Views on Mormonism?

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Miriam,

Jesus was teaching the Sadducees using the example they gave. Their question pertained to the resurrection as a doctrine. He assured them there is a resurrection, but also noted those who choose a “Mosaic law” marriage are choosing to be resurrected as angels for their resurrection, rather than as “sons of God” which is often talked about in the New Testament.

If you sort out the pronouns, “they” was specific to the case presented to Jesus. He didn’t change the subject to a “universal they”–that would be poor grammar, and Jesus was the most perfect user of language to ever walk the earth.

(I might add that He also knew exactly what He was praying for in the Intercessory prayer, and didn’t need help getting the words made into something different than what they specifically express as His prayer for His covenant followers.)
[BIBLEDRB]Matthew 22:29-30[/BIBLEDRB]

For in the resurrection they shall neither marry nor be married; but shall be as the angels of God in heaven. In other words, single.

Parker you add stuff all the time that has nothing to do with what is actually said in the Bible.

I understand why you do this but, it doesn’t make your argument the truth.
 
Is this passage in Matthew 16:19 what you’re referring to?
18And I say also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.

19And I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.
If so, obviously, we’ll have a different interpretation of that. Jesus just changed Simon’s name - always a significant event in the Bible - to Peter (rock) and promises that on “this rock” Jesus will build His church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. Then He gives Peter the keys to heaven. Please see Isaiah 22:20-22 to see what real authority that gave - when a king gave keys and the power to bind and loose, it was an actual power. That man could act in the king’s name. So the fact that Jesus builds His church on Peter, giving him the keys to heaven and the power to bind and loose says much more about how this church is strong and blessed by God and has real authority (and will not be losing all authority in an apostasy in a few years) rather than anything about an idea not yet to be practiced for 1800 years.
that is a stretch
 
[BIBLEDRB]Matthew 22:29-30[/BIBLEDRB]

For in the resurrection they shall neither marry nor be married; but shall be as the angels of God in heaven. In other words, single.

Parker you add stuff all the time that has nothing to do with what is actually said in the Bible.

I understand why you do this but, it doesn’t make your argument the truth.
Miriam,

When you choose not to read the entire passage, then you certainly shouldn’t expect to get the entire meaning of the passage. The use of the word “they” means that there was an understood subject and the verb ties to that understood subject. Go back to verse 25 and you will find the specific subject introduced by the Sadducees and addressed as the same subject by the Savior.

If you are saying that Jesus used the kind of poor grammar you would be attributing to Him by asserting that He changed the subject without transitioning to the new subject He was going to teach about, then I certainly disagree and say again that He was the most perfect user of language to ever walk the earth. He used a verb that tied to the subject that was presented in the Sadducees’ question.
 
Hi, Tony888,

I realize that this is critical to the presentation, so let me just go over my prevous post from another perspective.

The mental picture I have of your presentation is three men sitting down and talking with one another so that an agreement is reached. We have three beings with three different personalities being in agreement over particular actions. The picture would be complete if one said to the other two, “Let us make man in our image” - and not something like, “I will make man in my image.”

Maybe this will be helpful:

For God to be God, God must be Eternal - having no beginning or no end, and bringing into existence everything that has existed or will exist. God can neither deceive or be deceived. While unaided human reason can conclude that there must be a God, it can have no detailed knowledge about the nature of God. Any knowledge we have about the Nature of God comes from God Himself.

In the Baptism of Jesus account given in Matthew 3:16-17 we have the voice from heaven - clearly understood by all to be the Voice of God, clearly stating that Jesus Christ - the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity - is the Son of God. And, we have the Third Person of the Blessed Trinity in the form of a dove as the Spirit of God. All three are identified as different Persons (with no confusion of Person) of God - singular.

In the Great Commission account given in Matthew 28:19 we have the Risen Christ telling His Apostles - the First Bishops of the Church Christ founded on Peter - whose current successor is Benedict XVI - to proclaim the Good News to the entire world and to Baptize in the Name (singular - NOT NAMES) of the Father, and the Son and the Holy Spirit. Christ is quite exact in identfying the Three Unique Persons of the One God - no ambiguous grammar.

But, you know, it was 67 years after the Resurrection and Ascension of Christ that the last book of the New Testament was written. And, it was 300 years after the death of St. John the Evangelist that the Canon of Sacred Scripture (you have an abridged copy) was finalized. During this time - there were active persecutions - with al the Apostles, save John, meeting a martyr’s death. The Sacred Tradition of the Apostles that was carried forward by the Early Church Fathers under the guidance of the Holy Spirit is what enabled the Good News to be preached before there was a Holy Bible.

I mention this because very early on in the History of the Church - Three Persons in One God was an established doctrine of Christianity (and that would be the Catholic Church) before there was the Bible as we have it today.

As I said before, the choice seems quite clear to me: believe Jesus Christ or believe Joseph Smith. One can not believe both when there is conflict - and there is real conflict when it comes to the Nature of God.

God bless
Personally, I have not seen where Scripture clearly articulates a distinct person versus a being. My ask is for you provide references on this particular point, so crucial to our different views.

I understand John 14:8-9 as stating their complete unity in purpose. To work in your favor, there should be context in the scripture that explains the common being of God vs the separate and distinct Persons of God

I think agreeing on God’s laws, which we are to follow is what is really important,
 
None of those scriptures conclusively deny the existence of other gods, merely state that the gods worshipped by other nations round about at the time were not gods.

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Let’s try again. There is more than just that one singular point, attested to, in these scriptures.

Book of Abraham.
Chapter 4.
1 And then the Lord said: Let us go down. And they went down at the beginning, and they, that is the Gods, organized and formed the heavens and the earth.

Versus

[1 Chronicles 16:26](http://forums.catholic-questions.org/passage/?search=1 Chronicles+16:26&version=NASB)
For all the gods of the peoples are idols, But the LORD made the heavens
------------------

The bible says “Lord” , i.e. singular, one god. The Book of Abraham says “Gods” i.e. , plural more than one god.


**Then the Bible uses “All the gods” are idols. The word “All” does not mean “Some of them”. **

To try to blame this on “timing” is a stretch - yes? Also the bible does use the word “gods”, but it clears it up and says “gods” are man made. You’ll have to show me were the bible “Explicitly” defines this otherwise.
 
Could you please point to the Biblical reference to Temple Sealings?
Peter was given the sealing power (bind on earth, bound in heaven); which power was employed when the saints performed baptisms for the dead.
But, that’s my point. When your very definition of God is so far from reality, then it’s obvious that you really can’t have any idea what any of the rest of it means, either.
As far as following the laws of God, His divine nature is of no significance (just as I pointed out before with relation to our eternal destination). He could be a Flying Spaghetti Monster, but if we followed His laws, we would still find ourselves saved in eternity. The discussion of His nature is intellectually interesting, but of little eternal significance because it does not alter His laws.
I was just referring to your ‘prophets’, not the rest of the hierarchy of the church. If the current prophet decided to throw out half of your doctrines because he claimed to have a major ‘new revelation’, more than likely there wouldn’t be any room for argument, as long as he was very convincing to the ‘quorum of 12’ or the ‘70’, as unlikely as that might seem to be.
Although only the president holds the authority to exercise the necessary keys to receive new revelation pertaining to the whole church, each of his two councillors, and each member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles also hold those keys, and their office Is that of prophet, seer and revelator. Each of them approaches God and receives revelation of the truth of the president’s revelation. Then each and every member of the church has the right to approach God to receive their own personal confirmation of the validity of the revelation also.
So, do you still practice polygamy, and are blacks still denied the ‘priesthood’? Or, are you saying that those things are still active doctrines that are just waiting to be reinstated when someone else gets a new ‘revelation’ that God wants it to happen?
The doctrine of polygamy has never changed: it was only ever practised at the express request of God, by individuals He knew were prepared and of the right mind, and was never compulsory. We also “believe in being subject to kings, presidents, rulers and magistrates in obeying, honouring and sustaining the law”. The law now prohibits polygamy, so until such a time as it is again permitted (unlikely until Jesus Christ returns), God will no longer request that anyone enter into a polygamous union.
African Americans being excluded from the priesthood was always known to be temporary.
I thought it was fairly clear that he was paraphrasing, and I knew exactly which passage he was referring to. You have to remember that English is not his native language, so he sometimes has a problem saying things as clearly as those of us that were brought up speaking English.
Yes, I apologised for the confusion.
Jesus was telling them to be “one body” of men, in full agreement with each other, in the same way that He is One in Being with the Father and the Holy Spirit. He wanted them to be One Body of Christ on earth (aka One Church in the Communion of Saints), made up of all of the individual followers of Jesus, in the same way as there is only One God consisting of three distinct Persons.
The term Christ uses is ‘even as’; He does not say ‘in similar manner’. This language states the situation clearly that the way He desires His church to be one is identical to the situation in which He and His Father are one. As humans we cannot be one in being, therefore we must be one in purpose, desire and action; just as The Godhead are one in their purposes, goals and intentions.
In the Old Testament, God emphasizes that He is One as opposed to many pagan tribes that are polytheistic.

The concept of Trinity is developed in the New Testament

The Trinity Itself
You write that as if we are unaware of the scriptures. The fact is that we both believe the words of scripture, what we disagree over are the interpretations.
As Joseph Smith said;
“the teachers of religion of the different sects understood the same passages of scripture so differently as to destroy all confidence in settling the question by an appeal to the Bible.”
This is not incidental bickering over an inconsequential detail - this is a major item: the very nature of God as revealed by God Himself. Either we believe what Christ tells us, or we believe what Joesph Smith tells us. Both groups believe that Christ rose from the dead. Joseph Smith has not risen from the dead. The evidence looks very strong to me on who we should place our Faith in. If we can not agree on this we can not agree on what is really important.
We do believe what Christ tells us, through the revelation of His Holy Spirit.
We place our faith in Jesus Christ only: Joseph Smith is revered for what He has done in restoring the truth, and bringing to light the true gospel of Jesus Christ once again; but we can only be saved through faith in Jesus Christ.
Again, the nature of God is what it is, and is not important as far as following His words. We know He exists, and that He loves us; anything further than that is only (as far as our mortal existence is concerned at least) intellectually interesting. Whatever His nature, we still can only follow His teachings.
 
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If so, obviously, we’ll have a different interpretation of that. Jesus just changed Simon’s name - always a significant event in the Bible - to Peter (rock) and promises that on “this rock” Jesus will build His church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.
According to John this name change happened immediately when Chist first met Peter, Matthew and Luke call him Peter from the outset. I only say this becaus I had never considered this a change of name. The start of the passage already names him Simon Peter: before any change might occur.
The passage is unclear as to what Christ intends that His church be built upon, there are three possiblities: Peter himself (worrying, as what does this mean after Peter’s death?); testimony of Christ’s divinity (that Peter had just professed) that every person following Him must have; or continuing revelation from God (Jesus just told Peter that 'flesh and blood hath not revealed it to you, but my Father which is in heaven) which is essential to understand what is right in the ever changing world we live in (after all, no teachings exist in the scriptures regarding television, film, contraception etc.).
I find it illogical that Christ should intend that the entire future of His church be built solely on Peter; as a mortal man he was bound to die, leaving the church without its rock anymore. The other two options are everlasting and come directly from God Himself, much better candidates.
The concept of gates prevailing logically means one of two things: gates keep things either in, or out; they do not act on something directly. And prevail means to overcome, to win against something. For gates to win, they succeed in either keeping something in or out. Of where? Hell, or as the actual root of the Greek word means; Hades - the place where all departed souls (/spirits) go. The gates of Hades would prevail by keeping souls inside, preventing the work of God to bring them to heaven. Christ’s ressurection overcame this because it opened the gates, allowing souls to leave. Thus the gates of hell will never prevail against His church, as the members of it (who make up the church: there is no church without them) can no longer be kept within hades.
.Then He gives Peter the keys to heaven. Please see Isaiah 22:20-22 to see what real authority that gave - when a king gave keys and the power to bind and loose, it was an actual power. That man could act in the king’s name.
Yes, and anything that man did in the kings name, anywhere, still had effect within the king’s court and kingdom; the king did not have to personally repeat it. Just the same, part of the keys Peter was here given was the power that whatever he did on the earth with this authority would also have power in heaven, having been performed in the name of Jesus Christ already.
[BIBLEDRB]Matthew 22:29-30[/BIBLEDRB]

For in the resurrection they shall neither marry nor be married; but shall be as the angels of God in heaven. In other words, single.

No, look in the text; it says they will not get married. Jesus was making a point that the situation of someone’s marital status must be decided in this life, and cannot be changed later.
that is a stretch
You’re just here to play devils advocate to both sides, aren’t you?
The mental picture I have of your presentation is three men sitting down and talking with one another so that an agreement is reached. We have three beings with three different personalities being in agreement over particular actions. The picture would be complete if one said to the other two, “Let us make man in our image” - and not something like, “I will make man in my image.”
Sort of, yes. And the biblical record does say ‘let us make man in our image, after our likeness’
For God to be God, God must be Eternal - having no beginning or no end,
Why?
and bringing into existence everything that has existed or will exist.
In the creation that we are a part of, yes.
God can neither deceive or be deceived.
Naturally
In the Baptism of Jesus account given in Matthew 3:16-17 we have the voice from heaven - clearly understood by all to be the Voice of God, clearly stating that Jesus Christ is the Son of God. And, we have the Third Person in the form of a dove as the Spirit of God. All three are identified as different Persons
Yes, yes, yes… Keep going… 👍
of God - singular.
Oops 🤷

The baptism of Christ is a clear account of three separate and distinct personages, each with their own mission, but also each with the same overall purpose and aims. Something as elaborate and easily misunderstood as the Trinity would have a much greater deal of explanation in the scriptures unless 1. It is not important to understand the nature of God in such detail or 2. It is not the case.
I do not need the doctrine of the Trinity as you teach it explained to me; I understand it very well, but still do not see scriptural teaching that it is the case.
 
Naf623,
Originally Posted by Miriam1947
Matthew 22:29-30 (Douay Rheims)
29 And Jesus answering, said to them: You err, not knowing the Scriptures, nor the power of God.
30 For in the resurrection they shall neither marry nor be married; but shall be as the angels of God in heaven.
Show with Haydock Commentary or the Latin Vulgate Bible
Bible passage courtesy of VeritasBible.com
For in the resurrection they shall neither marry nor be married; but shall be as the angels of God in heaven. In other words, single.
No, look in the text; it says they will not get married. Jesus was making a point that the situation of someone’s marital status must be decided in this life, and cannot be changed later.
Huh? They shall neither MARRY nor be MARRIED

If Jesus is saying that they will not be married, he means there is no marriage in heaven. He is not saying that if you were married on earth you will continue the marriage in heaven.

Finished, done with, no more.
 
The passage is unclear as to what Christ intends that His church be built upon, there are three possiblities: Peter himself (worrying, as what does this mean after Peter’s death?); testimony of Christ’s divinity (that Peter had just professed) that every person following Him must have; or continuing revelation from God (Jesus just told Peter that 'flesh and blood hath not revealed it to you, but my Father which is in heaven) which is essential to understand what is right in the ever changing world we live in (after all, no teachings exist in the scriptures regarding television, film, contraception etc.).
I find it illogical that Christ should intend that the entire future of His church be built solely on Peter; as a mortal man he was bound to die, leaving the church without its rock anymore. The other two options are everlasting and come directly from God Himself, much better candidates.

.
NAF, we both agree, don’t we, that Jesus founded a church that would be authoritative? I think the Catholic church is the one founded by Christ, constantly and demonstrably in existence, and you think yours was founded by Christ, lost almost immediately, and restored by Joseph Smith. We both think our respective churches have the power of succession, so I’m not sure why this is such a stumbling block for you. Our church also has teachings on modern inventions not specifically in the Bible. We believe our church’s leader is preventing from teaching error in the matter of faith and morals. I’m not sure exactly how you believe your church is guided - my impression is that it’s more of a direct revelation to the present leaders. As your church has changed its position on, for example, abortion, something that to us seems like it can only be right or wrong and NOT a matter of discipline, like whether priests should be able to marry, it does seem to outsiders that not all the revelations can be directly from God unless God is remarkably undecided on right and wrong. This may be too much to bring up in a single post, but someone asked you about polygamy. I can’t think of any examples in the Bible where it is described as anything but ugly and disastrous. In the case of Solomon and Abraham, it came directly from not trusting or obeying God. But yes, it existed, as did divorce, and Jesus told us why that was allowed - because of the hardness of their hearts. God was gentle with His people there, meeting them where they were and taking them someplace better. We see Paul’s instructions about who was allowed to be leaders of the church - among other things, he had to be a husband of only one wife. It just seems like Joseph Smith, living in an era of abolished polygamy, brought back something much lower, not something Godly. I know polygamy is banned from your church today, and we can all see why. You see what polygamist colonies are like. How do you suppose it looked any less selfish or abusive in Smith’s time? Please don’t say it was only a way to protect little old widows. He wasn’t living in the wilderness with dozens of helpless widows, and who was his second wife?
 
Oh, I understand the fascination; I have some queries of my own that I intend to start up a thread about when i have some time.
And in general (after a somewhat bumpy start) I do appreciate most posters’ attitude of discussion rather than argument/controversy.
As to our ‘…theism’, look up Henotheism. While the term may not be an exact fit (being more generally applied to something akin to Mt Olympus where there are many venerated gods, but one main personage, I believe), or Monolatrism, a sub-division that probably applies better.
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Thanks, I’ve never heard of those before. I did look them up. Monolatrism does fit LDS as I understand it. And I’m glad you find most posts a discussion - it’s easy to misread attitude, esp. from someone you don’t know, in print. I assume most people have an attitude similar to my own - respect for anyone seeking to know and follow God. We all must be curious and interested in theology, or we wouldn’t be here. Naturally, we all believe our own church is right, or we’d be in another one, and so some disagreement has to come out.
 
bz5,

Having a fullness of joy would mean that if one of my children chose differently than to be married and sealed through temple ordinances, or chose not to be faithful to their sealing covenants and chose not to repent, then I would expect that I would be given to know of their joy in that which they did choose, and although it would not be “with us” and “with Heavenly Father”, we would know that that child was resurrected to a good place, with a glorified body but not a fullness of glory. Our will would and will be completely in accordance with Heavenly Father’s will, and we will rejoice in knowing that each person chose that which they truly, deep-down desired as they had the opportunity to repent and grow to the measure of that which they desired.
Thank you! I’ll watch the posts between you and Miriam with interest for the discussion on sealing/eternal marriage.
 
Around and around and around…

We are always taught to seek the will of God over our own.

The one purpose of God is love and for us to be in communion with Him. One God, three Persons…reflecting God as love…relationship.

Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are one, serve as one in the one , same will. God in Three Persons does not have us trying to seek His will in the Father, then turn around and start pleasing the will of the Son, and then turn again and try to do the will of the Holy Spirit.

Mormonism is seeking to develop its own theology, using the Catholic Church as its perpetual counter point, because the foundation of Mormonism is that our beliefs and our priesthood are corrupt.

There were some fellows who came on to CAF in the past posing as a Catholic priest and another as a Anglican bishop. A number of us reacted.

Now I noted someone on CAF who I do sense is a priest, and his answers are totally on a different and much higher educational level than I have been seeing of all the different posters on CAF.

A Catholic priest’s education is equal to a Ph.D. I think if he were to come on here, his answers would take time for people to digest and undestand.
 
Hi, Naf623,

Oh, where to begin… let me try the first item, and then move on.
According to John this name change happened immediately when Chist first met Peter, Matthew and Luke call him Peter from the outset. I only say this becaus I had never considered this a change of name. The start of the passage already names him Simon Peter: before any change might occur.
You are correct. The name change as recorded in John 1:42 indicates that this happened after Andrew and John had seen John the Baptist point out Jesus as the Messiah and Andrew immediately got his brother to meet Jesus.

The real issue however is that Jesus knew exactly what would happen when He and the Apostles were at the massive rock at Caesarea Philippi as recorded in Matthew 16:18.
Christ knew His Father would inspire Peter to proclaim that Christ is the Messiah - and that the Keys (all of the authority to govern Christ’s Church) would be given to Peter.
According to John this name change happened immediately when Chist first met Peter, Matthew and Luke call him Peter from the outset. I only say this becaus I had never considered this a change of name. The start of the passage already names him Simon Peter: before any change might occur.
Actually. there is another possibility.
Instead of waiting until the 16th or even the19th Centuries - look at what was going on in a cotemporaneous manner with the people who followed Jesus - the Apostles and their successors. There really isn’t any doubt about Peter being in charge because Christ placed in charge. There really isn’t any doubt about Peter being given complete and total authority - even though he was a very sinful man! The thing that most tend to ignore is that God has known from all eternity what is going to happen to the Church He founded on this sinful man - and since His Ways are not our ways… He did it this way. Peter had the authority to appoint, select or what-have-you his successor - and to deny this is to deny the Power that God gave to Peter. The First Pope was indeed mortal - as Nero proved - but, Christ’s Church has always had a leader.
The passage is unclear as to what Christ intends that His church be built upon, there are three possiblities: Peter himself (worrying, as what does this mean after Peter’s death?); testimony of Christ’s divinity (that Peter had just professed) that every person following Him must have; or continuing revelation from God (Jesus just told Peter that 'flesh and blood hath not revealed it to you, but my Father which is in heaven) which is essential to understand what is right in the ever changing world we live in (after all, no teachings exist in the scriptures regarding television, film, contraception etc.).
It is only illogical if you refuse to look at Church History - claiming that it is not in the Bible. Truly, I seem to recall a seagull and locust story that is repeated often as part of LDS history. This is not discounted because it is not in the Bible or the Book of Mormon.
I find it illogical that Christ should intend that the entire future of His church be built solely on Peter; as a mortal man he was bound to die, leaving the church without its rock anymore. The other two options are everlasting and come directly from God Himself, much better candidates.
This is truly a most literal view of the word ‘gates’ - and one that unfortunately misses the idea of a figure of speech. In this particular case we are looking at a metonymy (“Metonymy enables us to use one part or aspect of an experience to stand for some other part (or the whole) of that experience.” An example is when a young man asks the father for the daughter’s HAND in marriage - the young man wants the whole woman - not just an amputated appendage!) We are really looking at the power of Hell as symbolized by its gates. Just the opposite would be to refer to all of Heaven by calling it the ‘Pearly Gates’.
The concept of gates prevailing logically means one of two things: gates keep things either in, or out; they do not act on something directly. And prevail means to overcome, to win against something. For gates to win, they succeed in either keeping something in or out. Of where? Hell, or as the actual root of the Greek word means; Hades - the place where all departed souls (/spirits) go. The gates of Hades would prevail by keeping souls inside, preventing the work of God to bring them to heaven. Christ’s ressurection overcame this because it opened the gates, allowing souls to leave. Thus the gates of hell will never prevail against His church, as the members of it (who make up the church: there is no church without them) can no longer be kept within hades.
Just look around at your own history and then farther back at the LDS history. Earlier events influence later events - and no one can deny this. Courts go back to earlier decisions for a reason - history is important. The history of the Catholic Church goes back 2,000 years and begins when Christ founded it on Peter and its ‘public launch’ on that first Pentecost Sunday.

God bless
 
Hi, TexanKnight,

Only if you believe that Jesus Christ was lying…:eek:

God bless
Nope. So, show me Biblically where, when he said what you quoted, he was referring to marriage? Especially since He earlier stated there would be no marriage in heaven?
 
I find it illogical that Christ should intend that the entire future of His church be built solely on Peter; as a mortal man he was bound to die, leaving the church without its rock anymore. The other two options are everlasting and come directly from God Himself, much better candidates.
Peter as a mortal man was not to lead the Church forever. His leadership was passed on due to apostolic succession. Our Lord said to his apostles that he “would be with them until the end of time.” This means that he would be with the leaders of his church, those who succeed the Apostles, always.

Also, when there is a name change in the OT, it ususally signifies an important event. When Our Lord changed Simon’s name, which had previously been Simon Barjona (Simon, son of John), to Simon Peter, this singled him out from the other Apostles.

The word “peter” in the language of that time meant “rock.” So
Our Lord changed Simon’s name to Peter the Rock…“And upon this Rock I shall build my church.” It was upon the leadership of the papacy (not called papacy then) that the authority of the Church rested upon and still rests upon. The Pope is designated as the Vicar of Christ on earth. The current Pope is a successor to Peter. There has to be a visible church with a visible authority in order to pass on what Our Lord instructed. Also, Simon Peter was singled out many times by Our Lord; it wasn’t just the name change.

If Our Lord intended that everyone just read a bible, profess faith in Jesus, and then allow the Holy Ghost to guide them, then there would not be unity of belief. Truth would then be subjective, based on what a person thinks the Holy Ghost has personally taught them.
 
Peter was given the sealing power (bind on earth, bound in heaven); which power was employed when the saints performed baptisms for the dead.

So, if I understand you, you accept Matthew 16 as it pertains to binding (though it is a stretch to believe that refers to marriage in heaven) but you do not accept Matthew 16 when Jesus said the Gates of Hell would never prevail against the Church He started with Peter as the first leader.

You write that as if we are unaware of the scriptures. The fact is that we both believe the words of scripture, what we disagree over are the interpretations.
As Joseph Smith said;
“the teachers of religion of the different sects understood the same passages of scripture so differently as to destroy all confidence in settling the question by an appeal to the Bible.”

True. This is why Jesus set up His Church that NEVER left the earth. So that there would be a decider. It was all the new denominations that sprung up, including LDS, that issued forth a plethora of interpretations.

And as for setting His Church on Peter even though Peter would die, that is a little odd since you believe Jesus restarted His Church on Joseph Smith, who would surely die
 
Peter was given the sealing power (bind on earth, bound in heaven); which power was employed when the saints performed baptisms for the dead.
The whole premise of ‘sealing’ anything the way LDS use it, comes directly from the mind of Joseph Smith. It’s just one of many inventions he used to make his church more distinct from any church in Christendom. He thought it would make it sound more ‘mysterious’ and Biblical, although there are very few things in the Bible that are actually ‘sealed’. It probably comes more from the rituals of Freemasonry than the Bible.

The only ‘saints’ that performed Baptism for the dead for very long, are LDS. Paul was clearly telling the Corinthians that it was a foolish waste of effort and had no meaning, whatsoever, for those that were already dead, because they were already judged, as individuals, in the first Judgement of God. Joseph Smith just loved making up new rituals and laws for ‘his people’ to follow. It gave him a real feeling of power over them, like being a king. Why do you think he wanted to be president?
As far as following the laws of God, His divine nature is of no significance (just as I pointed out before with relation to our eternal destination). He could be a Flying Spaghetti Monster, but if we followed His laws, we would still find ourselves saved in eternity. The discussion of His nature is intellectually interesting, but of little eternal significance because it does not alter His laws.
If God is not divine, then He is not a true God. To say that it makes no difference shows a complete misunderstanding of why we worship God in the first place. If you want to worship a ‘Flying Spaghetti Monster’, that’s up to you. But, I guarantee that God will not be amused by your caricature of Him. You’ll most likely be placed in the same category as anyone else that makes up their own ‘god’ (idol) to worship. He won’t care how well you followed the laws that you attribute to that version of ‘god’, even if they are somewhat similar to His Laws.
Although only the president holds the authority to exercise the necessary keys to receive new revelation pertaining to the whole church, each of his two councillors, and each member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles also hold those keys, and their office Is that of prophet, seer and revelator. Each of them approaches God and receives revelation of the truth of the president’s revelation. Then each and every member of the church has the right to approach God to receive their own personal confirmation of the validity of the revelation also.
That doesn’t change my example in the least. The fact is, it could happen, tomorrow.
The doctrine of polygamy has never changed: it was only ever practised at the express request of God, by individuals He knew were prepared and of the right mind, and was never compulsory. We also “believe in being subject to kings, presidents, rulers and magistrates in obeying, honouring and sustaining the law”. The law now prohibits polygamy, so until such a time as it is again permitted (unlikely until Jesus Christ returns), God will no longer request that anyone enter into a polygamous union.
African Americans being excluded from the priesthood was always known to be temporary.
When Jesus returns, there will no longer be any form of marriage, because it will be the Final Judgement of all souls. No more will ever be born after that day.
The term Christ uses is ‘even as’; He does not say ‘in similar manner’. This language states the situation clearly that the way He desires His church to be one is identical to the situation in which He and His Father are one. As humans we cannot be one in being, therefore we must be one in purpose, desire and action; just as The Godhead are one in their purposes, goals and intentions.
God is One in Being, just as the Church is One Body of Christ. Your verbal gyrations over there being some kind of a difference in terminology, don’t mean diddly squat.
You write that as if we are unaware of the scriptures. The fact is that we both believe the words of scripture, what we disagree over are the interpretations.
As Joseph Smith said; “the teachers of religion of the different sects understood the same passages of scripture so differently as to destroy all confidence in settling the question by an appeal to the Bible.”
Interpretation is the key to understanding the truth of all scripture. God will judge us by our interpretation. If we’re wrong, it won’t go well for us.
We do believe what Christ tells us, through the revelation of His Holy Spirit.
We place our faith in Jesus Christ only: Joseph Smith is revered for what He has done in restoring the truth, and bringing to light the true gospel of Jesus Christ once again; but we can only be saved through faith in Jesus Christ.
Again, the nature of God is what it is, and is not important as far as following His words. We know He exists, and that He loves us; anything further than that is only (as far as our mortal existence is concerned at least) intellectually interesting. Whatever His nature, we still can only follow His teachings.
No, you put your faith in the false interpretations of Joseph Smith, and not what Jesus actually meant. That’s what you’ll be judged on, no matter how well you followed those false interpretations. Knowledge of the Law, or of scripture, does not trump the Judgement of God on how closely we follow His Word (Jesus). It didn’t help the Pharisees to perfectly quote scripture, because their interpretations were still wrong, and Jesus told them exactly what they were and who they followed.
 
We also “believe in being subject to kings, presidents, rulers and magistrates in obeying, honouring and sustaining the law”. The law now prohibits polygamy, so until such a time as it is again permitted (unlikely until Jesus Christ returns), God will no longer request that anyone enter into a polygamous union.
Naf623, this position has always bothered me for the following reasons. We have had laws that made slavery legal. If it were legal today, would the LDS church support it. If not, why? Abortion is legal in this country. It is the law. Do you believe in " obeying, honoring and sustaining" this law? If not, why?

Thanks.
 
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