LDS Question - How did the first church fail?

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Yes it has both as to doctrine and membership, and this Church is not yet 150 years old. A. There are many groups claiming to originate from Joseph Smith and they seem hopelessly divided. They accuse each other of being heretical and of espousing doctrines that are not of Joseph. For example of the Reorganized LDS Church denies the doctrines of a plurality of Gods, polygamy and baptism for the dead, all major teachings of the Utah Church.
 
I’m late to this discussion, but perhaps some understanding can still be achieved. As an LDS person, I think of the “Church” in two senses. There is the Church as an organization, which is articulated in D&C 20. There is also the Church in the sense of anyone who is a follower of Christ, which is articulated in D&C 10 (and which predates the founding of the LDS Church by about a year and a half).

It is in this second sense that I, as a Mormon, consider Catholics and other followers of Christ as fellow Christians.

In terms of the organizational New Testament Church failing, Mormons really are staking out the following arguments:

Apostolic authority is connected to an open canon. Actions like Acts 15, where the Apostles set aside much of the Old Covenant (and including things like circumcision, that were to last forever according to Genesis 17), are seen by Mormons as necessary. For Mormons, when the canon was closed, an important aspect of Apostolic authority was officially disavowed. For Mormons, you have to be able to put “new wine in new bottles” so to speak. I should add that Mormons I’ve discussed this with don’t have good answers for a shifting notion of Apostle within the New Testament.

Mormons find the idea of creeds to be in error. This is really an extension of the first argument.

Mormons see the LDS Church in quasi-Jewish Christian terms (although only Mormon scholars would make the comparison so explicit). If you can wrap your head around this, you’ll come a long way in terms of understanding Mormons’ views of themselves. They see themselves very much as keepers of temple authority, albeit not in the Old Testament sense. They see other Christians as sects–like Essenes, Saducees, Nazaraens, you name it–who, despite differences, should all acknowledge the authority of the Mormon rituals (including the temple ones, but Mormons see all of their rituals in these exclusive, authoritarian terms). Modern notions of “organization” cause much of the strife, but Mormons basically see themselves in this fashion. The absence of Jewish influenced, temple Christianity, such as has been asserted before the destruction of the temple in AD 70, is very much what Mormons see as having been restored through them. Mormons see themselves as the temple cult (not in a negative sense, in an anthropological sense), and their priesthood is built around this idea of exclusive, sacred ordinances.

I hope this helps. I’m trying to put it in language that Mormons might not use, but that other readers will understand.
 
It is in this second sense that I, as a Mormon, consider Catholics and other followers of Christ as fellow Christians.
I Have to do this

If you teach the Apostasy as your Church is centered in it you can’t really say that and be honest at the same time.

The difference is black and white as to who is a Christian and who is not. I am not saying that God is not with you…He created you, He loves you. I am a Christian, I also have many flaws and failings…yet I go to confession with a sincere heart. I was once LDS, not to jab, rather background for you.

If you have not been baptized into the Christian formula of the Trinity and if you do not believe in the Trinity, you are not yet a Christian.

Here are a couple conflicts

The Apostasy
Multiple Gods
Atonement in the Garden rather than on the Cross
The fall being a good thing…God lied to us in the garden
Jesus and Lucifer brothers
Understanding that good works come from Jesus through us. its not us doing them, we choose to do His works etc……

I could go on …its black and white, no middle ground at all. Yes we have some very good things in common but its not Christianity.

We also have our Creed, the Apostles Creed and the Nicene Creed that your faith rejects but all other Christian sects accept, not Chritsian if they don’t.

Not to be mean here or upset with you I am not at all

I really do care about the LDS here in Utah…I would even say I love them in Christ. I have been helping them with questions for 11 years now…I really get it.

I have a really hard time with the Apostacy because I have found so much love in the Catholic faith, so many Saints that have pierced my heart, thousand of them. Then we have us, not Saints at all yet we know we are loved the same…we continue to battle evil in our lives together through the Sacraments of healing. If you were told your parents were evil (Apostacy) that they fell into darkness…yet you came to know them and found them to be loving…understanding…by your side at all cost you to would be upset a bit with the lies told about them. Yes you can see their bad side as well, yet because of them you have learned to forgive and reconcile. Do you underterstand what I am saying? We are not worthy, not one of us yet within the confines of Jesus you want to do good for others. The Catholic Church, with all of its good and bad within as well as on the oustside is authentic Christianity. Being with jesus is our only true goal.

A Catholic in good standing with the Church would see themselves as Prodigal sons and daughters, the women found in adulty, the lost coin, because if you do not know that you are sick why would you need Jesus in your life? We are taught not to think of ourselves as better than one single person. We are all sinners and yes we all die.
Then comes Jesus…

If we are better than the next its only because we place our hand in His and He makes us better. Then we help others find the same. Its here

God Bless
Again could not let it go and just being foreward

Rich
www.uathmission.com
 
I Have to do this

If you teach the Apostasy as your Church is centered in it you can’t really say that and be honest at the same time.

The difference is black and white as to who is a Christian and who is not. I am not saying that God is not with you…He created you, He loves you. I am a Christian, I also have many flaws and failings…yet I go to confession with a sincere heart. I was once LDS, not to jab, rather background for you.

If you have not been baptized into the Christian formula of the Trinity and if you do not believe in the Trinity, you are not yet a Christian.

Here are a couple conflicts

The Apostasy
Multiple Gods
Atonement in the Garden rather than on the Cross
The fall being a good thing…God lied to us in the garden
Jesus and Lucifer brothers
Understanding that good works come from Jesus through us. its not us doing them, we choose to do His works etc……

I could go on …its black and white, no middle ground at all. Yes we have some very good things in common but its not Christianity.

We also have our Creed, the Apostles Creed and the Nicene Creed that your faith rejects but all other Christian sects accept, not Chritsian if they don’t.

Not to be mean here or upset with you I am not at all

I really do care about the LDS here in Utah…I would even say I love them in Christ. I have been helping them with questions for 11 years now…I really get it.

I have a really hard time with the Apostacy because I have found so much love in the Catholic faith, so many Saints that have pierced my heart, thousand of them. Then we have us, not Saints at all yet we know we are loved the same…we continue to battle evil in our lives together through the Sacraments of healing. If you were told your parents were evil (Apostacy) that they fell into darkness…yet you came to know them and found them to be loving…understanding…by your side at all cost you to would be upset a bit with the lies told about them. Yes you can see their bad side as well, yet because of them you have learned to forgive and reconcile. Do you underterstand what I am saying? We are not worthy, not one of us yet within the confines of Jesus you want to do good for others. The Catholic Church, with all of its good and bad within as well as on the oustside is authentic Christianity. Being with jesus is our only true goal.

God Bless
Again could not let it go and just being foreward

Rich
www.uathmission.com
I am being honest. I don’t believe you’ve understood me (what else is new on the Internet? ;)).

Here is the passage from D&C 10:67 “Behold, this is my doctrine—whosoever repenteth and cometh unto me, the same is my church.”

I believe that passage is true. Additionally, Robert Millett, former Dean of Religious Education at BYU, interprets it the same way I do. He discusses it in a recent book of his A Different Jesus?.
 
Mormons find the idea of creeds to be in error. This is really an extension of the first argument.
I’ve always noticed that the word “creed” seems to be like a four-letter word (except with 5…) for many Mormons. Is the idea of Creeds in error, or what the creeds actually say in error? I see the Mormon Articles of Faith as a creed, for example.
 
I’ve always noticed that the word “creed” seems to be like a four-letter word (except with 5…) for many Mormons. Is the idea of Creeds in error, or what the creeds actually say in error? I see the Mormon Articles of Faith as a creed, for example.
The Articles of Faith lack the specificity of a creed, and no one is asked if they accept them in any sort of determination of worthiness or orthodoxy. In the end they become a quick way to lay out basic Mormon talking points.

Joseph Smith was opposed to creeds in that he believed they calcified belief and were used to interpret a closed canon. As the author of the Book of Mormon, Joseph Smith didn’t like that idea. Joseph objected to the articulation of the Trinity in the Athenasian creed, but it really was the idea of creeds that got his goat.

Early on in the LDS Church there were a couple of attempts at “catechisms” but they never took hold for the long haul.
 
I am being honest. I don’t believe you’ve understood me (what else is new on the Internet? ;)).

Here is the passage from D&C 10:67 “Behold, this is my doctrine—whosoever repenteth and cometh unto me, the same is my church.”

I believe that passage is true. Additionally, Robert Millett, former Dean of Religious Education at BYU, interprets it the same way I do. He discusses it in a recent book of his A Different Jesus?.
The big problem is a lot of us think the Book of Mormon could have come from a “Angel Of Light” do you know what that means?
 
I
Here is the passage from D&C 10:67 "Behold, this is my doctrine—whosoever repenteth and cometh unto me, the same is my church."
quote]

What I understand clearly in your above quote is the “me”

Clearly the Jesus taught in the LDS religion is not the same taught in 2000 years of Christianity. If you do not know this than further discernment would be needed. If you do know this than why would you call yourself Christian and not just Mormon.

So who do “we” cometh to? This is the question that calls for an answer.

Christians (Catholics, Lutherans, Baptist, Pentacostal, Methodist etc…) choose to come to Jesus, who is one in being with the Father, the only Son of God, eternally begotten of the Father, God from God, Light from Light, true God from true God, begotten, not made, one in being with the Father. Through Him all things were made. For us men and our salvation He came down from heaven: by the power of the Holy Spirit, He was born of the Virgin Mary , and became man. For our sake He was crucified under Pontius Pilate; He suffered, died, and was buried. On the third day He rose again in fulfillment of the scriptures: He ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of the Father. He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead, and his kingdom will have no end. We believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the giver of life, who proceeds from the Father and the Son. With the Father and the Son, He is worshiped and glorified. He has spoken through the Prophets. We believe in one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church. We acknowledge one baptism for the forgiveness of sins. We look for the resurrection of the dead, and the life of the world to come

That is the real question…what “me” are we speaking of.
 
I’m late to this discussion, but perhaps some understanding can still be achieved. As an LDS person, I think of the “Church” in two senses. There is the Church as an organization, which is articulated in D&C 20. There is also the Church in the sense of anyone who is a follower of Christ, which is articulated in D&C 10 (and which predates the founding of the LDS Church by about a year and a half).

It is in this second sense that I, as a Mormon, consider Catholics and other followers of Christ as fellow Christians.

In terms of the organizational New Testament Church failing, Mormons really are staking out the following arguments:

Apostolic authority is connected to an open canon. Actions like Acts 15, where the Apostles set aside much of the Old Covenant (and including things like circumcision, that were to last forever according to Genesis 17), are seen by Mormons as necessary. For Mormons, when the canon was closed, an important aspect of Apostolic authority was officially disavowed. For Mormons, you have to be able to put “new wine in new bottles” so to speak. I should add that Mormons I’ve discussed this with don’t have good answers for a shifting notion of Apostle within the New Testament.

Mormons find the idea of creeds to be in error. This is really an extension of the first argument.

Mormons see the LDS Church in quasi-Jewish Christian terms (although only Mormon scholars would make the comparison so explicit). If you can wrap your head around this, you’ll come a long way in terms of understanding Mormons’ views of themselves. They see themselves very much as keepers of temple authority, albeit not in the Old Testament sense. They see other Christians as sects–like Essenes, Saducees, Nazaraens, you name it–who, despite differences, should all acknowledge the authority of the Mormon rituals (including the temple ones, but Mormons see all of their rituals in these exclusive, authoritarian terms). Modern notions of “organization” cause much of the strife, but Mormons basically see themselves in this fashion. The absence of Jewish influenced, temple Christianity, such as has been asserted before the destruction of the temple in AD 70, is very much what Mormons see as having been restored through them. Mormons see themselves as the temple cult (not in a negative sense, in an anthropological sense), and their priesthood is built around this idea of exclusive, sacred ordinances.

I hope this helps. I’m trying to put it in language that Mormons might not use, but that other readers will understand.
First of all, I want to thank you for taking the time to hop into this discussion and answer these questions.

Next, I like to give you a little piece of advice while on the board: let it fall off like water on a duck’s back. (It=anything that might aggrevate you)

And now for my question. I find it somewhat interesting that you bring in the Jewish faith in your comparison to the Mormon faith. I said it once to a group of Mormon missionaries that it seems that the Mormon Church is a reinstatement of the Jewish law (and they completely disavowed the even concept). What I tried to explain (and I will try to condense it for this post) is that Jesus is the fulfillment of the Old Testament. an example would be Luke 4. We see Satan tempting Jesus. Satan quotes Psalms 91 as a prophecy of of the protection for Christ, and Jesus responds with Deut. 6. I say all this because Jesus is the word. He fulfills the Old Testament. This fulfillment creates the New Testament. Now, the Mormon church is a restoration (or recreation) of the Old Testament which is then a restoration (or recreation) of Jesus.

Would you accept that general analysis?
 
[SIGN][/SIGN]
The Articles of Faith lack the specificity of a creed, and no one is asked if they accept them in any sort of determination of worthiness or orthodoxy. In the end they become a quick way to lay out basic Mormon talking points.

[SIGN]Joseph Smith was opposed to creeds in that he believed they calcified belief and were [/SIGN]used to interpret a closed canon. As the author of the Book of Mormon, Joseph Smith didn’t like that idea. Joseph objected to the articulation of the Trinity in the Athenasian creed, but it really was the idea of creeds that got his goat.

Early on in the LDS Church there were a couple of attempts at “catechisms” but they never took hold for the long haul.
That there should sum it up for you. JS was OPPOSED to the Apostltes Creed that is what they lived by. The Apostles Creed are the exact Teachings of Jesus Christ. So to make a long story short if JS opposed the Creed they quite simply opposed the teachings of Jesus Christ.
 
First of all, I want to thank you for taking the time to hop into this discussion and answer these questions.

Next, I like to give you a little piece of advice while on the board: let it fall off like water on a duck’s back. (It=anything that might aggrevate you)

And now for my question. I find it somewhat interesting that you bring in the Jewish faith in your comparison to the Mormon faith. I said it once to a group of Mormon missionaries that it seems that the Mormon Church is a reinstatement of the Jewish law (and they completely disavowed the even concept). What I tried to explain (and I will try to condense it for this post) is that Jesus is the fulfillment of the Old Testament. an example would be Luke 4. We see Satan tempting Jesus. Satan quotes Psalms 91 as a prophecy of of the protection for Christ, and Jesus responds with Deut. 6. I say all this because Jesus is the word. He fulfills the Old Testament. This fulfillment creates the New Testament. Now, the Mormon church is a restoration (or recreation) of the Old Testament which is then a restoration (or recreation) of Jesus.

Would you accept that general analysis?
I would say that “the Mormon argument” (as absurd as it is to claim “the”) comes down to the validity–or lack thereof–of the practices of the Jewish Christians. Bart Ehrman gets into the thinking and practices of Jewish Christians in Lost Christianities. These Jewish Christians are probably who Paul was so angry with in Galatians 2, and we only have fragments of them–there are scraps of wrtings of the Ebionites and Nazaraens, for example, but nothing more.

So while Historic Christianity sees the Church of Christ strengthening and coming together as orthodoxy and orthopraxy are established, Mormons see incremental apostasy. Mormons want to claim a restoration of Christianity before all of the decisions were made that make them heretics.

The young Mormon missionaries are well-versed in the basic teachings of Mormonism, but haven’t had the training to “do theology.” They may not have even understood what you were getting at!

There are legalistic Mormons who probably err on the side of OT thinking when it comes to “obedience to prophets,” but there are also Mormon mystics/gnostics, Aesthetics, Ascetics, and so on.

But let me take up what I believe to be an aspect of your argument: The letter to the Hebrews makes no bones about dispensing with temples and tabernacles, and salvation through the Mosaic law because of Christ’s sacrifice. Christ is our “High Priest in the Heavens” so to speak.

There is also 1 Peter 2 and 1 Cor. 3, which describe the followers of Christ as “the temple” wherein God dwells.

Most Mormons don’t understand these passages–in part because English speaking Mormons use the King James Bible and their comprehension of 17th century English isn’t that great, but also because they require some fancy dancing–so to speak.

The argument that Mormon scholars are likely to advance on these things goes something like this:

The OT sacrifices have been done away, and Christ is our High Priest in the Heavens, and the Mormon temple ordinances reflect his New Covenant. Mormons find grace and knowledge through the temple ordinances, but the ordinances themselves are only the means–and not the source–for grace and knowledge.

In D&C 124, the LDS Church is warned that if it is not able to build a temple in Nauvoo, it will be rejected by God as a church. In order to build the Nauvoo temple, Mormons had to come together as a people–as stones built on the cornerstone of Christ and willing to be fitted in the 1 Peter 2 sense–and be filled with the Spirit of God. The Nauvoo temple was an outer emblem of the inner work, so to speak. In that sense, Mormons can believe in the idea of the body of followers as the temple of God.

Because Mormons are heterodox by design, gnostic Mormons may think their salvation is more through knowledge in the ordinances (and there are Mormon scriptures that support this idea), legalistic Mormons think their salvation is in perfect keeping of the temple commandments and covenants (and there are Mormon scriptures that support this idea), and there are Paul-influenced Mormons who see the temple ordinances as teaching salvation by grace alone (and some of these think that this is a knowledge that distills slowly, so around we go again!). I could keep going with these “types” of Mormons–I’m not being exhaustive here.

By design, there is no mechanism in Mormonism to make all of these people agree. This can make discussing Mormonism with Mormons a frustrating affair, because while they often talk about the same concepts, they don’t necessarily have the same understandings.

I hope this helps a bit. Thank you for your thoughtful observation!
 
We have asked for proof that the Catholic Church apostasized. We have yet to receive tangible proof. For proof that the Catholic Church did not apostisize, read Church history, not only by Catholics, but by unbiased non-Catholics. Our proof is that we are still here after 2000 years, still teaching the same truths that Jesus and the Apostles taught.

PAX DOMINI :signofcross:

Shalom Aleichem
Smith’s teaching about a continuous guidance for the Church in order to keep it together in doctrine and practices by means of constant revelations (modern day revelation, the Mormons call it) from heaven, has actually failed Joseph Smith’s Church. It has experienced a falling apart and a disunity Smith never counted on. Many Mormons have left their church, while many more remain in, yet smoke, drink and reject polygamy even in theory. Thus the Utah Church exists as just one group out of the hundred or more (estimated) groups that base their beliefs on the teachings of Joseph Smith. Today the Mormon Church can be seen as part of a great apostasy that occurred in the Church of Jesus Christ, Latter Day Saints.
 
So while Historic Christianity sees the Church of Christ strengthening and coming together as orthodoxy and orthopraxy are established, Mormons see incremental apostasy. Mormons want to claim a restoration of Christianity before all of the decisions were made that make them heretics.

The young Mormon missionaries are well-versed in the basic teachings of Mormonism, but haven’t had the training to “do theology.” They may not have even understood what you were getting at!

There are legalistic Mormons who probably err on the side of OT thinking when it comes to “obedience to prophets,” but there are also Mormon mystics/gnostics, Aesthetics, Ascetics, and so on.

But let me take up what I believe to be an aspect of your argument: The letter to the Hebrews makes no bones about dispensing with temples and tabernacles, and salvation through the Mosaic law because of Christ’s sacrifice. Christ is our “High Priest in the Heavens” so to speak.

There is also 1 Peter 2 and 1 Cor. 3, which describe the followers of Christ as “the temple” wherein God dwells.

Most Mormons don’t understand these passages–in part because English speaking Mormons use the King James Bible and their comprehension of 17th century English isn’t that great, but also because they require some fancy dancing–so to speak.

The argument that Mormon scholars are likely to advance on these things goes something like this:

The OT sacrifices have been done away, and Christ is our High Priest in the Heavens, and the Mormon temple ordinances reflect his New Covenant. Mormons find grace and knowledge through the temple ordinances, but the ordinances themselves are only the means–and not the source–for grace and knowledge.

In D&C 124, the LDS Church is warned that if it is not able to build a temple in Nauvoo, it will be rejected by God as a church. In order to build the Nauvoo temple, Mormons had to come together as a people–as stones built on the cornerstone of Christ and willing to be fitted in the 1 Peter 2 sense–and be filled with the Spirit of God. The Nauvoo temple was an outer emblem of the inner work, so to speak. In that sense, Mormons can believe in the idea of the body of followers as the temple of God.

Because Mormons are heterodox by design, gnostic Mormons may think their salvation is more through knowledge in the ordinances (and there are Mormon scriptures that support this idea), legalistic Mormons think their salvation is in perfect keeping of the temple commandments and covenants (and there are Mormon scriptures that support this idea), and there are Paul-influenced Mormons who see the temple ordinances as teaching salvation by grace alone (and some of these think that this is a knowledge that distills slowly, so around we go again!). I could keep going with these “types” of Mormons–I’m not being exhaustive here.

By design, there is no mechanism in Mormonism to make all of these people agree. This can make discussing Mormonism with Mormons a frustrating affair, because while they often talk about the same concepts, they don’t necessarily have the same understandings.

I hope this helps a bit. Thank you for your thoughtful observation!
Well it has been slow going on my part to really figure out what the core belief system is and then what is secondary. I also did come to understand there are quite a few different thoughts within the Mormon community. Personally, I see Christianity as ever so simplistic, so simple in fact that people don’t want to accept it in that form. While I wouldn’t be willing, even as a “protestant” to say the church has fallen into complete disrepair, I think it is easy to see where the house has varied from the blueprint.

If we think of a “church” as a building for a second, I think there is a little insight. Yes, there is some spots where it fails (especially since Christians are the church). It would seem that that the Mormon founders were interested in a near complete razing of the church. They would have to say, this building has failed, it must be torn down. Then as an afterthought, it was more like, they had to accept a complete renovation, for the church to work out.

The problem with the renovation is complex then. You are having to adjust plans around established walls. You are are having to work around limitations. You are making adjustments for measurements and meanings that are no longer standard. (Just put a new roof on a house built 125 years ago and you will chuckle). Anyone who has done a renovation knows there are reasons for going that route (mostly it is money) but I’ve actually done a renovation to keep the integrity of outward appearance (it was a house in a historic district). I see the Mormon church like this. They need the blood of Christ. When they accept that then they get the whole Bible. Here is where the renovation metaphor goes a little cattiwompus. God’s measurements a true. On my very first project, I learned, man’s measurement is not so true. How I can have a square room with one wall a half an inch longer than the others is beyond me, but I have seen it happen time and again. So, when we look at God’s measurements and compair them to man’s measurements, we see our failings. We can try to explain them away and say, it is material, or the foundation, or whatever, but you have to acknowledge the difference.

This is where the renovation fails because we realize, the original was perfect. I’ll be the first to say, I have looked at the Mormon blueprint of the proposed changes to the church, and I find them lacking. I keep inquiring because I think that maybe I have not understood the plans, but nobody can seem to explain-away some of the serious flaws.
 
That there should sum it up for you. JS was OPPOSED to the Apostltes Creed that is what they lived by. The Apostles Creed are the exact Teachings of Jesus Christ. So to make a long story short if JS opposed the Creed they quite simply opposed the teachings of Jesus Christ.
:clapping:
 
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what pray is this
 
Strange computer writing - not quite sure who invented this or why. :confused:
Here’s what it says, or so I’ve pieced together:

"Yes, it is indeed a Catholic thing. You get your First Holy Communion at Easter, but I won’t be able to receive it cuz I missed the program that leads up to it.

So now I have to wait a whole year!

I absolutely ______ (no idea what that word is supposed to be) (looks like “gutted”, but that doesn’t make any sense. 🤷)

"I use to be Protestant only 4 months ago. So I really want this Communion so that I feel completely Catholic.

No comment!? So you like the Mormons then? LOL
I have a Mormon friend who often harasses me to convert to her “beliefs”.

LOL indeed my little friend.

No idea what the bottom symbols are for. :confused:
 
Smith’s teaching about a continuous guidance for the Church in order to keep it together in doctrine and practices by means of constant revelations (modern day revelation, the Mormons call it) from heaven, has actually failed Joseph Smith’s Church. It has experienced a falling apart and a disunity Smith never counted on. Many Mormons have left their church, while many more remain in, yet smoke, drink and reject polygamy even in theory. Thus the Utah Church exists as just one group out of the hundred or more (estimated) groups that base their beliefs on the teachings of Joseph Smith. Today the Mormon Church can be seen as part of a great apostasy that occurred in the Church of Jesus Christ, Latter Day Saints.
Yes. Also, the Mormons, like other cults, do change and alter their “truths” to conform to public opinion, situation, or whenever they are caught in error or “mis-truths” ( big faux pas ). Viz: the revelation that Blacks can now join the Church, the elimination of polygamy, etc. Sheesh!

PAX DOMINI :signofcross:

Shalom Aleichem
 
Yes. Also, the Mormons, like other cults, do change and alter their “truths” to conform to public opinion, situation, or whenever they are caught in error or “mis-truths” ( big faux pas ). Viz: the revelation that Blacks can now join the Church, the elimination of polygamy, etc. Sheesh!
Or the Adam-god theory of Brigham Young, that was taught for 50 years and then called heresy by the church.
 
[SIGN][/SIGN]
Well it has been slow going on my part to really figure out what the core belief system is and then what is secondary. I also did come to understand there are quite a few different thoughts within the Mormon community. Personally, I see Christianity as ever so simplistic, so simple in fact that people don’t want to accept it in that form. While I wouldn’t be willing, even as a “protestant” to say the church has fallen into complete disrepair,[SIGN] I think it is easy to see where the house has varied from the blueprint. [/SIGN]
If we think of a “church” as a building for a second, I think there is a little insight. Yes, there is some spots where it fails (especially since Christians are the church). It would seem that that the Mormon founders were interested in a near complete razing of the church. They would have to say, this building has failed, it must be torn down. Then as an afterthought, it was more like, they had to accept a complete renovation, for the church to work out.

The problem with the renovation is complex then. You are having to adjust plans around established walls. You are are having to work around limitations. You are making adjustments for measurements and meanings that are no longer standard. (Just put a new roof on a house built 125 years ago and you will chuckle). Anyone who has done a renovation knows there are reasons for going that route (mostly it is money) but I’ve actually done a renovation to keep the integrity of outward appearance (it was a house in a historic district). I see the Mormon church like this. They need the blood of Christ. When they accept that then they get the whole Bible. Here is where the renovation metaphor goes a little cattiwompus. God’s measurements a true. On my very first project, I learned, man’s measurement is not so true. How I can have a square room with one wall a half an inch longer than the others is beyond me, but I have seen it happen time and again. So, when we look at God’s measurements and compair them to man’s measurements, we see our failings. We can try to explain them away and say, it is material, or the foundation, or whatever, but you have to acknowledge the difference.

This is where the renovation fails because we realize, the original was perfect. I’ll be the first to say, I have looked at the Mormon blueprint of the proposed changes to the church, and I find them lacking. I keep inquiring because I think that maybe I have not understood the plans, but nobody can seem to explain-away some of the serious flaws.
Now see you guys keep saying that. And I ask what teaching of the CC has changed since the time of Christ. But I never get an answer. So you made a claim that the teaching of the Church varied please show me where!
 
And also could you show me scripture or ST that claims Christians are the Church. Because Jesus Christ and the Church are one. Jesus is the Church.
 
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