Early LDS theology. Oh brother. Swallowed the Dialogue party line hook sinker, and tackle box haven't you?
Actually Droopy, this something I picked up from Robert Millet in BYU studies. Want to look more foolish?
What you have shown above is not that my theory fails but that you are willfully impervious to any plausible alternative explanations. It doesn't fit your template, and it doesn't justify your overall perception of the Church. Its of little use to you.
Actually Coggy old fool, this helps the Church. When I explored the lecture issue in depth I found that from the Book of Mormon forward the idea about spirits is that they have a spirit body, they are embodied. This is in contrast to classical theology that a spirit is some ethereal formless thing present everywhere. So when I read Lecture five and see the Father is a spirit I can argue that in LDS thought, even in 1835, he was not a spirit in the vernacular of classical theology.
You know, the entire thing could be nothing more than rhetorical flourish? Why might I think that? Because in a truly vast plethora of published gospel works, sermons, and talks, by GAs from the nineteenth century to the present, and within the D&C itself, we have the physicality of the Father taught clearly and consistently, Then we find one, single, solitary statement that might conflict with this general teaching (but only if interpreted in a very narrow manner and outside of the context of other passages in the lectures right next to it), and create an issue. Sorry Jason, I'm well beyond falling for this kind of thing. Indeed, I was always well beyond it.
When I ran into this dilemma, and it was a dilemma for me, I searched high and low for something that demonstrated that LDS believed the Father was corporeal. Before 1838 I found only one thing. Just one. And it was not published by the Church. It was criticism published in an Ohio paper that the LDS believed in a heathen God that had body and parts. That was published in 1835 or 1836.
One other point. Its not at all clear that when the Lectures were written, Joseph knew that the Father was corporeal. He saw the Father, but didn't' touch him. The lectures were published in 1835, but section 130, containing the clear teaching about the physical nature of both the Father and the Son wasn't revealed until 1843
THis is the best argument anyone can make. It is one that I have argued myself. It does not remove the fact that the Church published conflicting doctrine for many years about the nature of God.
Joseph learned about God and the Gospel line upon line, precept upon precept, here a little, there a little.
Joseph's knowledge was growing and expanding throughout his ministry.
This does not help the problem of the Church publishing conflicting doctrine for year, which was really the point of bringing the lectures up. And it also signifies, in my opinion, more than line upon line. Joseph's theology changed dramatically in a space of a few years and his later doctrine did not just enlighten about GOd but it reversed a number of critical thing. Brigham Young continued this with some of his wild theology as well. Really it was not until 1916 that many issues about the Godhead seemed settled.
Anyway, I don't think your listening.
And you are?
Apostasy lite. All the flavor, half the calories.
You know Coggins I try not to be rude to you and was not going to be until I read your nasty commentary that you cannot seem to resist adding to most your posts. And I had a very rude comment that I just decided not to end with. You are a very unhappy man it seems. Why can't you be civil?