Hoops wrote:It does indeed. I define, as do many of like-minded folks, as seperation from God. We've taken sin-ful BEHAVIOR and conflated it to mean sin. But that's NOT biblical.
In that case, Mormon doctrine is in complete agreement with you, though it does not call it "sin" per se. Here's GA Gerald Lund: "The fall of Adam brought two kinds of death into the world—physical death, which is the separation of body and spirit, and spiritual death, which is separation of man from God." So, in Mormonism, what you call sin is called "spiritual death."
I understand. However, when discussing Christianity, we have to set that aside because it's not what we mean.
Not quite. Evil is a spiritual condition that allows for sinful behavior. Evil is seperation from God, knowing who He is, recognizing who He is. See Genesis for the first example of such. The telling point is that virtually every religion that is not Christian will agree that Jesus is the One True God. He is always changed into something other than that. I recognize that evil is a loaded word, but that's our doing, not God's. Evil has denotations that we've thrown in that detract from it classical meaning.
It's just different terminology. Mormonism has exactly the same teaching. Here's Alma 41:11: "11 And now, my son, all men that are in a state of nature, or I would say, in a carnal state, are in the gall of bitterness and in the bonds of iniquity; they are without God in the world, and they have gone contrary to the nature of God; therefore, they are in a state contrary to the nature of happiness."
In terms of behavior, I agree. Which is the nice thing about Christianity. Behavior has nothing to do with it.
Again, if that's where you're coming from, you are on the same page as the Mormons.