This is becoming really, really, really dreary and gray Jason.
Then don't read it or respond. Your vacuous comments add little.
Your preoccupation with this quibble has become well nigh a personal fetish.
If you would do more than a drive by post once in a while and if you would bother to read the thread you may understand this is not just a quibble. First. BC continues to declare himself the winner based on the ridiculous explanation that Lecture 5 can meant the Father had body and a spirit and this was just referring to his spirit.
Also, if the words of Joseph Smith mean anything it was he who said repeatedly that it is the first and fundamental principle of the gospel to know the Character and nature of God. This is stated in the Lecture and later in the KFD as well where the things about God's nature were radically changed. It seems important to know who God and what God's nature is. This was supposed to be a main point of the restoration. Yet it seems to be a moving target. If you think that is a quibble I am not sure what to make of it. I find it uttely foolish and believe you need to pass it off as a quibble so it won't trouble you too much.
One piece of exotic foreign cuisine in a cafeteria of otherwise standard fare.
I know you think you have a flare with words. You don't.
The bare fact that you cannot work through this tiny problem (which has been plausibly explained and put to rest by me and others here time and again) is indicative, not so much of the intractability of the problem, but of the mind fixated upon it. Others have negotiated this with, what would have to be understood, as compared to your incessant beating of this drum, ease.
Your explanations fall short. Words have meanings. I broke down the words in question here. There is absolutely know way a rational person can conclude that at the time of the Lectures whoever wrote them believes God was a spirit and did not have a physical body at all. They do not point to a personage of spirit and body.
You have not checkmated bc.
You are free to conclude whatever you want. I think I have provided a better analysis than he has when he claimed to check mate me.
The problem Jason, is that you don't really even have any pieces on the board at all. As I've said before, what we have here is not an absolute contrast but just a hyperbolic contrast, the spiritual nature of the Father (shared by the Son and all of us) contrasted with the physical body of the Son in his capacity as mortal messiah; as the incarnate Son of God. This is not an ontological contrast but simply theological.
Please use the words of the Lecture as well as the words of D&C 130 to demonstrate this. You cannot. This is simply your spin after the fact because later LDS theology contradicted it. As noted words have meaning. The words in question compare and contrast a spirit to a physical being and show how they are different. I see know way to reach the conclusion you do.
You're not using the mind God gave unto you to work through this.
Because I conclude differently than you? RIGHT!
You are thoroughly dedicated to seeing only an intractable problem here, for whatever reason, and will accept no plausible interpretation other then one that coincides with your own. Whatever the explanation, unless it preserves your idea of an irreconcilable official doctrinal difference, it will be unwelcome.
And you accept something that contradicts yours? What is the difference here? But you see the difference is I have spent hundreds of hours pursuing the issue of the Godhead in LDS thought. I have argued the way you and BC do. But I have come to see how the arguments fail. So yes, I have looked at the plausible explanations.
I see.
No you really don't.