Now, offering a hand of concilliation, and allowing NDM to “prove me wrong” in my characterization of his effort here:
Consider what the lds church’s website says about God, as found
here.
Note that only The Father is directly called God, leaving Jesus and the Holy Spirit as mere members of the “godhead”, a council “united in purpose” but “separate beings”. I’d also call upon NDM to reflect upon how many times he pointed to Jesus’ baptism while conducting the missionary discussions as proof that the three persons of the “godhead” are distinct entities in specific contrast to the truly “common faith” of Christians in the Trinity.
Compare this with the Catechism. Compare this, even, with the new Advent article
here. Despite some identical word useage, there remains an incontrovertable distinction.
The the LDS, “God” is specifically “The Father”, who is the head of the “Godhead” which consists of two other beings who merely share commonality of “purpose”. LDS: “God” = The Father
Contrastingly, for the Catholic Church, “God” referrs equally and without subordination of any fasion, to each member of the “Godhead”, which itself is a term used only to describe the distinctive persons of the Trinity, not a concilliar function. CC: “God” = The Father, son, and Holy Spirit, each distinct yet unseperable in their essential unity.
The distinction creates a barrier for the professed “common faith” that our mormon freind asserts he holds with us regarding Christ. For his religion, if not his personalize assumptions and beliefs, asserts that Christ is a subordinate, separate entity whose unity with God resides only in his subordination to the will of God (who is strictly said to be the Father only). This is very different from the Catholic perspective that Christ, himself, is God , as is the Father and the holy spirit, and that “God” is all of them without confusion of substance or division of essence. As such, according to both religions (and yes, they are distinct “religions”), ther is no comonality of Faith as regards God. There exists only a comonality of terminology.
While I do not, in actuallity, deny NDM’s assertion to his sincere desire to “serve Christ”, which itself is a common notion between the two religions, it is impossible to conclude that there exists an objective comonality of “faith” in regards to Christ, let alone other doctrinal issues.
And yes, doctrine does matter; otherwise there would have been the need for either teaching of Christ, nor the possibility of the mormon apostacy theory, and finally the necessity for prophets. If doctrine is subordinate to “works”, as some other mormons (usually uncomfortable with the implications of doctrine) have asserted in making such claims of commonality, then there was no need for the restoration of Smith, nor can said restoration have any purpose. Therefore, the comonality I acknowledged is not one which allows for the claim of commonality of faith as asserted. On the level of works, Buddhists are united to Christians in the same commonality, yet ontologically they are also as irreconcilable from the perspective of Faith. It is
false ecumenicism which allows for the confusion presented by NDM.