DeepwoodsofMaine
DeepwoodsofMaine
Hello everyone,
I am a new member and just happened across this topic. I will offer my opinions about why Christians do not accept the Book of Mormon. First of all the Bible specifically states we are not to add to or take from (the Bible), and that we are to stay away from later prophets and false prophets who will come into the world in later times. I have great differences with many beliefs the good Mormon people (and they ARE very good people) have with their ideas regarding Jesus Christ.....and other planets, gods, etc. I will offer the following for your opinions:
Mormons are members of the particular subset of polytheism called henotheism, while authentic Christian theology (like Judaism) is monotheistic. Mormons generally despise being called polytheists or henotheists, and claim to be monotheists on the grounds that they worship only one god ("Heavenly Father") and condemn the worship of other gods (in this world). But make no mistake, Mormons do believe in "plural gods" (just as they prefer the term "plural marriage" to "polygamy," Mormons prefer the term "plural gods" to "polytheism").
The god Mormons worship with adoration is usually called "Heavenly Father," their version of God the Father. "Heavenly Father" is, according to Mormon theology, the maker and supreme god of this world (not to be confused with the way the term is used in 2Cor. 4:3-4). Other worlds have their own supreme gods, each worshipped with adoration by the faithful people of his own world. Moreover, the supreme god of each world is believed to have once been a human man in some other world, who worshipped his own "Heavenly Father" (and so on in infinite regress). It would be impossible to number the gods Mormons believe may exist in various worlds: "there is an infinite number of holy personages, drawn from worlds without number, who have passed on to exaltation and are thus gods" (Bruce McConkie, Mormon Doctrine, "Plurality of Gods"). Recall the limitations of polytheists' gods mentioned above. They are usually composed of and limited by natural things like time, matter, and space, and are not therefore -properly speaking- "supernatural." This is certainly true of the gods Mormons believe in ("Heavenly Father," his superiors, peers, and subordinates). For example, Mormons believe that "Heavenly Father" has a resurrected material body, i.e. that he is at least partially composed of matter that existed before him. This further requires spatial limitation, for although Mormons profess that his influence is far-reaching, they believe he can only be in one place at one time. The world "Heavenly Father" has made was not created by his word from nothing, but organized out of pre-existing material (like a carpenter makes a chair out of wood). When Mormons use words like "eternal," "almighty," and "creator" to describe God, they do not mean the same thing Jews, Christians, and Muslims mean by those words.
As I read the many pages of this interesting topic, I saw where someone (forget who now) posed the situation where Our Lady appeared to the six women. She did appear to them, and at Fatima, etc., BUT the difference is She never attempted to change Holy Scriptures or the Gospels, but only reinforced our need to pray for the people of our world, to seek peace, and to worship our Lord, Jesus Christ. She "drew" people to God's commandments, rather than attempting to push them in another direction toward a "new prophet."
I welcome any responses or explanations to my humble post.
God's Peace Always,
DeepwoodsofMaine
I am a new member and just happened across this topic. I will offer my opinions about why Christians do not accept the Book of Mormon. First of all the Bible specifically states we are not to add to or take from (the Bible), and that we are to stay away from later prophets and false prophets who will come into the world in later times. I have great differences with many beliefs the good Mormon people (and they ARE very good people) have with their ideas regarding Jesus Christ.....and other planets, gods, etc. I will offer the following for your opinions:
Mormons are members of the particular subset of polytheism called henotheism, while authentic Christian theology (like Judaism) is monotheistic. Mormons generally despise being called polytheists or henotheists, and claim to be monotheists on the grounds that they worship only one god ("Heavenly Father") and condemn the worship of other gods (in this world). But make no mistake, Mormons do believe in "plural gods" (just as they prefer the term "plural marriage" to "polygamy," Mormons prefer the term "plural gods" to "polytheism").
The god Mormons worship with adoration is usually called "Heavenly Father," their version of God the Father. "Heavenly Father" is, according to Mormon theology, the maker and supreme god of this world (not to be confused with the way the term is used in 2Cor. 4:3-4). Other worlds have their own supreme gods, each worshipped with adoration by the faithful people of his own world. Moreover, the supreme god of each world is believed to have once been a human man in some other world, who worshipped his own "Heavenly Father" (and so on in infinite regress). It would be impossible to number the gods Mormons believe may exist in various worlds: "there is an infinite number of holy personages, drawn from worlds without number, who have passed on to exaltation and are thus gods" (Bruce McConkie, Mormon Doctrine, "Plurality of Gods"). Recall the limitations of polytheists' gods mentioned above. They are usually composed of and limited by natural things like time, matter, and space, and are not therefore -properly speaking- "supernatural." This is certainly true of the gods Mormons believe in ("Heavenly Father," his superiors, peers, and subordinates). For example, Mormons believe that "Heavenly Father" has a resurrected material body, i.e. that he is at least partially composed of matter that existed before him. This further requires spatial limitation, for although Mormons profess that his influence is far-reaching, they believe he can only be in one place at one time. The world "Heavenly Father" has made was not created by his word from nothing, but organized out of pre-existing material (like a carpenter makes a chair out of wood). When Mormons use words like "eternal," "almighty," and "creator" to describe God, they do not mean the same thing Jews, Christians, and Muslims mean by those words.
As I read the many pages of this interesting topic, I saw where someone (forget who now) posed the situation where Our Lady appeared to the six women. She did appear to them, and at Fatima, etc., BUT the difference is She never attempted to change Holy Scriptures or the Gospels, but only reinforced our need to pray for the people of our world, to seek peace, and to worship our Lord, Jesus Christ. She "drew" people to God's commandments, rather than attempting to push them in another direction toward a "new prophet."
I welcome any responses or explanations to my humble post.
God's Peace Always,
DeepwoodsofMaine