G
gazelam
Guest
Do you believe that Early Church Father Lactantius is also wrong? He said that The Father produced both Jesus and Lucifer:Mormons wrongly give that distinction to Satan as well which is the way they justify the teaching that Jesus and Satan are brothers.
Since God was possessed of the greatest foresight for planning, and of the greatest skill for carrying out in action, before He commenced this business of the world,–inasmuch as there was in Him, and always is, the fountain of full and most complete goodness,–in order that goodness might spring as a stream from Him, and might flow forth afar, He produced a Spirit like to Himself, who might be endowed with the perfections of God the Father… Then He made another being, in whom the disposition of the divine origin did not remain. Therefore he was infected with his own envy as with poison, and passed from good to evil; and at his own will, which had been given to him by God unfettered, he acquired for himself a contrary name. From which it appears that the source of all evils is envy. For he envied his predecessor, who through his steadfastness is acceptable and dear to God the Father. This being, who from good became evil by his own act, is called by the Greeks diabolus : we call him accuser, because he reports to God the faults to which he himself entices us. God, therefore, when He began the fabric of the world, set over the whole work that first and greatest Son, and used Him at the same time as a counselor and artificer, in planning, arranging, and accomplishing, since He is complete both in knowledge, and judgment, and power… ( Lactantius, Divine Institutes 2.9. in Alexander Roberts and James Donaldson, eds. The Ante-Nicene Fathers , 10 vols. (1885; reprint, Peabody: Hendrickson, 2004), 7:52–53.)
Hardly. Cain and Abel were also brothers, but no one believes that they were equally righteous.For Mormons to make such a claim, gazelam, is to promote Satan as also being God since Jesus truly IS God, or to demote Jesus to the status of an angel - and a fallen one at that. (Satan is a fallen angel.)