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TOmNossor
Guest
12"I have much more to say to you, more than you can now bear. 13But when he, the Spirit of truth, comes, he will guide you into all truth."I believe your insight is shedding light on the meaning of Jesus’ words in John, chapter 16:
For, everything Joseph Smith taught, you agree, certainly is not truth (his quote about God the Father once being a man like you or i being one example). So, it cannot be that even God’s prophets are always led to the truth by the Holy Spirit.
Why is it, then, if the Holy Spirit guides us into all truth did the Mormon prophet fail to see the truth on occasion? I do not think his teaching false doctrine was intentional, for i am giving him the benefit of the doubt until i have reason to believe otherwise. Would you say he was, at times, deceived?
Again, I believe that God the Father was once a man, I just believe this to be true in the same way it is true that God the Son was once a man. I have found little within Joseph Smith’s thought from which to run. There are however a number of things (though a small fraction of his teachings) within Brigham Young’s thought from which I do run. Virtually all LDS disagree with things Brigham Young taught and some LDS leaders have specifically called out where they thought he erred.
God’s prophets are led by the Holy Spirit, but as Joseph Smith said, “a prophet is not always a prophet, only when he is acting as such.” (History of the Church 5:256)
Some of the things that Brigham Young taught can be traced from what appears to be revelation to man derived error. I believe that every interaction between God and man has a fallible man involved. While God could imprint truth directly into the mind and I think He does, a mans mind then builds upon said truth and such is not without potential for problems.
Here is an example. Joseph Smith went to God with a question as to when the second coming of Jesus Christ would be. He records this, “I was once praying very earnestly to know the time of the coming of the Son of Man, when I heard a voice repeat the following: Joseph, my son, if thou livest until thou art eighty-five years old, thou shalt see the face of the Son of Man; therefore let this suffice, and trouble me no more on this matter. (D&C 130:14-15).
Joseph Smith then speculates upon what this communication meant. Our critics frequently suggest that Joseph Smith prophesied the return of Christ in 1890, but Joseph clearly offered some other possibilities in his speculation on this revelation (including that he might die before 1890 AND that the second coming might not occur until 1890 or later). It is consistent with my view of a prophet if Joseph Smith had leaned towards an interpretation that was in fact mistaken. Thus, real communication from God occurred, but a fallible man struggled to interpret what it meant.
BTW, if I recall correctly in the General Conference of Feb 1890 or Aug 1889, a talk was given that said contrary to what some might think Christ is not likely to return within the year.
Charity, TOm
