Gadianton wrote: ↑Thu Feb 26, 2026 2:47 am
Blake's GTF is explicitly the CEO of the bank, and deified men are explicitly VPs with stock options. My mom (and most Chapel Mormons) will say explicitly that deified men are all CEOs, however, my position is they really don't believe that, that as a community they've constructed the F-S chain, which satisfies an intuitive, ontological itch, that is most obvious in the mystery that God the father was the savior of his mortal world. They reveal that they really believe in a chain of CEOs (the royal line of Father-Saviors) as the greatest thing conceivable, implying that deified men are really VPs with stock options. When pressed, they really believe God and Jesus are above deified men even though they don't explicitly say that.
Two things. 1. While Joe did assert that our Father/God was once a mortal on an earth, Joe didn't actually say that our Father/God was a savior during that mortal period. 2. Within the Brighamite framework, Joe seemed to imply that deified men do indeed become creator/saviors of a world at least once prior to full exaltation. Consider:
Here, then, is eternal life—to know the only wise and true God; and you have got to learn how to be gods yourselves, and to be kings and priests to God, the same as all gods have done before you, namely, by going from one small degree to another, and from a small capacity to a great one; from grace to grace, from exaltation to exaltation, until you attain to the resurrection of the dead, and are able to dwell in everlasting burnings, and to sit in glory, as do those who sit enthroned in everlasting power.
Note that Joe specified
all gods have a path to being finally becoming "enthroned in everlasting power." Would not "all" necessarily include the god who is our Father? Perhaps not. Joe threw some special powers at our Father that he didn't ascribed to any of the other gods:
I might with boldness proclaim from the housetops that God never had the power to create the spirit of man at all. God himself could not create himself... The intelligence of spirits had no beginning, neither will it have an end... There never was a time when there were not spirits; for they are co-equal [co-eternal] with our Father in heaven. God himself, finding he was in the midst of spirits and glory, because he was more intelligent, saw proper to institute laws whereby the rest could have a privilege to advance like himself.
What I find particularly interesting about this is Joe's assertion that "God himself could not create himself" and "finding himself in the midst of spirits." He is the "only wise and true God." Why would he say that? If our Father were like all the rest of the gods, then Joe could have referred to a more primeval God who is our Father's father. But he didn't. He also called him the "only wise and true" God. From this it is reasonable to infer that our Father is indeed the First God.
So let's leave the question of our Father aside and consider Jesus. Obviously he was not the first Father/God. So he must be in the category of "all the gods" who have "learned" to become gods. How did
he hop on the road to ultimate exaltation? By A) creating a planet, B) being a savior on that planet, and C) resurrecting himself from the dead. So unless there are more than highway to ultimate exaltation, all the gods have to do their time as a savior on a planet as Jesus did. Even our Father was a mortal prior to the godhood he possesses. And "exaltation" is not a single event. There are multiple exaltations - "from exaltation to exaltation" that ultimately terminate at being "enthroned" at the pinnacle of "everlasting power."
Joe muddied the waters a bit with this utterance:
We have imagined and supposed that God was God from all eternity. I will refute that idea, and take away the veil, so that you may see...He was once a man like us; yea, that God himself, the Father of us all, dwelt on an earth, the same as Jesus Christ Himself did;
One might wonder who was acting as the "Almighty" when our Father/God was a mortal doing the job of a savior on his first planet, assuming he was a savior. Joe didn't say. At any rate, one would assume he slept at night just as any mortal. Not sure he Joe had all this completely thought out. (The transcriptions by Willard Richards, Wilford Woodruff, Thomas Bullock, and William Clayton essentially agree on the substance where they overlap. The amalgamation was published in
Times and Seasons.)
At any rate, the whole point of Joe's lecture is that humans can become "gods" and have to "learn" and achieve what "all the other gods" did "from exaltation to exaltation" in order to "know" our Father/God and gain the ultimate exaltation. If Jesus was a planet creator/redeemed on his path to ultimate exaltation, you have do your time as one too.