chores to do before I could eat dinner, I would never eat dinner as I would never finish the amount of chores. I would always have a new thing popping up that I would need to do. It is also like a chain hanging in the air. There can be an infinite amount of chain links spreading up into the sky, but inless I have a link which is attached to a first thing, then the chain will never suspend itself.
 
Paul,

From the standpoint of Joseph Smith’s teaching, then “there never was a time when there wasn’t God”. There was no beginning, no “very first God” besides Alpha and Omega.

Nor did Joseph Smith ever say that God the Father was an “intelligence” in an earlier universe. I don’t think of God the Father as having “progressed”. As far as I’m concerned, He has always, forever backward in time, been God the Father, the Supreme Ruler of the universe, forever omnipotent backward in time.
Actually, the teaching is “there was never a time when there were not gods”. Huge difference.

But anyway, I know you have your own peculiar personal brand of Mormonism and disavow many of the common LDS beliefs, so then you disagree with the Mormon belief that God the Father had a father who had a father…ad infinitum?

Just curious since that flies in the face of the consistent teaching by your prophets and apostles since Joseph Smith’s time that God the Father was not always God, but became God as a result of obedience to his God.

Paul (formerly LDS, now happily Catholic)
 
Well, I hope this third time makes it…wrote my reply twice then it disappeared right when I was going to post my reply…

The book of Genesis, the exclamation of faith and fidelity throughout the Old Testament attest to the belief in God as Creator, our belief held by Christians – not dependent on St. Thomas Aquinas, and Aristotle used Cause and Effect, not pertaining to the existence of God, in his tradition.
 
Secondly, attending Mass yesterday on the Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God, a belief defined and held since the 2nd Century, I thought of the Mormon religion while reflecting on the Liturgy of the Word.

(We Catholics/Christians have had the Liturgy of the Word in the Oral Tradition as Christ taught…He did not pass out Bible Books)…

There were 3 points that stood out:

Christ was named by an angel, but He came into this world through His mother like the rest of humanity.

Christ came at the fulfilled time, not Joseph Smith’s time.

And it is the Holy Spirit, not us seeking to become Gods, that we are made adopted sons and daughters.

2 Galatians 4:4-7:
Brothers and Sisters,

When the fullness of time had come, God sent His Son

Born of a woman
, born under the law
to ransom those under the law
so that we might receive
adoption as sons.

As proof, you are sons,
God sent the Spirit of His Son into our hearts, crying out, "Abba, Father!"

So you are no longer a slave but a son,
and if a son, then also an heir, through God.’

There is no need for Joseph Smith. Instead we need the Holy Spirit, Who came to us at Pentecost fulfilling Christ’s words, that after Him He would send the Comforter Who would teach us many things.
 
There is no need for Joseph Smith. Instead we need the Holy Spirit, Who came to us at Pentecost fulfilling Christ’s words, that after Him He would send the Comforter Who would teach us many things.
And yet, so many Mormons believed that Joseph Smith was the incarnation of the Holy Ghost that the 1st Presidency had to issue an official proclamation to the contrary.

Several fundamentalist Mormon sects still believe and teach it.

Paul (formerly LDS, now happily Catholic)
 
For him, Joseph Smith, to be the incarnated Holy Spirit…and the wrong time no less…yes is indeed making him a god, taking the place of Christ Who, contrary to Sacred Scripture then, did not come at the Fulfilled Time…
 
Janderich

I see you are a newbie on the forums. How did you find this site??? Invited on because of “qualifications” or something?

Bible clearly says “God is Spirit” and “God is Love”, The I AM who AM. How do Mormons assume God was “once a man.” Where in Ancient Jewish writings does it say God would or did come down and live on earth as the Father? I would bet big money that the archeological evidence for something so fantastic would be out of this world but there is none, no evidence, nothing to say where God the Father “lived” That would be HUGE NEWS!

Explain how God who is clearly Spirit can switch Natures. He’s perfect the way he has been from the ages.

How would, could God the Father come down & live amongst mere mortals especially since anyone that sees Him clearly DIES? (Except Jacob). God states early in the Tor-ah, I AM WHO AM; implied no changing on His part to the Israelites: “I changeth not” as he is IMMUTABLE and He knows of “NO OTHER” God(s) that is…

Please square that with the LDS idea of a God(s) conveyor belt/treadmill.

If you answer any of my questions, please answer this: You believe in your own impending Godhood do you not?
Wow Pepband Mom this seems a rather harsh line of questioning. I’m not opposed to answering tough questions but I hope you can respect that I am not here to attack or be attacked. Mostly to hear and share.

I found out about this site while spending some time on an LDS discussion board. Someone who used to be Catholic mentioned this site. I thought I would see what it was like and saw a number of questions about the LDS religion so thought I would comment, nothing more.
 
God is the supreme ruler of heaven and earth. Yes we believe that God is greater than us. The idea that God is greater than Jesus is not talked about much but I believe this also to be the case. However, I don’t know that I have ever been called to believe it.

“Ye have heard how I said unto you, I go away, and come again unto you. If ye loved me, ye would rejoice, because I said, I go unto the Father: for my Father is greater than I” (John 14:28).
I’m sorry, I don’t mean to be picky here, but I really am trying to get as much clarity as I can about LDS doctrine.

Just let me see if I have this correctly:
  1. LDS doctrine teaches that God is and always will be greater than us, primarily because any exaltation and glory we can possibly attain will also be given to Him, and he will take on a “higher” exaltation.
  2. LDS doctrine teaches that Christ “did the same thing He saw His Father do” (according to Joseph Fielding Smith). That is, he “worked out His kingdom with fear and trembling,” then presented it to Heavenly Father, who then took on a “higher” exaltation.
Yes?
 
Wow Pepband Mom this seems a rather harsh line of questioning. I’m not opposed to answering tough questions but I hope you can respect that I am not here to attack or be attacked. Mostly to hear and share.

I found out about this site while spending some time on an LDS discussion board. Someone who used to be Catholic mentioned this site. I thought I would see what it was like and saw a number of questions about the LDS religion so thought I would comment, nothing more.
Janderich,

I hope you stick around. We rarely get a Mormon on this forum who admits to believing what the LDS church teaches. It is very difficult to dialog with a Mormon who keeps saying “we don’t believe that” even when we provide copious documentation from your own lesson manuals (which are prepared under the supervision of the 1st presidency and approved by them).

You are a breath of fresh air.

Paul (formerly LDS, now happily Catholic)
 
And when we eventually reach the same place as God…then we have plurality of gods and this also implies competition…going back to Genesis again, 'Who is like unto God"…

The Nicene Creed was further articulated, Christ then completely defined through the works of St. Athanasius…Christ of the same substance of the Father…no beginning or end…

God is, God was, God will always be separate from us in His divinity. We are always creatures, that is our destiny.

But we are predestined to be heirs to the kingdom of heaven, to be adopted sons and daughters through the Holy Spirit in Jesus Christ.
 
Yes, I second Paul here as well…bless you for being forthright and honest about your beliefs.
 
Classic Parker: “Create doesn’t actually mean what you think it means. And even if it did, it’s not the correct translation.”

So awesome.
We have a distinctly different use of the word “create”. Because your definition arises from the tradition that seems to trace its root to Thomas Aquinas and thus to Aristotle, then even though there are other just as meaningful and acceptable definitions in a dictionary for the word “create”, those are brushed aside as non-applicable.
The word which became the verb “to create” as we use it in English today originated in the late 14th century. “To create” has its roots in the Latin word creare, which means, “to make, bring forth, produce, beget.”
Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, 10th Edition, defines the verb “create” as the following:
  1. to bring into existence <God created the heaven and the earth.>
  2. a) to invest with a new form, office or rank <was created a lieutenant.> b) to produce or bring about by a course of action or behavior <her arrival created a terrible fuss>
  3. CAUSE, OCCASION <famine creates high food prices>
  4. a) to produce through imaginative skill <create a painting> b) DESIGN <creates dresses>
  5. to make or bring into existence something new
Which of those “meaningful and acceptable definitions” are we alleged Aristotelians “brushing aside as non-applicable?”
But if one were to trace the root origin of the Hebrew use of the word that was translated as “created”, it would more closely match “organized” or “formed”.
The Hebrew verb in Genesis 1:1 is “ba-ra.” Its primary two definitions are “to create” and “to fill.” It is an uncommon word in the Hebrew scriptures an in every instance which it appears its only subject is God. “Ba-ra” is a God-specific action that only He can perform.

Now please… show us all how that particular verb “more closely” translates to “organized.”
 
Janderich,

I hope you stick around. We rarely get a Mormon on this forum who admits to believing what the LDS church teaches. It is very difficult to dialog with a Mormon who keeps saying “we don’t believe that” even when we provide copious documentation from your own lesson manuals (which are prepared under the supervision of the 1st presidency and approved by them).

You are a breath of fresh air.

Paul (formerly LDS, now happily Catholic)
Strongly, strongly seconded.
 
Actually, the teaching is “there was never a time when there were not gods”. Huge difference.

But anyway, I know you have your own peculiar personal brand of Mormonism and disavow many of the common LDS beliefs, so then you disagree with the Mormon belief that God the Father had a father who had a father…ad infinitum?

Just curious since that flies in the face of the consistent teaching by your prophets and apostles since Joseph Smith’s time that God the Father was not always God, but became God as a result of obedience to his God.
Paul,

I disagree with the words “in the face of consistent teaching by your prophets and apostles since Joseph Smith’s time that God the Father was not always God, but became God as a result of obedience to His God.”

I am familiar that Joseph Smith is quoted as having given a discourse (not the King Follett, but a separate talk in 1844), that had a phrase like “father who had a father…” But as far as I’m concerned, that teaching was never explained enough to consider it doctrinal, and to my knowledge it has not been taught in my day by prophets who have lived during my lifetime (which would include beginning with David O McKay).

I also don’t feel like it’s something I need to know about–if it were, it would be in the scriptures or in a formally presented unanimous doctrinal statement by the First Presidency and the Council of the Twelve.
 
Paul,

I disagree with the words “in the face of consistent teaching by your prophets and apostles since Joseph Smith’s time that God the Father was not always God, but became God as a result of obedience to His God.”
Then you’re disagreeing with Joseph Fielding Smith:
Quote:

Commenting on this the Prophet Joseph Smith has said: ‘What did Jesus do? Why; I do the things I saw my Father do when worlds come rolling into existence.** My Father worked out his kingdom with fear and trembling, and I must do the same [that is Christ must do the same]**; and when I get my kingdom. I shall present it to my Father, so that he may obtain kingdom upon kingdom, and it will exalt him in glory. He will then take a higher exaltation, and I [Christ] will take his place, and thereby become exalted myself. So that Jesus treads in the tracks of his Father, and inherits what God did before; and God is thus glorified and exalted in the salvation and exaltation of all his children.’

Do you not see that it is in this manner that our Eternal Father is progressing? Not by seeking knowledge which he does not have, for such a thought cannot be maintained in the light of scripture. It is not through ignorance and learning hidden truth that he progresses, for if there are truths which he does not know, then these things are greater than he, and this cannot be. Why can’t we learn wisdom and believe what the Lord has revealed? (Doctrines of Salvation, Vol.1, p.7)
The bolded portions are pretty clear:
  1. Jesus saw “Heavenly Father” “work out his kingdom with fear and trembling.”
  2. Jesus “must (that’s a direct quote “must”) do the same” things that “Heavenly Father” did.
  3. Jesus “presented” this world to “Heavenly Father,” thus, bringing “Heavenly Father’s” exaltation and glory to a “higher” level.
Therefore, since Jesus did “the same things” that “Heavenly Father” did, “Heavenly Father” must have presented his own world to his own “Heavenly Father,” which brought “Heavenly Grandfather’s(?)” exaltation and glory to a higher level.
 
I’m sorry, I don’t mean to be picky here, but I really am trying to get as much clarity as I can about LDS doctrine.

Just let me see if I have this correctly:
  1. LDS doctrine teaches that God is and always will be greater than us, primarily because any exaltation and glory we can possibly attain will also be given to Him, and he will take on a “higher” exaltation.
  2. LDS doctrine teaches that Christ “did the same thing He saw His Father do” (according to Joseph Fielding Smith). That is, he “worked out His kingdom with fear and trembling,” then presented it to Heavenly Father, who then took on a “higher” exaltation.
Yes?
I asked similar questions here:
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=8754447&postcount=6

Quote:
Originally Posted by 1voice
This (Joseph Smith) quote is really confusing … can you provide clarity here …

“I am going to tell you how God came to be God. We have imagined and supposed that God was God from all eternity. I will refute that idea”

Quote Janderich:
You will get arguments inside and outside the LDS church on what the above means. Some opponents will quote other church authorities on the matter and say we believe in an infallible God. Truthfully I can not remember ever hearing a lesson on this topic in church. It is simply not discussed in detail.

So having said that I will give you some of my thoughts. Further on in the same discourse we have been quoting Joseph says, “he [God] was once a man like us: yea, that God himself, the Father of us all dwelt on an earth, the same as Jesus Christ himself did, and I will show it from the Bible.” Please read the above carefully. He was a man, like us but dwelt on the earth the same as Christ did. Did Christ dwell on the earth as fully human? Yes. Christ, like us, was born of woman and suffered death. Does that mean Christ was a sinner? Of course not. Christ was the only perfect being to ever walk the earth. I take this quote to mean that God at some previous time came to earth took upon him flesh and blood the same as Christ did.

With the above belief, I, a member in good standing, may attend church, go to the temple and receive all blessings the same as any other member. May Joseph have meant more than what I just explained? Indeed it is possible, but I am not bound to believe it. No doubt some members would not even go so far as I have gone.

Perhaps this discussion will help…

Is the Mormon God/Heavenly Father described in the Bible?
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=629891
 
The word which became the verb “to create” as we use it in English today originated in the late 14th century. “To create” has its roots in the Latin word creare, which means, “to make, bring forth, produce, beget.”
Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, 10th Edition, defines the verb “create” as the following:
  1. to bring into existence <God created the heaven and the earth.>
  2. a) to invest with a new form, office or rank <was created a lieutenant.> b) to produce or bring about by a course of action or behavior <her arrival created a terrible fuss>
  3. CAUSE, OCCASION <famine creates high food prices>
  4. a) to produce through imaginative skill <create a painting> b) DESIGN <creates dresses>
  5. to make or bring into existence something new
Which of those “meaningful and acceptable definitions” are we alleged Aristotelians “brushing aside as non-applicable?”
“bring forth”, “produce”.

Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, Fifth Edition:
  1. “To invest with a new form, office, or character; to constitute.”
The Hebrew verb in Genesis 1:1 is “ba-ra.” Its primary two definitions are “to create” and “to fill.” It is an uncommon word in the Hebrew scriptures an in every instance which it appears its only subject is God. “Ba-ra” is a God-specific action that only He can perform.
Ba-ra is the word used in Isaiah 40:26, and refers back to earlier verses in that chapter that show a word use that does not indicate “out of nothing”.

I suppose a thought question from Genesis 1:2 is,

Why was the earth “without form” after it had been created if verse 1 is talking about its creation from nothing?
 
Then you’re disagreeing with Joseph Fielding Smith:

The bolded portions are pretty clear:
  1. Jesus saw “Heavenly Father” “work out his kingdom with fear and trembling.”
  2. Jesus “must (that’s a direct quote “must”) do the same” things that “Heavenly Father” did.
  3. Jesus “presented” this world to “Heavenly Father,” thus, bringing “Heavenly Father’s” exaltation and glory to a “higher” level.
Therefore, since Jesus did “the same things” that “Heavenly Father” did, “Heavenly Father” must have presented his own world to his own “Heavenly Father,” which brought “Heavenly Grandfather’s(?)” exaltation and glory to a higher level.
I’m not sure if you mean that Joseph Fielding Smith compiled Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, or if you mean “Joseph Smith” instead of “Joseph Fielding Smith”.

That quote is the one I had indicated to Paul that was one quote in one talk and was never discussed in any greater detail by Joseph Smith as far as I have read. I feel fine about letting it be an item that I don’t feel any need to support as doctrinal because it is in no formal doctrinal presentation by either Joseph Smith or by any succeeding president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, as far as I have read. If it turns out to be correct doctrine, then that will be fine with me–it would make no difference to me, either way. I personally prefer to stay with the scriptures and be guided and strengthened by them.
 
Paul,

I disagree with the words “in the face of consistent teaching by your prophets and apostles since Joseph Smith’s time that God the Father was not always God, but became God as a result of obedience to His God.”

I am familiar that Joseph Smith is quoted as having given a discourse (not the King Follett, but a separate talk in 1844), that had a phrase like “father who had a father…” But as far as I’m concerned, that teaching was never explained enough to consider it doctrinal, and to my knowledge it has not been taught in my day by prophets who have lived during my lifetime (which would include beginning with David O McKay).

I also don’t feel like it’s something I need to know about–if it were, it would be in the scriptures or in a formally presented unanimous doctrinal statement by the First Presidency and the Council of the Twelve.
Here is the actual quote:
If Jesus Christ was the Son of God, and John discovered that God the Father of Jesus Christ had a Father, you may suppose that He had a Father also. Where was there ever a son without a father? And where was there ever a father without first being a son? Whenever did a tree or anything spring into existence without a progenitor? And everything comes in this way. Paul says that which is earthly is in the likeness of that which is heavenly, Hence if Jesus had a Father, can we not believe that He had a Father also? I despise the idea of being scared to death at such a doctrine, for the Bible is full of it.
  • History of the Church, Vol. 6, p. 473
The quote seems very clear to me. Why would it need to be explained?

Here are some more:
Our father in heaven, according to the Prophet, had a father, and since there has been a condition of this kind through all eternity, each Father had a Father"
  • Prophet Joseph Fielding Smith, Doctrines of Salvation, 2:47
Man was born of woman; Christ, the Savior, was born of woman; and God, the Father was born of woman"
  • Prophet Joseph F. Smith, Deseret News, Church News, Sept. 19, 1936, p. 2
The Father is a glorified, perfected, resurrected, exalted man who worked out his salvation by obedience to the same laws he has given to us so that we may do the same"
  • Apostle Bruce R. McConkie, A New Witness for the Articles of Faith, p. 64
We are precisely in the same condition and under the same circumstances that God our heavenly Father was when he was passing through this, or a similar ordeal
  • Prophet Joseph F. Smith, Gospel Doctrine, p. 54
These quotes are all unambiguous and describe a consistent belief taught by LDS prophets and apostles. I don’t see why an enlightened man like you would need to have it explained to him when, to a spiritually darkened apostate like me, it is quite simple and clear.

Paul (formerly LDS, now happily Catholic)
 
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