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LittleDeb
Guest
This is very well put, Ben. This is precisely my trouble when I try to get to the heart of an LDS doctrine. I know I am partially at fault since I do not read things by FAIR and FARMS. I tried just once and it was way too dry for me. I have enjoyed reading the Ensign at my best friend’s house. Upon mention of Gerald Lund I was reminded of how much I enjoyed his fictional novels, “The Work and the Glory.” Yes, this Catholic read all 9 of them. (8? It’s been many years now.) I know I should seek out the LDS sources on my own but I feel I have to weed through so much that is not relevent to the topic.I am sure you will disagree with me but I am hoping that you can see where frustration sets in for those of us who would like to know what the LDS church teaches and the obstacles we face in achieving that goal. There are four main obstacles, I suppose… there is no church-sanctioned ‘catechism’, different LDS seem to have some fundamentally different beliefs, reading the discourses of now deceased LDS prophets and applying those words to today’s doctrine is verboten, and LDS apologetics is so radically different from that of other Christian sects that it seems, at times, insulting (and yet I do realize that LDS apologetics differ, too, in that they are meant primarily for the audience of the faithful and not, as in other sects, directed most specifically against detractors).
I really just want to know where to truly begin to understand the (basic) LDS concept of the nature of God. As a Catholic I strongly agree with the prior posting “It is better to know the Planner than the plan.” I am realizing in trying to understand LDS theology I am making a mistake of applying my own beliefs to the information instead of looking at it from a fresh approach. This is difficult. Anyone who understands my physical location might understand that I have been looking at this for a great many years. I love my LDS friends. I pray with them. I hope we are praying to the same God.