This is incorrect. The book of Acts shows that the first debate was over whether gentile converts to Christianity should have to obey the Jewish law.Perhaps the biggest to me is lack of athority. Christianity has been a product of political and social debate for decades. After the death of Christ, the books that were to become the Bible sparked the first Christian debates on which to include, which to ignore, and which were authentic.
Then when Constantine decided to allow Christianity into Rome, he said that he wanted to be a defender of Christian doctrine, but that the Christian fathers needed to get over their differences and decide on what really IS doctrine. Hence the Council of Nicene. Ironically, some of the very things Mormonism gets dinged on are the VERY things argued over during that convention.
I wasn’t aware that LDS were Unitarians. Nicea was concerned about the Arian issue. LDS tend towards tritheism which wasn’t an issue.
You’re right. There’s no emphasis on prayer in Evangelicalism. And it’s nice to see again that LDS don’t attack other religions. Being called a dead religion is such a complement.Futher argument by Martin Luther and his followers... Even the first translation of the Bible by King James's buddies into English was flawed. The translators themselves declared that they were NOT inspired by God, but rather simply were doing a translation so that English speakers could read the thing themselves. Basically in my opinion, Christianity became a "free for all" debate on who could make the most convincing arguments about what IS and what IS NOT Christian/Biblical.
What does that create? To me, that demonstrates a man-made and "dead" religion. People spending more time trying to figure it all out themselves rather than have any interaction with God Himself.
If the LDS claims were good, the subjective approach would be unnecessary. What if one gets a different answer from the one you got? Why do organizations like FARMS exist if the subjective approach suffices. Obviously, a lot of non-LDS don’t buy it.In my feeling, Mormonism offers a believable mechanism. You pray about it and if you personally feel you get a revelation from God that the LDS Faith is God's true religion, then you simply follow the theology presented by Mormonism.
The revelations seem pretty sparse these days. On ZLMB, some LDS had to resort to calling the placement of temples an example of prophetic leadership. And GBH doesn’t appear to know if the couplet, “as man is, God once was. As God is, man may become.” is true.When asking Mormonism what is Biblical and what isn't, you theoretically have prophetic answers to those questions, creating a "living" religion. There are no debates, rather revelations that are presented in the cannon scriptures and additional writings (I like the King Follette Discourse myself).
Gee, I thought LDS believed in grace not works. There’re a lot of LDS who disagree with you. So much for the unity of your faith. The question is not what we want but what is.Second, I don't think my mother is going to Hell. I don't agree with the "You either believe or die in enternal damnation". That isn't a loving God. Mormonism teaches something more logical that matches a more mature God. If you live a good life, you would be saved in the afterlife.
Sorry to break this to you, but it’s found throughout ancient paganism.Some people who grow up thinking the Wacky Mountain Monkey God is the true God may NEVER be exposed to Christianity, much less the branch - Mormonism.... SO why would they be punished ETERNALLY???? That's silly to me.
Third, I think a God that has actually done what we have done makes more sense. How can a God understand what we are going through if He Himself never did?? The Idea that God has a father and that there are other worlds going through similar experiences is very unique and inspiring to me.
The "Oh, God was always there" is a broken answer in my own feelings. While I believe the TITLE of God is eternal, the thought that the man holding that title has a past very interesting.
Yes, the temptation to bring God down to our level is perennial. The LDS faith is not an advance on Christianity but rather a syncretistic combination of Christianity and paganism.