Scottie wrote:Sethbag wrote:Scottie, my understanding of LDS theology was that it was never like that parable. Not one bit.
How so? That is exactly how I understood LDS teachings.
Because there's nothing in that analogy that comes anywhere close to explaining the process of "becoming" that's inherent in LDS theology about the the Celestial Kingdom.
In LDS theology you don't become a God because God gives you Godhood. You become a God by becoming Godly, and inheriting a place in the Kingdom of the Gods (Celestial Kingdom).
Think of an analogy as with becoming a doctor. Let's say you're born the son of a doctor. Does that make you a doctor? No. Will you ever become a doctor by pleasing your dad enough that one day he waves his wand over you and voila! you're a doctor? No. You become a doctor by studying and preparing yourself in your early school years to succeed in college, where you are preparing yourself to be accepted to and succeed in medical school. Finally, after 16 years of formal education, you enter yet another four-year school to actually become a doctor. When you finally graduate from that school you become a doctor not just because some state board gives you a certificate. You become a doctor, and are entitled to that certificate, because through this whole process you've become a doctor. You are a doctor because you know what doctors know, you do what doctors do, and have enduring and succeeded at the process of transforming a non-doctor into a doctor.
How is this anything like a dad thinking how cute and responsible it was for a little girl to earn 100 pennies and then coughing up a hundred bucks so she could have her bike? Is "having this bike" anything like "being a doctor"? You're talking about "getting" something, and LDS theology is really about "becoming" something.
The reason your analogy fails the Mormon theology test is because it's focused on "getting" something as a reward.
Frankly I'm shocked that Charity thinks so highly of it. I'm disappointed, really. For such a hard-core TBM, I thought she "got it". Apparently not.