Jane_Doe22
Well-Known Member
Because you think that the temple is about "earning" salvation.Why won't you answer my question? I know the answer, lol.
It's not.
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Because you think that the temple is about "earning" salvation.Why won't you answer my question? I know the answer, lol.
You CAN answer my question no matter what I think, but you DON'T. I believe that there are Mormons who would answer this question truthfully and specifically. You need to ask yourself why you don't answer this way.Because you think that the temple is about "earning" salvation.
It's not.
Prayer Warrior: are you aware that LDS Christians believe that there will be folks whom never paid a cent of tithing or stepped a physical foot into a temple that will be rejoicing with the Father in Heaven?You CAN answer my question no matter what I think, but you DON'T. I believe that there are Mormons who would answer this question truthfully and specifically. You need to ask yourself why you don't answer this way.
Of course, you don't HAVE to answer any question you don't want to answer, and you can just say you don't want to answer it, but this run-around I get from you is frustrating. I feel like you and I are on one of those hamster wheels going round and round and round....
They may believe this, but is it what LDS teaches?Prayer Warrior: are you aware that LDS Christians believe that there will be folks whom never paid a cent of tithing or stepped a physical foot into a temple that will be rejoicing with the Father in Heaven?
It is, despite the common myths.They may believe this, but is it what LDS teaches?
I prefer one topic at a time. We were/are talking about salvation: giving one's everything to Him. Having a temple recommend does not equate with salvation (not remotely) and I would perfer to finish addressing the topic of salvation before moving on.I've asked you very specific questions about your temple recommend which you have avoided answering. Now, if you don't want to answer, just say so, but please don't give the the runaround. I asked you what questions you were asked in order to receive a temple recommend.
It is.
The temple is not about earning salvation. Tithing is not about earning salvation.
I prefer one topic at a time. We were/are talking about salvation: giving one's everything to Him. Having a temple recommend does not equate with salvation (not remotely) and I would perfer to finish addressing the topic of salvation before moving on.
Sleep well :)I know that having a temple recommend doesn't equate with salvation in LDS teaching.
I think that we have covered the topic of giving everything to Jesus. I was just wanting some specifics from you about what you believe in terms of LDS teaching, but it's getting late where I am, and I need to get to bed.
I have enjoyed talking to you (until I got frustrated) But hopefully, you understand my frustration.
Good night, JD!
You too, and God bless!Sleep well :)
I have to go to work now; but I hope to have the time to answer you when I get back home. My answer will bring us back to a discussion of Joseph Smith, by the way. I think my answer will show you how I view the Bible. You may even agree with me. :)
How can you read John 6:63 and fail to see that Jesus was not talking about words printed in a book but Living Words of spirit. Your Bbile is not spirit or life. This goes back to Genesis when God called the animals to Adam to have him name them. Adam was to act on God's behalf after God rested. He was to speak -- and I do mean speak -- to the animals, plants and even the forces of nature. Your Bible can't still the wind; but Jesus' Living Words could. Your Bible can't make things happen the way the Living Word can like separating soul, spirit, mind and flesh.When you talk about the Bible as just a book, you miss the power and the life that are in God's words. Jesus said that His words are LIFE! The Bible is His story from beginning to end.
John 6:63-- The Spirit is the One who gives life. The flesh doesn't help at all. The words that I have spoken to you are spirit and are life.
Ah, so you're not 100% sure that what you're hearing is actually coming from God? I hope so. It's easy to get carried away by pride thinking we're hearing from the Holy Spirit when maybe we aren't. It is always best to measure things up with the Bible.I do hear the voice of God. Do you? Jesus said that His sheep hear His voice. And what I hear I always compare to His written Word because God doesn't contradict Himself. This is one way that I know what I'm hearing is from Him. And this is one reason He has given us His written Word, the Bible.
I do not think I said we don't need the Bible. If we had pure hearts, we wouldn't. I think that is what I said.Again, this is God's doing. He saw fit to give us His written Word for a reason.
You're kind of being hypocritical about this. On one hand, you base arguments on the Bible; on the other hand, you say we don't really need the Bible. Which is it??
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I doubt you could produce any example that changed my mind. People tend to blame God for being harsh when the truth is they are selfish themselves. People often think God should be like an earthly father who spoils his children rotten. God can appear very harsh to people like that. If I behave like a monster and treat others abominably, I can be sure it will feel like God is punishing me when He gets around to chastising me; but He's not being harsh with me. No, no, God loves everyone. He loves the people I'm treating so horribly. He may have take severe measures with me to get me to stop what I'm doing. That's God protecting the innocent; and if I take His chastisement the right way, I will realize He wants only the best for me.I didn't say that God looks harsh. He can be harsh in His love. I'm sure you've read the whole Bible and have seen this in the OT and the NT. I could give many examples. The problem is that we think we're more compassionate than God when we question His harsh treatment of people.
Again, your imagination is running riot. What I am saying is that the written Word is valuable when men cannot hear the Voice of God for themselves. The aim in reading it then should be to correct ourselves, to let the Bible show us where we have wrong ideas and where we are misbehaving by not showing others love. This corrects the defects on the heart. The Bible can be extremely valuable if used to help us correct our flaws.You seem to be trying to lead me away from God's Word. First, it won't happen because God will not let it happen. But if you were to lead one of God's children away from His written Word, what then?? What do you think you have accomplished?
How can you read John 6:63 and fail to see that Jesus was not talking about words printed in a book but Living Words of spirit. Your Bbile is not spirit or life. This goes back to Genesis when God called the animals to Adam to have him name them. Adam was to act on God's behalf after God rested. He was to speak -- and I do mean speak -- to the animals, plants and even the forces of nature. Your Bible can't still the wind; but Jesus' Living Words could. Your Bible can't make things happen the way the Living Word can like separating soul, spirit, mind and flesh.
Don't mistake a travel brochure about China with China. The brochure may be very, very good; but it's still not China. If you actually viist China, then you'll find out how accurate the brochure is.
Giuliano, I want to thank you for these thoughtful posts. I agree with you on some points, disagree on others, but for all I majorly appreciate seeing thoughtfulness put into things. I actually enjoy most of your posts and the Christian way you generally approach things.How can you read John 6:63... <Jane shortened for length>
I want to discuss now what a prophet is. First he is picked by God. There are ways to train to be a prophet; but it is entirely up to God who He chooses to reveal things to and when. Why does God do this? God rested after Day Six, that's why. All of God's work after that were to be performed through His servants exercising lawful dominion over the earth using the Power of the Living Word. When a prophet speaks the Living Word (and it is always out loud, even if written down later), the words are not entirely his own. They are God's words albeit each prophet has his own style and that may affect the style of writing.
God does nothing without first telling at least one of His prophets. It has to be that way since that's how God works -- through men.
Amos 3:7 Surely the Lord God will do nothing, but he revealeth his secret unto his servants the prophets.
What we have are the written words on pages. That being said, any saint can bring them back to life by reading them out loud with as much intention as he or she can summon; and if that saint has pure lips and is in the Light of God, he too is speaking the Living Word on behalf of God. Every saint who says the Lord's Prayer is exercising the lawful dominion of man over the earth when he recites, "Thy kingdom come, Thy Will be done, on earth as it is in Heaven." That is a very powerful prayer if uttered with great intention. You have authorized God to act, you are inviting God to act -- as He sees fit.
Back to what a prophet is now. A prophet often needs to learn how to discern among several things: His own thoughts first of all; the thoughts of other people; the thoughts that could be projected into his mind from various spiritual beings; and the thoughts that can be properly be assigned to God. Samuel had to learn this. A prophet who mixes things up is of no real value.
Now it must be admitted that some "fortune tellers" are fairly good at predicting the future; and some can be deluded into thinking they are receiving thoughts from God when they are not. Then there is the possibility that a genuine prophet sins grievously (perhaps out of vanity, greed, the desire for power or lust), and God no longer works though him. Such a prophet may demand that Heaven do as he wishes; he may fall into being deceived himself by the Dark Side impersonating the Voice of God, or he may deliberately turn to the Dark Side in an attempt to get information about the future.
As good as any fortune teller may be, he is always dealing with probabilities. Imagine a toy boat floating on a river without power. If you know its position and you know about the currents in the river, you can do a pretty good job of predicting where the boat will be in ten minutes, maybe even in twenty minutes; but the longer the time interval, the more unknown factors there will be, and the less accurate the predictions will be. Thus Nostradamus was really fairly good at his short-term predictions; but as time went by, you can see how more and more of his predictions failed. Sometimes the tiniest factor can mess up a prediction. Thus a tiny fish could bump against that toy boat and throw off even the ten minute prediction. This is how fortune telling works; and no matter how many accurate predictions someone may make, eventually he'll mess up and make a false prediction. A genuine prophet cannot make a false prediction since God's Power is behind it, and God will make it happen. That being explained, I think we see what Moses wrote about predictions make wonderful sense.
Deuteronomy 18:22 When a prophet speaketh in the name of the LORD, if the thing follow not, nor come to pass, that is the thing which the Lord hath not spoken, but the prophet hath spoken it presumptuously: thou shalt not be afraid of him.
Reject my theory on why this is true if you like; but keep the rule given by Moses. Moses is not telling us there how to "prove" someone is a genuine prophet, but how to weed out a false prophet when his predictions fail. Scripture is often like that about ideas too -- with great value at showing us when ideas are false. It may be harder to ascertain the truth; but we can all use the Scripture with "profit" to weed out what can't be true.
I am confident that there are still prophets; but I am glad I was never asked to be one. I'd be afraid of making mistakes. I have had private revelations but nothing I was told to declare publicly -- so of course, I can't "prove" it, but it convinced me that prophecy is still possible. I prayed once for something and was told my prayer would be answered within six months. I wrote the date down in my diary and then forgot about it until the prayer was answered. Curious, I checked the date. It was six months less one day.Giuliano, I want to thank you for these thoughtful posts. I agree with you on some points, disagree on others, but for all I majorly appreciate seeing thoughtfulness put into things. I actually enjoy most of your posts and the Christian way you generally approach things.
Big points of agreement are that the Bible isn't supposed to stand just as words on a page. Rather, it's supposed to be read and understood through the living Spirit. Also the importance of God still speaking and prophets. God comes first, all other things (including scripture and His servants) come second or later.
Some things are fairly clear if a time is specified, no? Believe me, I could produce a long list of ministers from other denominations who made brash predictions and claimed they were being inspired by God. Some are still around with faithful followers. There are other denominations that were started by people who made false prophecies like the fellow who predicted the return of Jesus on a certain date, and his followers went to a mountain top (I think) to wait. Nothing happened, but that church is still around.I do disagree about using Deut 18:22 for *us* to decided whether or not a prophecy has come to pass-- I find it's very prone to us humans telling God how we see things should be and then us missing the memo when God doesn't do as we were looking for.
If we all could get answers that easily from God, why would we need prophets?A prophet is also a servant of the Lord, much much more than a tell-about-future-events person. I see the best way of testing whether or not someone/thing is of God is to simply ask Him.
Ah, they finally got one. Better late than never. I see the ground breaking was in 2010.Also, there is a temple in Missouri. Kansas City Missouri Temple | ChurchofJesusChristTemples.org
Ah, so you're not 100% sure that what you're hearing is actually coming from God? I hope so. It's easy to get carried away by pride thinking we're hearing from the Holy Spirit when maybe we aren't. It is always best to measure things up with the Bible.
I do not think I said we don't need the Bible. If we had pure hearts, we wouldn't. I think that is what I said.
I also base my arguments on the Bible since I expect people who say they trust it as an authority to accept it as an authority. I don't expect people to trust me as an authority.
Why do you write such things? I did not compare them that way. I was using the travel brochure as an example.So, you compare God's written Word to a travel brochure, but His written Word comes to life when spoken??
Your Bible can read your mind? Your Bible can separate soul and spirit? Do you know what this verse means? If you can tell me that your soul and spirit have been divided, if you can tell me that soul and spirit have been separated from the flesh, then you can claim to know what that passage means. I can so claim. I also asked you elsewhere about sitting in heavenly places. I can claim to know about that too, having traveled in the spirit to heavenly places while my body was left behind on the earth.I agree that speaking God's Word out loud can be powerful, but whether we read it or hear it or speak it, God's Word is powerful! I'm sure that you're familiar with the following verse, and it doesn't differentiate between God's spoken or written Word.
Hebrews 4:12-- For the word of God is quick, and powerful, and sharper than any twoedged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.
What you are missing is how the saint can speak with a "new tongue." That is always done aloud the way Jesus spoke to the wind and told to be still.You and I are speaking to each other using written words, but we could well be speaking these words out loud to one another if we were within earshot of each other, right? What's the difference, except that it takes a lot longer to write than it does to speak. Either way, it's communicating what we want to say to each other.
Paul is talking about a lower variation of prophecy. Not all prophecy rises to the standard of being "Scripture."I noticed that you didn't address the gift of prophecy, which is a gift of the Holy Spirit mentioned in 1 Cor 12 and Romans 12. In fact, you've talked a lot more about false prophets and fortunetelling than you have about the gift of prophecy.
I see this gift as being somewhat different from the OT "office" of a prophet. Paul said in 1 Cor 14:1, "Pursue love and desire spiritual gifts, and above all that you may prophesy." IMO, this implies that any believer can have this gift as it is to be desired above the other spiritual gifts.
This kind of prophecy can be incomplete the way the prophet who warned Paul was right to a certain extent.One of Strong's definitions for the word prophesy in this verse is "to speak under inspiration." This is how I see the gift of prophecy. The Holy Spirit moves on the person to speak what God would have them speak. A good test for whether the person is inspired by the Spirit is to compare what the he/she says with the written Word of God. The Holy Spirit will not move on someone to contradict God's written Word. Therefore, any word that contradicts the Bible should be dismissed. Also, I believe that it's up to the person hearing the word spoken to them to pursue confirmation from God concerning the word.
As you know, God gave me this gift even though I did not pursue it. I have seen Him use this gift powerfully. He usually gives me a word for an individual, but occasionally, He has given me a word for believers assembled at a church meeting, and church leaders have confirmed that the word was from God.
Again, what counts as "fulfilled" seems very human-centric to me. God frequently works in ways we don't expect.Some things are fairly clear if a time is specified, no? Believe me, I could produce a long list of ministers from other denominations who made brash predictions and claimed they were being inspired by God. Some are still around with faithful followers. There are other denominations that were started by people who made false prophecies like the fellow who predicted the return of Jesus on a certain date, and his followers went to a mountain top (I think) to wait. Nothing happened, but that church is still around.
Need both. Having that direct-to-God connection / relationship is critical. But other times we also need a human servant to help guide us too.If we all could get answers that easily from God, why would we need prophets?
Your Bible can read your mind? Your Bible can separate soul and spirit? Do you know what this verse means? If you can tell me that your soul and spirit have been divided, if you can tell me that soul and spirit have been separated from the flesh, then you can claim to know what that passage means. I can so claim. I also asked you elsewhere about sitting in heavenly places. I can claim to know about that too, having traveled in the spirit to heavenly places while my body was left behind on the earth.
What you are missing is how the saint can speak with a "new tongue." That is always done aloud the way Jesus spoke to the wind and told to be still.
Paul is talking about a lower variation of prophecy. Not all prophecy rises to the standard of being "Scripture."