Tobin wrote:Don't worry about it. This isn't something that should concern you.
Darth, I, for once, actually agree with tobin here. His looney, pseudo-lds mental concoctions aren't something that should concern you (or anybody).
Tobin wrote:Don't worry about it. This isn't something that should concern you.
Gadianton wrote:DarthJ,
My guess is a few people out there have more thoroughly explored the path of TBM specialness than others. We know that not only is one extremely lucky to be born into the only true church, but on the very world that happens to be both the most wicked and most righteous of any of the worlds without end HF created. Out of the billions and billions of worlds, this was the one Jesus came to and he died for everyone on this world and all HF's other worlds too.
Great idea. Except for one thing. While making Jesus special beyond comprehension, but make HF look like a chump. For all we know, HF was a janitor when he was a man. So he's an exalted ex-janitor, and Christ is this exalted superhuman, the most righteous humanoid from among billions of worlds. So someone thunked up the idea, HF might have been the Jesus on his world! Holy Cow! what are the odds that you were born Mormon, on a world a Jesus died on, who happened to be the son of yet another Jesus? It's unthinkable.
So my guess is guys like Tobin consider these absurd odds, and try to work out two classes of humanoids to avoid the sheer problematic specialness of our situation.
Gadianton wrote:DarthJ,
My guess is a few people out there have more thoroughly explored the path of TBM specialness than others. We know that not only is one extremely lucky to be born into the only true church, but on the very world that happens to be both the most wicked and most righteous of any of the worlds without end HF created. Out of the billions and billions of worlds, this was the one Jesus came to and he died for everyone on this world and all HF's other worlds too.
Great idea. Except for one thing. While making Jesus special beyond comprehension, but make HF look like a chump. For all we know, HF was a janitor when he was a man. So he's an exalted ex-janitor, and Christ is this exalted superhuman, the most righteous humanoid from among billions of worlds. So someone thunked up the idea, HF might have been the Jesus on his world! Holy Cow! what are the odds that you were born Mormon, on a world a Jesus died on, who happened to be the son of yet another Jesus? It's unthinkable.
So my guess is guys like Tobin consider these absurd odds, and try to work out two classes of humanoids to avoid the sheer problematic specialness of our situation.
Not really. I meant that you have no frame of reference and so further discussion with you is pointless. It was made clear by your comments that you don't know what Celestial beings are and how they relate to Mormonism.Darth J wrote:Oh, I agree, Dean Robbers. Tobin has no issue making metaphysical pseduo-Mormon claims on a public message board, but it "doesn't concern" me what the basis is for his assertions.
While it may be possible that he is teaching the philosophies of men mingled with scripture, more likely his "doesn't concern you" response suggests that he is implying that it is too sacred to talk about. That is, much like The Nehor, God is revealing to Tobin his own idiosyncratic truths about what Joseph Smith's teachings really mean.
he is implying that it is too sacred to talk about.
Gadianton wrote:he is implying that it is too sacred to talk about.
Or "no frame of reference."
thought I'd draw out this one as an example of how the TBM mind is internally navigating bits and pieces of folk wisdom to come up with these weird ideas.
But here is a link from the Prophet Seer and Newsroom, that new pronouncer of revelation and doctrine for the LDS Church.
Thank you GBH we don't know much about that. What happened to God being man and we learning to become a god just like our God did? Where is that?
Well BY and crew certainly believed this and taught is. So did McConkie and JFS. So did all my seminary teachers. Guess they were wrong.
I will let the women here opine on this.
So was Joseph Smith wrong? What then was Adam-ondi-Ahman?
Jason Bourne wrote:Do Mormons believe that the Garden of Eden is in Missouri?
We do not know exactly where the original site of the Garden of Eden is. While not an important or foundational doctrine, Joseph Smith established a settlement in Daviess County, Missouri, and taught that the Garden of Eden was somewhere in that area. Like knowing the precise number of animals on Noah’s ark, knowing the precise location of the Garden of Eden is far less important to one’s salvation than believing in the Atonement of Jesus Christ.
March 30, 1873: At evening prayer circle: President Young said Joseph the
Prophet told me that the Garden [172] of Eden was in Jackson County, Missouri,
and when Adam was driven out of the Garden of Eden, he went about 40 miles to
the place which he named Adam ondi Ahman, and there built an alter of stone
and offered sacrifice. That altar remains to this day. I saw it as Adam left
it, as did many others, and through all the revolutions of the world, that
alter had not been disturbed. Joseph also said that when the City of Enoch
fled and was translated, it was where the gulf of Mexico now is; it left that
gulf a body of water.
Wilford Wodruff's Journal
Gadianton wrote:he is implying that it is too sacred to talk about.
Or "no frame of reference."
thought I'd draw out this one as an example of how the TBM mind is internally navigating bits and pieces of folk wisdom to come up with these weird ideas.