Just_A_Guy

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Posts posted by Just_A_Guy

  1. but what about the wives that would be given to us after we die, doesn't that count as getting married in heaven?

    I'm going to presume that you're asking about faithful latter-day saints who die without the opportunity to marry but nevertheless have the promise of exaltation with an eternal companion (as opposed to making an impertinent accusation about Mormons harboring secret hopes of polygamous afterlives).

    There are two possibilities. First is the idea, apparently posited by McConkie, that the righteous really can marry in heaven.

    If you don't buy that (and I don't), you can still go back to the text of Talmage's statement, which is merely that such questions are resolved before the resurrection. As long as the sealing ordinance for two individuals has been done prior to the resurrection (e.g. in a temple, by proxy), they are still technically in compliance with the LDS interpretation of Matthew 22/Mark 12 as well as Talmage's summary thereof.

  2. What the Church Handbook of Instructions does say is that if the person doing the marrying is not a stake president, bishop, branch president, or LDS military chaplain, he or she may not perform the marriage as an authority (or as a representative) of the Church.

    I like that interpretation, MOE; and I think it makes a lot of sense.

    But does the text of the CHI include this limitation? The language cited by LoudmouthMormon seems pretty absolute--you don't perform the ceremony, period. That seems to have been the position adopted by several commenters here.

    So Joe Schmoe wants to marry his buddy?

    Good heavens--where to start with this one? :D

  3. The unsaved carry the stains of their sins to the grave and are forever guilty of their impurity and likely are forever haunted with each and every mistake they ever committed (the worm dieth not).

    There's the crux of our disagreement. You seem to believe that people who die in their sins have lost all chance for salvation. I wonder why, if that is so, Jesus bothered after His death to preach to the onetime-disobedient spirits who had lived in the days of Noah and were then in "prison". (1 Peter 3:18-20). But I suppose this discussion has been had repeatedly, elsewhere on this board. :)

  4. Hi Tubaloth. This won't be a comprehensive reply--my time is limited--but it will have to suffice for the present, I'm afraid. Let me start with this:

    What we are debating is why was the seer stone so much better then the U & T.

    With all due respect, that is not what I am debating. I freely concede that the U&T were more powerful than the seer stone. Joseph Smith himself said so, if Lucy Smith's account is to be believed.

    What I'm interested in is which instrument was actually used during the translation of the Book of Mormon in the wake of the loss of the 116 pages.

    For at least this one account it seems clear that Joseph Smith knew the difference between getting back the U & T vs being able to use the seer stone again. Joseph Smith also seems to make the point that God wanted him to have the U & T back.

    How do you figure? Smith doesn't mention the seer stone at all in the quote you cite.

    I’ll take the blame here. There actually is a couple of other pages before what I quoted that the commentators explain about the translation process. Or more a couple of accounts by Joseph Smith and Oilver Cowdrey.

    Sounds like I'll have to find the book, then. :)

    It does[n't] really fit with what the revelations teach about the translation process. I haven’t looked into much of how the Book of Abraham came forth (if it was closer to Whitmer or D&C) but Whitmer’s explanation makes it seem like it was a bit too simple. (that even I could have done it) From the D&C we learn there is more work put into it.

    Ostler and McConkie seem to be locked into the mindset that the translation process was 1) look at the original material; 2) look into the translating medium; and 3) a translation of the content of the original material somehow appeared. What I'm getting at is, that paradigm is not the absolute and universal method of inspired translation. For example, the Book of Abraham is not a literal translation of what was actually on the Joseph Smith Papyri. (The remnants of those Papyri still exist and have been examined by Egyptologists; they are a near-perfect match for a copy of the Egyptian Book of Breathings.) The Joseph Smith Translation of the Bible was done without either the source documents (except for a standard King James Bible) or, as far as I know, a U&T/seer stone of any type. Please note that I'm not saying the Book of Abraham or the JST are false; I'm merely saying that there's more to the translation process than meets the eye and Ostler/McConkie are on shaky ground if they're trying to discredit Whitmer based on their flawed understanding of the process.

    I actually don’t know if this is in Whitmer’s account or in Emma’s account. But one of the accounts have it that the Plates were just sitting on the table. That Joseph Smith didn’t even look at them or be on any certain page in the book of mormon. If that holds true, then yes there was no need for the plates.

    What Ostler and McConkie state is

    Why all this flap and fuss if the Prophet didn’t really have the plates . . . ?

    Whitmer never made such a claim. It strikes me as highly disingenuous to imply that he did.

    . . . Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery should be the source in what was used to translate (meaning the U & T). But for some reason we grasp this notion from David Whitmer for the reason that it explains more then what Joseph and Oliver did. So because David explains more, (assuming its true) it now become the source of our knowledge and Joseph and Oliver’s testimony so to speak are thrown out the window. That for some reason doesn’t make sense to me.

    As Ostler and McConkie themselves state, Smith pointedly refused to go on-record as to the mechanics of the translation. All we really have from him (AFAIK) are some references (possibly firsthand, and possibly not) to his possessing the "Urim and Thummim" (possibly THE Urim and Thummim, and possibly not) at various times.

    So really it boils down to Whitmer and Emma Smith vs Cowdery. That's why I'm so interested in Cowdery's statements, and when they were made.

  5. California Family Code, Section 401(b):

    The commissioner of civil marriages may appoint deputy commissioners of civil marriages who may solemnize marriages under the direction of the commissioner of civil marriages and shall perform other duties directed by the commissioner.

    Most California counties have a "Deputy for a Day" program, which in effect allows couples to choose their own wedding officiator regardless of the officiator's prior qualifications.

    Is this practice kosher for Mormons? The Church Handbook of Instructions would seem to say "no".

  6. Animals? No likely....anyone noticed when viewing such kingdoms did not see any animals.

    How about John the Revelator?

    D&C 77:2-3

    2 Q. What are we to understand by the four beasts, spoken of in the same verse? [Revelation 4:6]

    A. They are figurative expressions, used by the Revelator, John, in describing heaven, the paradise of God, the happiness of man, and of beasts, and of creeping things, and of the fowls of the air; that which is spiritual being in the likeness of that which is temporal; and that which is temporal in the likeness of that which is spiritual; the spirit of man in the likeness of his person, as also the spirit of the beast, and every other creature which God has created.

    3 Q. Are the four beasts limited to individual beasts, or do they represent classes or orders?

    A. They are limited to four individual beasts, which were shown to John, to represent the glory of the classes of beings in their destined border or sphere of creation, in the enjoyment of their eternal felicity.

  7. I believe the Church's view is that you should have as many kids as you can financially and emotionally handle. I could be way off on that

    Sounds about right to me. You'll find quotes from prophets past to the effect that birth control is bad (and some hardline Mormons who still adhere to those quotes), but the Church has officially backed off from that stance.

  8. it is just so scary to have a gun in the home.. I hear all the time on the news how kids get a hold of there parents guns

    Without wishing to get overly judgmental: kids get a hold of guns because they were not stored properly.

    Some people just aren't usually careful/conscientious/obsessive-compulsive enough to put the gun back in the safe after every time they have it out. I think a potential gun-owner should honestly ask him/herself if he/she is willing to put the time, effort, and money into storing a gun properly after each and every use; if not, and there are kids in the house, maybe a non-lethal weapon like a Taser or pepper spray would be a better option.

  9. Nipper, I don't have the time or inclination right now to write a lengthy reconciliation of Mormon beliefs to the Bible right now. Erik asked what the Mormon position was, and I gave it to him as best I could.

    I'll just submit the following thoughts:

    1) If you object to my idea of hell not being a literal place of burning, I would suggest that much of the Book of Revelation is symbolic and not literal. John had grown up hearing about hell as a place of burning, and I think that in this vision the Lord simply chose to use symbols he knew John (and, to some degree, the primitive Church at large) would understand.

    2) If you object to the idea that a coward, unbeliever, vile person, adulterer, magician, etc. can be saved from Hell, I would suggest that this clause is subordinate to verse 6--in other words, the cowards, unbelievers, vile, adulterers, magicians, etc. who do not repent and seek Jesus (or "thirst"--unless you also believe that the people in this verse are literally suffering from a craving for Dihydrogen Monoxide).

    If you adhere to a strict reading that all cowards, unbelievers, vile persons, adulterers, magicians, etc. will be forever cast down to hell (regardless of whether they ultimately repent and seek Jesus) then I don't see the point in bothering to preach to such persons in this life. PrisonChaplain's entire ministry would seem to be for naught.

  10. One more thought:

    Hell, as Christians understand it (“generic Christians”—per jadams_4040), appears to be not applicable. And not even for a man like Adolf Hitler (per Connie’s criteria).

    Oh, it's definitely applicable. It's just that Jesus' Atonement is so powerful (we're actually pretty Universalist in that regard) that sometimes we kind of take it for granted that very few will actually wind up there permanently.

  11. Hi Erik--

    But it’s interesting to me that no LDS respondents have explicitly stated they are saved from God’s wrath—His everlasting punishment in Hell. There seems to be a disbelief that they (or anyone) need to be saved from such a thing. Hell, as Christians understand it (“generic Christians”—per jadams_4040), appears to be not applicable. And not even for a man like Adolf Hitler (per Connie’s criteria).

    I don't think that's correct.

    Without an Atonement, we would be permanently thrust out of God's presence--in other words, we would be forever in the state of "perdition" or "outer darkness" that Connie mentions. That (along with physical death, which is overcome through Christ's resurrection) is what almost all mankind has been or at some point will be saved from. I do think that the Biblical description of hell/perdition as a place of burning is primarily symbolic/allegorical (and perhaps built primarily on Jewish history/tradition--I understand that Jews used the Valley of Hinnom, south of Jerusalem, as a metaphor for Hell; it was in Biblical times a perpetually-burning trash dump and earlier in history had been the site of human sacrifices to the god Moloch), but there's no doubt that Hell is not a happy place.

    Those who emerge from the "temporary" state of Hell (as understood by the LDS) to receive a telestial glory, do so by virtue of Jesus' Atonement. I give it as my opinion that they receive this glory because they have (finally) accepted Jesus Christ, acknowledged His doctrines, and committed to be bound by His laws. Their "salvation" is not as great as those who made those same commitments during their mortal lives--but they are most definitely "saved".

  12. Hi Ceeboo--

    I would respectfuly disagree that the question was not calculated to make the notion of resurrection look ridiculous. Rather, the question WAS calculated to make the notion of " how can you pick one out of the seven " look ridiculous. They got an answer they certainly were not expecting ( IMHO ).

    I can agree to disagree here. :)

    Jesus Clearly ( IMHO ) said none and went on to provide his lesson for the day ( In this case it happened to be his teachings of " marriage ", " spouses " in the eternal Kingdom )

    It strikes me that the "lesson for the day" (such as it was) comes up in Matt 22:31-32/Mark 12:26-27 (and this is when Matthew tells us that the crowd was astonished and the Sadducees were silenced), where Christ emphasizes that the God of Moses is a God of the living.

    The remarks on marriage are, IMO, building towards this point--and they provide only a minimal answer to the actual question the Sadducees asked. Note that in Mark 12:28-34, Jesus does the same thing: in verse 32 the scribe takes a dig at Jesus' divinity ("And the scribe said unto him, Well, Master, thou hast said the truth: for there is one God; and there is none other but he"--i.e., "there's only one God, and it ain't you"). Jesus, noticing that the scribe has answered "discreetly" or "prudently" or "intelligently" (depending on your translation; but the implication that this is a battle of wits and not a master/student interchange), chooses not to press the point; rather he simply says "Thou art not far from the kingdom of God." Note that Jesus didn't say the scribe was in the Kingdom of God; just said "thou art not far"--i.e., "close enough, and I'm not going to argue with you over this right now". And, Mark tells us, "no man after that durst ask him any question."

    Throughout these chapters, Jesus' interlocutors aren't interested in learning; and Jesus isn't that interested in teaching profound doctrine. The chapters describe a series of debates, primarily showcasing Jesus' rhetorical abilities and his superiority over the supposed masters of God's law (in turn the Sadducees, the Pharisees, and the Scribes [probably the Essenes]).

  13. if its conspiracy that you are looking for look in to 9-11

    Speaking of which, I for one hope he does launch an independent inquiry into 9-11. Obama's the one person who most of the "truthers" would believe if he finished the investigation and announced that, no, it really wasn't orchestrated by Bush and Rummy.

  14. The Peace Corps' annual budget--330 million, per the gods at Wikipedia--is a drop in the bucket compared to what was needed in Iraq. Nor would it have helped our popularity much to pull the Peace Corps out of the 70-odd countries where it functions and redirect all of its resources to Iraq.

    Moreover, much (though by no means all) of the actual reconstruction in Iraq was done under the aegis of the State Department, not the Pentagon (though there were some titanic power struggles between the two in the early stages of the war).

  15. No, sorry, I have not.

    You can find it here.

    There are lots of doctrines that the LDS teach were "lost" by mainstream Christianity, but for me (as a Mormon) it all boils down to other churches'

    a) lacking the proper priesthood authority,

    b) being led by an imperfect degree of revelation from God, and

    c) not having the fulness of the Holy Ghost and therefore lacking the tools necessary bring members to their full spiritual potential.

    (EDIT: The tone of this post may seem unduly offensive. If so, please forgive me; I'd go over it and soften the tone but I really have to be somewhere right now. :) )

  16. If there are different ways of doing things that keep the earth in more cleanliness before God, then I am interested in learning about them, trying new things that fit with my beliefs about the earth's and my own purpose.

    Agreed; provided that such steps are not economically ruinous or a façade to facilitate social engineering.

  17. This perticular elder said and I quote "Sister missionaries are just hungry husband hunters" That isn't the first negative comment I've heard but its one of the most irrating to say the least. What are your guys thoughts and oppionions on this especially those of you that have already served missions.

    A currently serving missionary spoke ill of his fellow missionaries in public?

    That elder is not serving with the Spirit of Christ. Ignore him.

  18. Jesus gave he was rejecting the notion the Sadducees presented of marriage in Heaven

    I see your point, Ceeboo, but I would add that the Sadducees were presenting a false version of marriage in Heaven--and they knew it. It was a set-up. The Sadducees didn't believe in resurrection (as both Matthew and Mark note), and the question was calculated to make the notion of a resurrection look ridiculous.

    In this context, it is at least plausible that Jesus' answer was not calculated to provide an authoritative answer as to the eternal/temporal nature of marriage. Rather, I believe that He was simply countering the idea of resurrection as The Bachelor on steroids by asserting curtly that (in Talmage's words) "n the resurrection there will be no marrying nor giving in marriage; for all questions of marital status must be settled before that time." Jesus the Christ, Deseret Book 1983, p. 509.

    I don't think the text bars the continuance of an extant marriage. Under the custom of the time as I understand it, on a Jewish wedding day the groom "married" and bride was "given in marriage".

    Interestingly, the Sadducees seem to have taken it for granted that if the soul was eternal, then marriage was eternal as well. It would be interesting to see if that was a broader Jewish perception, then or now.