C
Cowboy_Pete
Guest
No. To be exalted in the highest level of the Celestial Kingdom, she needs to be married to a faithful LDS person, but not necessarily married in this life, and not necessarily married to someone that was LDS in this life. Her husband might convert in the spirit world. After he dies, his kids will probably do the temple work for him, which includes baptism, then the work sealing his marriage for eternity. If he accepts this, in the spirit world, then they may exalted together, serving God in the highest capacity. Otherwise she could be a minstering angel in the Celestial Kingdom. Or she might be sealed to someone else and thus exalted.Maybe not, but isn’t it a fact that that woman will never enter the top level in heaven, which I think is called the celestial kingdom?
This world isn’t the end of the road.
To be sure, there will always be those who build for themselves “a hell in heaven’s despite,” to steal a phrase from William Blake. Mormons who twist the theology to their despair, put unwarranted pressure on others, as if they could color coordinate their heavenly mansions by compulsive behavior on earth. If you think about it, I bet you can think of some Catholics that act like that as well, who use unreasonably narrow interpretations of doctrine in order to control and manipulate each others’ lives.
In short, NewSeeker’s got less to fear for his eternal family than I do, as a mormon alcoholic with just 3 days since my last drink.