Great" does not equate with "total."
It does in LDS doctrine. Do you understand that, as you claim, or are you just keeping up appearances here as Harmony does so assertively?
One could point to the historical record post-Joseph Smith and argue for "apostasy," even "great apostasy" in Mormonism, but it wouldn't necessarily equate with total, either.
This is sophistry, not serious critique, and please don't think I'm not aware of that state of affairs. The Church has changed not at all in its teachings or doctrines since its inception, even though it has left off some practices here and there. Its principles have remained as they were. You could make that argument because your own tenuous grasp of the overall structure of LDS theology allows you to logically leap over barriers that would otherwise restrain such intellectual adventurism.
We're still wondering about you since the "Jesus wasn't always God" gaffe.
I don't recall making that statement, but if I did, it certainly isn't a "gaffe". If Jesus was the first born of the Father, as LDS doctrine teaches, and as the book of Hebrews makes quite clear, then it must be the case that there was a time when Jesus was not a god, and was just beginning his development and evolution toward that point. Sounds like good LDS doctrine to me (and against, you wouldn't have said this is a "gaffe" if you really understood LDS doctrine and its implications, in the manner you claim you do).
This also accords well with the KFD and tumorous statements of the modern Prophets from Joseph to the present (and would include God the Father as well, who followed a path of progression and development to his position as the God of the universe).
Quote:
She clearly has no idea whatsoever how much this kind of gaff makes here appear to be a anti-Mormon poseur pretending to be a disaffected member on a message board.
See above.
No don't, as its irrelevant.
I said:
Yes, no kidding. The system that remained were altered, corrupted, and diluted forms of Christianity, but they were still forms. The restored Gospel is about the presence of the true, authorized Kingdom of God being upon the earth, not who is or is not a "Christian". One can be a Christian while still outside the divinely instituted Kingdom.
hana:
Not according to Christ. And by that definition, most "Christians" would find Mormonism safely outside.
I'd advise you to begin a serious program involving the study of the Bible hana, especially the New Testament, as its loaded with references to an impending apostasy from the true Gospel, anticipated by Jesus' apostles throughout the New Testament record. Indeed, it was clearly under way in Paul's own time, according the New Testament texts he himself wrote.
Outside it? Or without it?
Both, depending upon individual circumstances...
I await your treatise on how the Holy Ghost fits into this equation.
I have no idea how he fits into this equation. Nothing has been revealed on that subject as of this time.
I don't know that we teach that.
Given your level of doctrinal knowledge as thus far displayed on this board, I could, at all events, write a book about what you don't know the Church teaches.