Croso,
I’m sorry, I don’t understand why the concept that we mortal men can become “exalted” and get our own spiritual children and organize our own universes is so difficult to understand. It’s actually not that hard at all. You just explained it yourself, completely, in about four paragraphs in this very thread. And we all understand it.
So why, exactly, would that concept have gone completely over the heads of the Hebrews of three thousand years ago? What’s so hard to understand about a panoply of gods in an ascending hierarchy? Answer: Um, nothing. Because guess what? That was pretty much the basis for all human supernatural belief before the Bible was written. It’s not difficult to understand at all.
You know what
is a difficult concept for the human brain to understand? One God, who is the Creator of All Things, but He Himself was not created. A single God who brought forth everything - everything that exists everywhere - from nothing. That, frankly, is a much more difficult concept to explain and understand than Mormon cosmology. In fact, you yourself seem unable to understand it right here in this thread.
The only reason Mormon doctrine seems so “alien” (your words) to so many people in the West is because it’s such a radical break from the Judeo/Christian theological tradition, which has become the new “normal” in the three thousand years since the Book of Genesis was written. So your assertion that God wouldn’t have revealed Mormon cosmology from the beginning because it would have been too confusing for the Hebrews rests on a fundamentally flawed assumption: that polytheism or henotheism would have been more difficult for people to understand back then than monotheism.
Furthermore, leaving aside your assertion that “the beginning” doesn’t mean “the beginning,” but really “a beginning” (or, to put it another way, your assertion that “the” doesn’t really mean “the”), how do you reconcile the phrase “God created?” Mormon doctrine is clear: the “Heavenly Father” of this universe did not create the matter that comprises the heavens and the earth. He merely organized pre-existing matter. So both the words “God” and “created” are incorrect, according to Mormon doctrine.
By the way, I see that we’ve now added the word “the” to our list of words that need re-defining in order for the first sentence of Holy Scripture to be reconciled with Mormon doctrine. The list thus far:
- The
- Beginning
- God
- Created
Still have “in,” though. So that’s something.