beastie wrote:Since when do believers have the right to question the morals of God?
We're not supposed to. I don't question him. I just know him a little.
However while our morality is probably very different in many ways they have a common basis. I know his standards because he put them in me. When I see what he chooses to do with a more omniscient sight it will not be alien to me.....it will become clear why so much happened and so much did not. The problem I have with what they're doing is they're IMPLYING that God had to either permit or command someone to sin to fulfill an arbitrary restoration of all things. In other words, he was doing pointless things to connect some doctrinal dots.
As for Joseph, he might have been commanded to do unreasonable things. He might not have been. Some of the stories may be fabricated. Some are probably true. Whether he sinned or not is not really my concern. The doctrine he revealed aided me in finding God. If for nothing else, I love him for that. If he broke the laws of God then that's his problem and he either dealt with it while he was alive or dealt with it after death. The Apostles today state there is no golden easy road to exaltation. Joseph was working out his own salvation just like everyone else.
Incidentally, the idea that Joseph will judge us is unscriptural. The Book of Mormon makes it clear that Christ is our Judge and that he "employs no servant there".