The Mormon scriptures talk about “intelligences” which seem to be uncreated precursors of created human spirits. Do intelligences exist because God exists or are they completely independent of God’s existence? And do intelligences have individual personalities prior to becoming human spirits?
BartBurk,
A few items of note about this subject, from my perspective as I think about what Abraham learned about this and what Joseph Smith learned also, are as follows:
Abraham learned about this after he had prepared himself for more knowledge by being completely true to his covenants and by showing God that he desired more knowledge and that he could be trusted to act in a righteous way when given more knowledge. Otherwise, there is deliberately a “veil” placed upon our “spirit memory” by God such that even though we lived before we came to this earth, we have only knowledge of that in tiny glimpses from the scriptures and in other glimpses by gaining personal revelation or by getting as a Latter-day Saint youth a “patriarchal blessing” that talks about the pre-mortal life in some cases (such as my own when I was fifteen, as an example).
We don’t know enough to describe an “intelligence”, and only are given the glimpse that “they have no beginning” and “they shall have no end,” and that Christ, Jehovah, “[is] more intelligent than they all” and that He “rules in the heavens above, and in the earth beneath, in all wisdom and prudence, over all the intelligences thine eyes have seen from the beginning;” (this was given to Abraham in vision).
We can discern from the case of Satan that an intelligence, after being brought forth into the condition of being a spirit (an “angel” as used in some scriptural passages), could be a spirit and could later rebel against the light and knowledge they had received, so as far as a “personality”, it appears that such would apply more to a spirit than to an “intelligence”, but yet God had a knowledge of the potential of each “intelligence” since He knows all things and has no time barrier for His knowledge.
Another point I think is important is that the only difference it would seem to make to a person who gains this knowledge about there having been a pre-mortal life, is a positive difference in their life, (but perhaps not for some people–perhaps a person enjoys the thought that God created them from nothing with the emphasis on a “fresh start” from nothing).
I personally enjoy the joyful adulation of knowing that when “all the sons of God shouted for joy” as the book of Job exclaims, some of us now living had the opportunity to be there and to rejoice in having it explained that there was going to be an end time during the history of the world, when we would be able to come to earth and help out with God’s plan and see the continuing unfolding of Christ’s perfect work and glory.
Peace to you and all.