consiglieri wrote:liz3564 wrote:
My Pearl of Great Price Religion Professor at BYU said that Heavenly Father and Heavenly Mother came down to the Garden of Eden and had a second honeymoon. That's how Adam and Eve were conceived. LOL
This idea stems from Elden Watson's ill-considered "Two-Adam Theory," a highly creative if unsupported attempt to harmonize Brigham Young's teachings regarding Adam with currently received orthodoxy.
Watson proposed that Brigham Young's words would not be so troublesome if you presumed that there were two Adams (sometimes referred to by him as Adam, Sr. and Adam, Jr.).
Adam, Jr. is the guy the scriptures talk about as being Adam--the first guy in the garden--husband of eve--speaker to snakes--eater of fruit--that Adam.
Adam, Sr., on the other hand, is Elohim.
So if you understand Brigham Young as referring to Elohim by the name Adam whenever he said that Adam is our God, and many other things along those lines, you can solve the problem with relative ease.
The problem is it introduced a new teaching into the equation, because Brigham Young was clear in a number of places that Adam was a resurrected and exalted being who came to this earth with one of his wives and began the process of providing physical bodies for his spirit offspring previously begotten.
Well, this
couldn't have referred to Adam, Jr., according to Watson, and so it must have reference to Adam, Sr. (i.e., Elohim).
When you make the required shift of turning Adam into Elohim (i.e., Adam, Sr.), you are left with the concept you were taught by your PGP professor--that Elohim (Adam, Sr.) came to this earth as a resurrected and exalted being with one of his wives and began the process of creating physical bodies for his spirit offspring.
Which boils down to they did it in the garden and had a boy named Adam. Then did it again and had a girl named Eve.
Because they (i.e., Adam, Jr. and Eve, Jr.--no I am not making this up) were begotten of immortal parents, they were both immortal as well until they ate of the fruit sufficiently to introduce the materials of this world into their system and became mortal thereby.
But maybe that is more than you cared to know . . . ;^)
All the Best!
--Consiglieri