Relatable with Allie Beth Stuckey - Ep 1338 | DEBATE: Are Mormons Christians? LDS Apologist vs. Evangelical Christian | Jacob Hansen
Episode Date: April 27, 2026Allie engages in a theological debate on Mormonism with Jacob Hansen, who runs the Thoughtful Faith YouTube channel. Hansen, who belongs to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, presents hi...s religion as the true ecclesiastical priesthood with more similarities to Catholics or the Orthodox Church than to evangelicals. Allie and Jacob trade barbs on the Trinity, salvation, and whether humans, angels, and God are all the same species. Who is eligible for heaven? Is God all-knowing? Can believers become the gods of their own universe? Nothing is off the table in this civil yet educational discourse! Share the Arrows 2026 is on October 10 in Dallas, Texas! Tickets are on sale now at: https://sharethearrows.com Share the Arrows is sponsored by: A'del Natural Cosmetics: AdelNaturalCosmetics.com Range Leather: RangeLeather.com/ALLIE We Heart Nutrition: WeHeartNutrition.com Buy Allie's book "Toxic Empathy: How Progressives Exploit Christian Compassion": https://www.toxicempathy.com – Time Codes 0:00 Introduction 1:47 Mormonism & Apostasy 29:46 Is Jesus Christ God? 53:49 Do Mormons Aspire to Godhood? 1:06:05 Can God Change His Mind? 1:23:28 Is the Second Coming in Missouri? 1:26:34 Is Marriage Eternal? 1:29:59 What Do Mormons Consider Gospel? – Today's Sponsors: A'del | Visit AdelNaturalCosmetics.com and enter promo code ALLIE for 25% off your first-time purchase. Good Ranchers | If you go to GoodRanchers.com and subscribe to any box of 100% American meat, you’ll save up to $500 a year! Plus, if you use code ALLIE, you’ll get an additional $25 off your first order. We Heart Nutrition | Check out We Heart Nutrition at WeHeartNutrition.com and use the code ALLIE for 20% off. EveryLife | Visit EveryLife.com and use promo code ALLIE10 to get 10% off your first order today! Seven Weeks Coffee | Experience the best coffee while supporting the pro-life movement with Seven Weeks Coffee; use code ALLIE at https://www.sevenweekscoffee.com to get up to 25% off your first order, plus your free gift! Episodes you may like: Ep 725 | Leaving Mormonism for Christianity | Guest: Lynn Wilder https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ep-725-leaving-mormonism-for-christianity-guest-lynn/id1359249098?i=1000590320441 Ep 416 | Once Saved, Always Saved? | Q&A https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ep-416-once-saved-always-saved-q-a/id1359249098?i=1000520439147 --- ► Buy Allie's book "You're Not Enough (& That's Okay): Escaping the Toxic Culture of Self-Love": https://alliebethstuckey.com/book ► Subscribe to the podcast: iTunes: https://apple.co/2UVssnP Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2FwkXxj ► Connect with Allie on Social Media: https://twitter.com/conservmillen https://www.instagram.com/alliebstuckey/ https://facebook.com/allieBlazeTV/ ► Relatable merchandise — use promo code ALLIE10 for a discount: https://shop.blazemedia.com/collections/allie-stuckey
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Are Mormons Christians?
Do we believe in the same gospel?
Today I've got Mormon apologist Jacob Hanson on to debate this and so much more.
You're going to love this lively debate and discussion on today's episode of Relatable.
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Jacob, thanks so much for taking the time to join us. If you could just tell everyone who you are
and what you do. Yeah. My name is Jacob Hansen. I am a LDS podcaster. I have a YouTube
channel called Thoughtful Faith, where I talk about usually kind of worldview apologetics,
and I kind of compare the Latter-day Saint worldview with everything from atheism to Islam.
Well, I appreciate how willing you are to engage in conversation, especially with those that
you disagree with. Not everyone of any background, of any faith, is really willing to do that.
And so the fact that you're willing to come here and, you know, contend for what you believe or
go on different podcasts to debate, I just really appreciate that and respect that a lot.
The goal today is for me to clarify what the LDS Church teaches and what they actually believe.
I've had people who have left the Mormon Church on the podcast.
And so I want to hear from you because you're still an adherent to LDS beliefs.
And I thought that you'd be a really good advocate for what you believe.
So I just have some questions for you.
And I want to go all the way back if that's okay, to like some history.
How did the LDS Church originate?
So the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints originated in,
the 1820s and 30s.
It was officially was founded in 1830 in New York by Joseph Smith, who through a series of sort of
miraculous events that he went through, brought about what we believe is a restoration of
the original ecclesiastical sort of structure of Jesus Christ Church on the earth.
And so that's kind of where, I mean, it's a very long story.
Yeah.
But that is essentially where the church came from.
He was in the woods in upstate New York, and he claimed to have been
met by God himself and told that the church, all of the churches for 1800 years had been
apostate. He says that he prayed to God, what church should I join? And that God said, look,
all the churches have become apostate. They're not teaching what they need to teach and revealed
to him through golden tablets that he found and the angel Moroni led him to, that this is the new
revelation from God. And is that correct? In a sense, so I would say that to kind of give
the full story. So Joseph Smith was around the age of 14. He was trying to decide which church he should
join. And so he's looking, and like many of us today, you see various denominations and infighting
and things like that. And so he was confused about it. And so what he did is he went and read in the
Bible, the epistle of James, which says, if any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who
giveth to all men liberally and abradeth not. And so what Joseph did was he went and he prayed
in a grove of trees. And what we believe is that he had a theopony, a vision of the Lord.
The father and the son appeared to him. And they essentially told him that the original church
of Jesus Christ was not in its fullness on the earth, which means that the way that I would
understand that and the way that Latter-day Saints understand that isn't the belief that there were
no believers between the time of Jesus Christ and 1820, right? I did an entire debate on this with
with Joe Heschmire recently. And it's the idea that the fullness of the ecclesiastical structure
of Christ's church was not on the earth. But we do believe that there has always been, since the
time of Jesus, sincere believers in Jesus Christ. So when we talk about the church, I think it's
important that we distinguish between the church as a body of sincere believers, which we believe
has had a continual existence, and the institution, which we believe is necessary to
govern those believers, the fullness of the institutional church. And that is what we believe was lost.
Okay. Help me clarify, is it just the ecclesia that needed to be restored? Just the structure
of the church and the authority. My understanding, correct me if I'm wrong, was that there was also
a sense in Joseph Smith at least that there needed to be a restoration of the gospel, that there
needed to be a new revelation and a new message from God because there are differing beliefs that we
have about creation, about even what these kind of essential Christian doctrines and words
actually mean. So there was a sense that no denomination or the Roman Catholic Church, the Eastern
Orthodox Church, had the fullness of the understanding of the gospel. Is that correct?
It is true in the sense that the fullness of the doctrine we believe had been, there had been
corruptions of the doctrine over time. For example, one of the main ones that Latter-day Saints believe
is that the, so we would consider ourselves, just so you know, we would consider ourselves
Christians, but we will not consider ourselves creedal Christians. And by that I mean the different
creeds that came out post, in the post-biblical era.
Nicene Creed, the Nicene Creed, the Apostles Creed. The Apostles Creed actually is one that we would
embrace. I don't think that there's anything in the Apostles Creed that we would have an issue with.
But when it comes to, and even the Nicene Creed, to be honest, 95% of it, we would believe
wholeheartedly. The area that we take issue with is the
consubstantiality of Jesus Christ and the Father. And so where the Latter-day Saint tradition... And consubstantiality
for people who don't know is that they are the same in substance. And we can get into this later.
We don't have to get into the Trinity right now. But I've heard your positions before is that you don't
believe the Trinity as many as you would call creedal Christians do. Yes. And that's...
Yeah, just clarify. That would be the primary distinction. So what we believe is, is that once you have
an understanding of God that distances his relationship to us.
Because what the creeds essentially say is that there is this distinction between God and man
that is an unbridgeable ontological gap between God and man.
And Latter-day Saints believe that when Jesus Christ said that God is our father and his father,
we believe that that is quite very much the case,
that we are the same species as it were as God.
And so what we believe is that what needed to be restored was a proper understanding of who God was and who man was in relationship to God.
Now, as far as the gospel, that meaning to be restored, it depends what someone means by the gospel.
You know, Latter-day Saints in our beliefs, I mean, Joseph Smith himself said that the fundamental principles of our religion are the testimony of the apostles and prophets concerning Jesus.
Christ, that he died, was buried, rose again the third day, and ascended to heaven, and all
other things which pertain to our religion are only appendages to it. So my question is, because
that does sound so similar to what a Catholic or a Protestant would say is the gospel. And many
people in the 19th century, I mean, there had already been a great awakening and there was this
unleashing of the gospel after the Protestant Reformation and into the Americas. People believed
that gospel. And there were a lot of people preaching that gospel, not just some people,
but a lot of people preaching the gospel. There were certainly Baptist churches who were preaching
that. And so he says that he heard from God that the church, though, was basically apostate.
Not that there were no believers, but that no one denomination got it right. And that he was going
to get it right because he had the revelation from God. But if it's essentially the same gospel,
which is what he argued and what you're arguing, then by what definition was the church apostate?
So we would say that what was missing was the priesthood authority and keys that were given to Peter.
So we believe, in a similar way to what Catholics believe, that there were keys of authority that were given to Peter to effectuate the ordinances of salvation as a means by which we make covenants with our Father in heaven.
And so you don't have the fullness of the church without the fullness of the priesthood that is necessary to govern that institution.
And we believe that was what needed to be restored.
Now, that is one aspect of the restoration.
There also are other things that we would say were restored as well as far as truth, specifically
probably the most important one is our understanding of who God is and who humanity is in
relationship to God and our potential as human beings.
Yeah, and that's something I really want to get into because that's a really interesting
distinction.
So would an LDS person, would you say that the church that I, as a Baptist, as a Protestant,
or Catholics, we're still a part of the apostate church today.
You would say that I don't have the fullness of truth,
that I don't understand the succession of apostolic authority
that the Mormon Church has.
What we would say, we have a very different entire framework
around all of this, okay?
The fullness of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints,
or the fullness of the Church of Jesus Christ,
is when you have both the body of sincere believers
and the fullness of the institution that governs those believers.
we would believe that you are a full sincere believer in Jesus Christ, and we believe that you can
reach a potential of relationship with Jesus Christ through that sincere belief that you have,
indeed we believe that you do.
What does that mean that I could reach a potential of a relationship with God through Jesus Christ?
So there is, this is one of the big differences maybe between the two positions that we have.
So there's sort of a binary heaven and hell.
So you would, for instance, look at a Latter-day saint and say that you're not saved.
If we follow sort of the LDS view that the eternity we have in store for us is hell.
We would actually say that because we have this, many people have heard of this sort of an idea of heaven more like a spectrum than a binary is a way to think of it.
There's three celestial kingdoms and then there's hell, right?
Well, we would call it to, there's quite a bit to get into that.
But there is, what we would say is that there's outer darkness.
Those are people who don't want any light at all.
Those people would just reject the light.
Who qualifies?
Those who are basically the way I've heard it put is that it's like someone who sees the sun and the light and like doesn't want it.
It's like you have a perfect knowledge of God and you hate God all the same with a perfect knowledge of who he is.
Are there any concrete qualifications?
Like, I mean, what qualifies someone is bad enough to go to outer darkness?
Because my belief is that it's all non-Christians.
You know, Acts 412 says there's no other name in heaven or earth by which one must be saved.
Jesus says, John 14, 6, I am the way, the truth in life.
No one comes to the father except through me.
And so it's like that's the distinction.
But it doesn't sound like you're drawing the distinction between Christians or non-Christians,
those who are in Christ and those who are out of Christ.
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that qualifies you to get sent to the outer darkness, but you don't have any examples of what that could be.
I would say, well, when it comes to the specific examples, like, I don't judge individual people.
I leave that to God ultimately.
Like, I don't want to make a judgment call on who it is the person that goes to hell.
But the analogy that I would use is a person who has a full knowledge of God and doesn't want him.
Maybe Judas.
We could use Judas as an example.
I think might qualify as a son of perdition in our tradition.
But the idea here is where maybe you look at me and think that Latter-day Saint, you're going to hell.
You're going to suffer in hell unless you change your ways.
I would say that, or the way that our faith views things is that there are different levels of
light that people are willing to accept, right? And the fullness of the light is to come into a
full covenant relationship with Jesus Christ through his church, through the ordinances that
put you into a covenant relationship with Jesus Christ. So a person can have a very deep and meaningful
relationship with Jesus Christ and in the next life experience great joy and happiness.
maybe even the heaven that you kind of imagine it to be, where what we would say is that
if you want a fullness to reach the fullness of your own potential, that you would need to
enter into a covenant relationship with Jesus Christ, because only through him can we reach
the fullness of our potential.
Okay, can you help me understand exactly what those ordinances are? Because I think you
would agree, like at least semantically you would say Jesus died for our sins and that
His sacrifice on the cross paid for our sin so that we could be reconciled to God.
I've heard those in the LDAS church say that.
And when I read that, like I read Ephesians too, for example, by grace through faith you have
been saved.
And this is not your own doing.
It is a gift of God, not a result of work, so that no one can boast.
And then we were dead and sin.
We were made alive in Christ.
And then we were reconciled to God.
Right there, we have the fullness of relationship with God, not through any particular
denomination or any particular tradition, but because of the belief that we have in Christ
sacrifice, like that was the fullness of everything that I needed to be qualified for a relationship
with God and access to God. But it sounds like you're saying there's something else too,
that Christ's sacrifice wasn't quite enough, that you also need to enter into ordinances,
your word, to have the fullness of a relationship with God in heaven. So tell me what those
ordinances are and why they have to be added to Jesus' sacrifice. So I'd start it like this. I use this
analogy to understand kind of the way that we would view salvation and specifically where the ordinances
kind of fit into that. The first thing is I would say that imagine that we're all in a car and this car
is on a cliff and we being dumb teenagers decided to drive our car around the cliff and our parents
told us not to. It's our fault and the brakes all of a sudden go out and our car is heading downhill
towards the cliff. It's our fault. Like, we're heading towards the cliff. There's nothing we can do to
save ourselves. We're going to go off that cliff. And then Jesus shows up with a helicopter, and he reaches
his hand out, and he says, take my hand, and I'll get you out of this mess. Right. And now, what we would say
is that there involves a choice there. You have to choose Jesus Christ. You have to take his hand.
And there's a question, well, what does that look like? What does it look like for us to accept the
gift that Jesus would give to us. Because the other alternative is, and I know that certain Protestant
models have this, it's that Jesus reaches into the car, he grabs certain people out of the car as
his elect, and then he puts them in the helicopter, he flies away with them, and he leaves the other
people to go off the cliff, because he's sovereign, and it's like, well, he gets to pick who he
wants to save, and the other's going to go off the cliff. Our view is different. Our view is that we
have to do something to reach up to take his hand. And what I would base that on is actually what
happened at Pentecost. At Pentecost in Acts 2, Peter is preaching to the people, and they feel the
Spirit of the Lord. In verse 37, it says, now when they heard this, they were pricked in their heart
and said unto Peter and to the rest of the apostles, men and brethren, what shall we do?
So these are people that believe they want to follow Jesus Christ, but now they're asking,
well, what do we need to do? And what Peter says, he says, repent and be baptized every one of you in the
name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.
So our view is that our repenting, being baptized, which is where we make this covenant with Christ,
opens us up to receive the gift of the Holy Ghost by the laying on of hands by those who have authority.
And then basically at that point, we're in a covenant relationship. We've taken his hand.
And the only question is, are we going to hold on?
Are we going to continue to place our faith in Jesus Christ and seek to follow him?
Okay, I have a couple of things on that because I don't want to quibble about Armenianism versus Calvinism with you because I think our differences are a little bit bigger and more fundamental.
But I will say, yes, according to Ephesians 2, we are dead in the trespasses and sins in which we once walked.
We followed the prince of the power of the air, which is now at work in the sons of disobedience.
That's what Ephesians 2 says that we are spiritually dead.
dead people can't reach. Dead people can't clean themselves up. Dead people can't say,
please God help us. A dead person has to be revived. And so, yes, I do believe that we contribute
nothing to our salvation. I just want to clarify my stance there. But my further question for you
is what you've described, there are a lot of Armenians that would believe that. Maybe a lot of
Protestants who would believe, yes, there is part of a choice there that we reach up. What you haven't
clarified for me is the, like what are the latter?
day saints ordinances that are required for us to have the fullness of their relationship with
God because there are a lot of Christians who are not LDS who have done exactly what you said.
They follow Christ.
They were repented.
They're baptized.
They're filled with the Holy Spirit.
But according to what you just said, they don't have the fullness of the ordinances.
So they don't have a fullness of a relationship with God, according to your theology, I think.
Well, in our theology that that would have to be, all of the ordinances have to be done
through the priesthood.
So I, you know, I can't...
So what are the ordinances that is required for someone to have the fullness of the
relationship with God according to Mormonism?
So first, our article of faith, or our fourth article of faith says,
the first principles and ordinance of the gospel are first faith in the Lord Jesus Christ,
second, repentance, third, baptism by immersion for the remission of sins, like Peter said.
Fourth, the gift of the Holy Ghost by the laying on of hands.
I may have misquoted a little bit there, but it's essentially that, right?
So these are the things that we do that bring us into a relationship with Jesus Christ.
Now, these are what we would refer to as the ordinances of salvation.
These are the things that basically get us out of this mess.
Now, within the Christian world, there's sort of this notion of salvation versus sanctification, right?
That sanctification is something that happens over time, if I'm not mistaken, or at least some tradition.
By Christian world, you're talking about my world.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, when I'm talking about the Christian world, I'm talking about the creedal Christian world.
Let's put it that way.
Because I would consider myself a Christian, just not a creedal Christian.
And that's the way that Latter-day Saints tend to view themselves.
So, yes, I would say that this already is something within Christian thought, that after
someone has been saved, that there is a process of sanctification that people go through
throughout their lives to be made more perfect, right?
To become what God wants them to be, right?
And so we would have those, we actually have ordinances, and this is what our ordinances
that are in the temple are about.
They're sort of like the second half, right?
And these are things such as the endowment is something that we have.
We have the celestial marriage where people can be sealed to their families for eternity.
And these are things that help us to reach the fullness of our potential in Christ is the way we would be able.
Okay.
So everything that you listed before, like the five things that you must do to be saved are all things that happen in a Baptist church.
But you're not Baptist.
So like what is the distinction there?
because according to you, like I'm a Baptist and, you know, I've done all of those things.
And yet I won't go to the fullness of the highest celestial kingdom and have that relationship with God if I don't enter the LDS church.
So I would say that the idea here is priesthood authority.
It's that the ordinances of the priesthood have to be administered by those who have the authority to then minister those.
And that's only LDS.
That is something that the Lord always in his.
his in his original church, it wasn't like you could go and just be baptized by anyone. There were
specific people. There's a reason, for example, that Jesus went to John the Baptist. And so there is an
idea of an ecclesiastical structure that governs the covenants that people make with Jesus Christ.
So it's not just people, you know, in a Protestant denomination that are like, hey, well, my Jesus
allows for gay marriage and, you know, lesbian preachers. So it is, there is a, there's an
idea. And it's very similar to what Catholics have.
our similarities with Catholics are very strong in the sense that we believe in an ecclesiastical
structure and priesthood that governs the ordinances that enable us to to enter into the fullness
of covenant relationship with Jesus Christ.
And what qualifies someone?
Please correct my vocabulary for I'm not saying this correctly.
So there's three levels of heavens.
There's the outer darkness, sons of perdition go there.
We don't know who.
Bad, really bad people.
Whatever really bad, whatever really bad means.
Judas. Let's say Judas.
Okay. I think that's a little, that's confusing.
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Okay, so there's three levels of heaven. What are most non-LDS people? Like, what are they going to go to?
Who qualifies for what? So we would generally say that, that again, and I'm kind of generalizing here,
think of it in terms of light. We use an analogy of sun, moon, and stars, right? So the stars have light.
but it's a lesser light than what one could enjoy.
The moon has a different level, okay, of light that a person could enjoy,
and then the sun is kind of the fullness of light, right?
And so what we would view is that the people in the lowest kingdom of glory
are basically your normal kind of bad person.
They just aren't people that, you know, want to do what's right.
These are, and they will only enjoy that which they are willing to receive.
In the middle is sort of what we would call like the good people but that aren't willing for one reason or another to embrace the fullness of Jesus Christ to accept his sacrifice into their life and enter into covenant relationship.
But they're kind of good.
What was that?
They're kind of good people.
I would say, well, no, I'd say they might be very good people.
But just because you're a very good person doesn't mean that you've necessarily decided to accept your cross and bear what Jesus Christ wants to give you.
The simplest way to put it is this.
You will get eternally what you really want.
and if you don't want Jesus Christ, then you'll sell yourself short of your potential.
And so we don't believe that God will take someone who's lived a good life as a Latter-day Saints,
serve their neighbors, raised a good family, and then internally torture them in hell for that decision.
We believe that they're going to be able to retain whoever they are, whether they're within
our church or without, that they're going to be able to retain whatever light and goodness
that they are willing to accept, God will give them.
there's a fullness and that fullness of light that a person will be enabled to enjoy, it's all predicated on them and their willingness to follow Jesus because the path that Jesus is calling us to, as you would know, is not an easy path.
But it has to go through the LDS Church to get that fullness of light in eternity.
I wouldn't, when you say it, the church, I would say it has to go through the priesthood structure that Christ has organized on earth.
Is there any other sect out there that has the priesthood ordinance?
The fullness of the priesthood, no.
Okay, so it is just through the LDS Church.
It would, well, it would be through the fullness of the priesthood that has been restored in the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Do Baptists have that, or Presbyterians or the Catholics?
No, those were churches ultimately that were not started fundamentally by God.
They broke away from the Roman Catholic Church, started their own movements, and basically denied
even the need for priesthood structure and authority.
And so these were churches that fundamentally were organized by men.
But you don't believe that Catholics have their right apostolic succession either.
See, the Catholics, and that was, my whole debate with you, Heschmire, was about that, as if they do.
I believe that the Catholic Church is the remnants of the original church, along with the Orthodox, by the way,
who don't have the fullness of that authority because the apostolic authority that actually belonged to the original apostles wasn't passed on into.
those traditions. So that is a view of view of have. So someone does have to go through LDS Church in order
to reach the highest level of heaven according to your theology. To reach the fullness of their
potential, they have to have a covenant relationship with Jesus Christ. And to do that on
earth requires that you make that covenant through the priesthood ordinance. Which only LDS Church
has right now. Correct. Okay. So yes. You have to go through the LDS Church to get to the highest
form of heaven. So it's not enough for someone to believe by grace through faith. And Jesus
death, burial, and resurrection for the forgiveness and remission of their sins and reconciliation
to God. That's not quite enough to get you there. To have fullness of relationship with God,
it's not that, as Scripture says, Jesus gives us boldness and access to confidently to go before
the throne of God. That's not enough, according to Mormon theology. It is also going through the
Mormon Church. Well, I would say that those are necessary but not sufficient conditions, because as Jesus said
to Nicodemus, except a man be born of water and the spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God.
So we believe that ordinance, at least at the very minimum, Catholics would hold of this view as well, that baptism is a necessary ordinance to enter the kingdom of God.
God, in our view, is trying to organize his...
But Catholics aren't going to the full kingdom of God, according to your theology.
But that's simply because they don't have the fullness of the priesthood authority, because they don't have the apostolic...
Right.
So I'm just trying to understand the formula, because it's not just faith in baptism, but it's also faith, baptize of the fullness of the ordinances, which is only found in the LDS Church.
So that's what I want to understand is like the gospel or the plan of salvation according to the Mormon Church.
It's not just grace, faith, is which I believe, or Catholics believe grace, faith, baptism,
but it is grace, faith, baptism, plus going through the Mormon Church.
You have to go through the priesthood.
The priesthood authority has to be there.
Christ very clearly in the original church that was organized in the first century had authorized people that were authorized.
that were authorized to do certain things within that structure.
There were apostles and prophets,
and there were various people that were ordained under their hand
to administer the baptism, for example, to the believers.
So if you believe in a kingdom of God that is actually organized as a kingdom,
it will have the structure of a kingdom.
And that is largely what we believe has been restored to the earth.
and it's in many ways very, very similar to what the Catholics have, where they believe that
there is no salvation outside of the Catholic Church.
And they have that, and they believe that, because when you go back and you follow the apostolic
tradition bag, that seems to be the sort of structure that existed in the early church.
There was no, anyone could just baptize anyone.
Well, I'm not a Catholic.
And so I could debate with Catholics about that, but I'm more interested in what you believe
and why you believe it.
So I'm glad that we clarified that.
I would love to get down to, which you referenced earlier, like who God is in accordance
with LDS theology and specifically who Jesus is, because you, Joseph Smith, we have a lot of
the same language.
But as far as I understand, the origin story of Jesus is different within Christianity than
in Mormonism.
So can you tell us the origin story of Jesus according to your theology?
So I would say that Jesus has, uh, Jesus is the only because of the moment.
of the father. And that means that in some sense he has his source and origin in the father.
I would actually refer to St. Basil put it interesting. He said, since the son's origin is from
the father, in this respect, the father is greater as cause and origin. This is why the Lord
says, my father is greater than I. Indeed, what else does the word father signify, unless
being the cause and origin of that which is begotten of him? So in some sense, the father
is the source and origin of the sun, but within our theology, there isn't a lot of detail
besides essentially the same kind of idea that someone like Basil has, that the father is the,
he is the father of the son, but the son is fully divine. So the way I would make sense of this,
and this is me, this is kind of, there are certain things that Latter-day Saints sort of have
revealed and that are in our canon of scripture, and then there's some things that we're
doing theology just like anyone else does.
my personal take on it is that the father,
the son, and the Holy Spirit have always dwelt
into eternity past in a fullness of loving relationship
with one another.
But not as one, so not a Trinity.
Well, not as one in the sense
that they are the same person or being.
Yeah, well, we believe in three persons,
one being, you know, the eternal Godhead,
but you do believe in three separate beings
who are simply in communion with one another.
Correct.
But I would put it more that we believe
that they are three persons who share one nature, right?
That they all share the fullness of the divine nature,
just like we're two people,
but we both share the fullness of human nature,
like we are both fully human beings.
And so it doesn't make,
I don't have any issue with the idea of two persons
that share the same nature.
But when people begin to say that you have two persons,
me and you,
but we share the same being,
I have a hard time with that
because it seems to me
that what makes you your own person
is to have your own being.
being. So I, and I mean this, I'm very open to being convinced of the Trinitarian formulation of
God. I genuinely don't know what people even mean when they say that you have two persons that
share the same being if I always thought that having your own being is what made you your own person.
How do you all interpret John One in the beginning was the word and the word was with God and the
word was God? He was in the beginning with God. So that's a lot of like prepositions there.
But, yeah, like, the word was God.
And obviously we go on and the rest of John 1 were introduced to Jesus at the beginning of John's gospel.
So how do you all interpret that?
The word was God.
So I would probably actually agree with Dr. James White, who I just recently had a debate with.
He had a discussion with Dale Tugge or a debate.
And he said, in John 1 you have, and the word was God.
What is being said is that the word is as to his nature deity.
The Logos, or Jesus, has eternally been deity.
So if we break down the verse, it's, in the beginning was the word, right?
Jesus.
So in the beginning was Jesus.
And Jesus was with God.
And we would say in that instance, God is referring to the Father.
So it's, in the beginning was Jesus, and Jesus was with the Father.
And the Word was God.
Now, if we can't say in Jesus was the Father, because obviously that would be modalism.
and Jesus was fully divine.
So the way I would look at John 1-1 to interpret it
is in the beginning was Jesus
and Jesus was with the Father
and Jesus was fully divine.
That is the way that I would,
and I believe Latter-day Saints would view that.
And we do believe that Jesus was fully divine.
I wonder why it doesn't say that.
Well, I would...
The word God can be used in different ways.
So, for example, if it was...
I guess I would want to understand
how do you understand that verse?
that isn't it. I'm open to a different interpretation. How do you interpret when Jesus says, I and the
father are one? In the same way that he does in John 17. In John 17, he explains in what way is
one with the father, and he says that he desires that his disciples will be one with him in the same
way that he is one with the father. As you know, in the Bible, it talks about husband and wife, right?
They'll become one flesh. Oneness can refer to a type of indwelling relationship between two
totally separate individuals. And so I would see that it seems that in scripture, that's the way
that it's being used because, you know, do you think that when Jesus invites his disciples to
become one with him in the same way that he is one with the father? I mean, I wouldn't think that
that means that they're going to be the same being as Jesus. So you believe in community and communion,
in full agreement, kind of coworkers working together, not one as in he is part of the Godhead,
just to clarify. I would say that
I don't understand what it means to say
that there is one as you can be
while still being your own person.
If you and I are... Yeah, we do believe in three persons.
Yeah, and I guess... In what sense
can three persons be one? I just don't understand that.
I think that the Trinity is a bit mysterious
and has been for a long time,
almost every single metaphor or analogy
for the Trinity falls apart because we end up
kind of with polytheism.
We end up creating these three
divine beings, which is not what we believe. Of course, in the beginning, like we read, God say,
like the Lord your God is one. It's a monotheistic religion. And of course, you read in Hebrews 138
that Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever. Next sponsor is every life.
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Code Alley 10. I think, according to the Mormon belief, is that Jesus was actually conceived and
born, right? And that he was before he actually came to Earth, before he was actually incarnate,
Emmanuel, that he actually had kind of a human origin story and then attained that divinity.
Is that correct? I wouldn't hold to that view.
There are some Latter-day Saints who do, but there's nothing in our canon of Scripture that suggests that.
In fact, the idea in our canon of Scripture, like in Doctrine and Covenants 2017, it says,
By these things, we know that there is a God in heaven, who is infinite and eternal from everlasting to everlasting the same unchangeable God.
So there is, I mean, you have to recognize, just as there are discussions within Christianity about differing.
theology over the same canon of scripture. Amongst Latter-day Saints, you can get different
views. But the idea that, like, for example, the notion of spiritual birth is something that is,
you know, it's widely discussed amongst Latter-day Saints. But even amongst Christian, there's a,
there's a challenge when you deal with Jesus Christ being begotten of the Father. Like, that's a,
that's a Christian teaching. And so does that mean that Jesus ultimately has his, like,
Is his origin from the father?
And what does that mean?
So it isn't just a Latter-day Saint issue to sort of have to deal with who God or in what sense is Jesus begotten of the Father?
And so just as Christians have disagreements over that, Latter-day Saints are kind of all part of that same discussion.
There seems to be a little bit of a different origin story, though, that both Jesus and Satan were created in eternity past, or maybe you wouldn't use that phrase.
but they were created in their form a long time ago that Satan and Jesus were brothers,
that we also, all of humankind, are brothers and sisters of Satan and Jesus.
Is that correct?
I would say that Jesus and Satan are brother and sister in the same way that you and Nancy Pelosi are sisters.
Like it's not in a meaningful sense, no, but if, as it says, if we are children of God, right?
and if in the Bible it talks about this idea of, for example, the sons of God is something that it talks about in the Old Testament.
For example, in Job 1, it says that the sons of God approach God and Satan was among them, right?
So, okay, Satan is one of the sons of God, and Jesus is called the Son of God.
So isn't there some sense in which there's some relationship there?
I'm not sure that that's what that means.
You said the sons of God and Satan was among them.
It doesn't necessarily say that Satan was a son of God.
How do you square that with the origin story that we read in scripture, that Satan was a fallen angel, that he was the day star, that he was the morning star.
Jesus even says that he saw Satan fall like lightning from the sky, that he led his own army of rebellious angels who were demons in hell.
And we don't read that he was this being that was a brother to Jesus.
And so how does Mormonism square that with what we read in Scripture and Isaiah?
Well, angels, for example, you guys would view angels as a totally different species from
human beings, as some totally different creature.
We don't hold to that sort of view.
We believe that angels are also the same species as human beings.
Yeah, scripture says that angels long to see what we see, that they long to know what we know.
And so there does seem to be a distinction there.
There is a distinction, absolutely, in the sense that we are mortal and we're in this life and we're participating in the experience that we have.
Well, not currently.
Perhaps they're pre-embodied beings or their post-embodied beings that are no longer embodied.
But we don't make this distinction between that there's all these different sort of species of creatures that are out there.
We believe that we are all, you know, human beings, angels, even God, that these.
are, that these are, that we are all children of God is ultimately what it says.
Okay, wait, even God, what do you mean?
So we believe, here's the, here's a real radical Latter-day Saint doctrine.
It is that we are all, every single person is a child of God, that you, Allie, have a spark
of divinity within you, within your spirit.
Okay.
And we would look at, for example, you know, in Acts 17, Paul is talking to the pagans,
and he says that God hath made.
of one blood all nations of men to dwell on the earth or to dwell on all the face of the earth
for we are also his genus do you know the word genus means in greek are you familiar with that
kind type exactly kind or type so if we were to look at this it says that we are also his
kind or type genus that's the word that paul uses if ephesians four
he says there is one God who is the father of all. In Genesis, right, we're made in God's
image and likeness, right? Everyone knows that. But what does that mean to be in God's image and
likeness? Well, in Genesis 5-3, Adam has children. And it says, when Adam had lived 130 years,
he had a son in his own likeness and in his own image. So when we look at this idea of
image and likeness in the context of the book of Genesis itself, it's talking about a relationship
like the relationship between a parent and a child quite explicitly. And so when I look at the
overall message of Scripture, like Jesus, for example, in John 20, he says, I ascend to my father
and your father. If we both have the same father, that would seem to be some sort of a sibling
relationship. And he says, and to my God and to your God. So when Jesus talks about his relationship
to the father and our relationship to the father, he uses the same terminology, that of a father.
And so I'm not saying that these are, these prove anything. Yeah, I'm kind of confused with what that
means with Satan. Why does that make Satan Jesus' brother? If Satan is one of the fallen angels,
if he's one of the sons of God. And in your belief, angels are pre or post embodied beings.
So there are humans who ascended to angel-like status or will be humans one day?
Yes, something like that.
Something to that effect.
I would say that there's nothing in the Bible that suggests that there is a different,
that they're of a different genus.
In fact, when we look at the explicit scriptures, it seems to say, I mean, Paul quite literally
says that we are of, speaking of God, his genus.
And so I think that a lot of the post-biblical sort of tradition has come up with interpretations around Scripture that create these sort of ontological gaps that I don't see in the Bible itself.
How do you interpret John 44 when we read that God is spirit?
Or like in 1 Timothy 117 when God is described as immortal and invisible, or Colossians 117 that Jesus is the image of the invisible God.
Yeah, well, one, I would say that I am spirit fundamentally.
Like, I'm not, I'm not fundamentally my body.
So I would, I would see that.
And then number two, I think that we would probably quibble over that, or not even quibble.
I think that we would disagree with that, that you are body and spirit, that they are
inextricably, maybe not extricably, but they are intertwined and that that is a key part
of our identity.
So again, I don't think that it's kind of, you're kind of almost equating humans to
God or that we can ascend to God-like status? And is that a belief that the LDS Church has?
Well, I would, again, I would go back to the earliest Christians on that subject.
Athanasius, for example, one of the early church fathers said that God became man so that man
might become God. Cyprian of Carthage says what man is Christ was willing to be so that
man may also be what Christ is. Iraneus said, our Lord Jesus Christ.
through his transcendent love, became what we are, so that he might bring us to be even what he himself is.
There's also, now, the church actually are, we get a lot of sort of caricatures around our doctrine of theosis,
and the church released a statement that said, and I thought they summed it up well, it said,
Latter-day Saints believe that God wants us to become like him, but this teaching is often misrepresented by those who caricature the faith.
The Latter-day Saint belief is that is no different than the biblical teaching in Romans 8, 16, and 17, which states,
The Spirit beareth witness with our spirit, that we are children of God.
And if children, then heirs, heirs of God, and joint heirs with Christ.
If it so be that we suffer with Him, that we may also be glorified together.
And then it goes on to say, through following Christ, I'll sorry, I just finish the quote real quick.
This is one last line.
through following Christ's teachings, Latter-day Saints believe all people can become, as Peter
2-Peter 1-4 says, partakers of the divine nature.
Okay, I don't really understand how Romans Aether, which is a wonderful chapter, agrees with
the assertion that we can ascend to God-like status.
And you listed all of those church fathers, I have no problem, disagreeing with church fathers.
I would have to see the scripture to back up the idea.
Yes, I agree with Romans 8 that we are heirs with Christ, that we have been bought with a price, which, by the way, I would say that Mormonism adds to that, that I'm not really a total heir with Christ because I haven't gone through the Mormon Church because I don't have all of the ordinances and the authority. So I would actually say that your doctrines deny that that is sufficient to be reconciled to God and to become a friend with God.
You're welcome to come and get baptized.
Yeah, see, that is the necessary thing. I've actually already been baptized, but I know that's not enough for the gospel that the Mormon Church puts forth.
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my code alley seven weeks coffee dot com code alley but this idea that we ascend to godlikeness i don't actually
see in scripture like we get this gift of being reconciled to god our bodies will one day be
resurrected that's one thing why it's so important i think not to just say that we are spirit the way that
god is described god is described as spirit but we're described as spirit and body and there's a reason also
why Jesus took on flesh, we read, and John 1 and dwelt among us.
But in your belief, the Father is already flesh.
So I am curious.
I don't even have a certain down, but what exactly is the incarnation, according to the Mormon belief?
Is that what we're celebrating at Christmas?
For example, like if you already believe that God has a body?
Well, the incarnation of Jesus Christ is when he became fully mortal.
That's where he, as Philippian says, emptied himself of the full.
fullness of divinity to enter into kind of our world and our level. So if there's kind of different
levels, right? If Christ was at that level into eternity past, he descended and came among us
so that he could experience what we experience and show us the way, right? And what he's really
doing as we understand it is he's teaching us how to love, right? So what, what, it's sort of like,
I could write you a book all about how to love people, but it's very different if I were to come
and walk hand in hand with you to someone who's suffering and you watch me give that person a hug.
You know what I mean?
So our view is that Jesus Christ descended from the fullness of divinity, as Philippians 2 says.
I believe it's Philippians too.
It's in Philippians.
And that is what we celebrate with the incarnation.
It's that, you know, as it would say, God was among us.
can we ascend to God-likeness? Can we become gods ourselves? I would go with what the Bible says on that.
It says, in Revelations 3-2, it says, to him that overcometh, will I grant to sit with me in my throne?
Even as I also overcame, I am set down with my father in his throne.
And how does that mean that we have become gods?
It means that we have the full, we have, we, so I would use this example, if an acorn is of the same species as an oak tree, right?
An oak tree, if you look at an oak tree and acorn, you go, these things are totally different, but they're actually not.
There's a potentiality to rise to the, to be, to be as Athanasia said, to be as God is within us.
Well, I would, I could use some of these verses.
For example, Psalm 802 says, I have said, ye are gods.
ye are the children of the most high
as I pointed out in Romans 8 that were talked about as joint heirs with Jesus Christ
Revelations 2 talks about how we will sit in the throne
I mean I'm curious and I'm open to an alternative explanation like what do you think
it means for us to sit down in the throne with Jesus?
Well we do read that we have authority in Christ that we are co-heirs with Christ
but also that we will spend eternity
worshiping him. I don't think that we can conflate that to mean that we become gods. Because from the very
beginning, God has declared that he is one, that there is no one like him. Like me, there is no other.
In Isaiah, he says, the prophet says to his people. And if that is true, if he says, like me, there is no other.
There are no other gods before me. There are no other gods around me. I am the only one that
exists. Gosh, he repeats that over and over again to his people throughout the Old Testament.
And if that's the case, I just can't square that with the idea of, well, we also become gods.
Yeah, I think, actually, I would allow it.
There's a great Christian scholar, Dr. Situwade, and he emphasized the scholarly consensus
around the notion of God as held in the Old Testament, and actually throughout the entire
scripture.
He says, I want to emphasize the scholarly consensus.
Historians and biblical scholars, including Peter Heyman, Nathan McDonald, Paula Fredericksson,
Michael Heiser, Larry Hurtado, and Richard Bachman, among many others, argue that
that ancient Jewish monotheism was not a denial of other divine beings' existence,
but rather an affirmation of Yahweh's unique supremacy.
Christianity conceived divinity as a spectrum rather than a binary.
The key thing is that monotheism was not a numerical oneness,
but a qualitative concept about being the unique supreme deity amongst all other deities.
So there is this notion in the Old Testament of a head god of all other gods.
Latter-day Saints do not believe that I will surpass God the Father or something like that.
You might talk about it in terms of capital G-God versus little G-g gods.
But equal status.
Equal ontological level.
But just like...
Break that down for us.
Well, I would say that it is you could have the fullness of the divine nature, that you can have the fullness of divinity within you.
But you will always have depended on that.
from your father, from our father in heaven.
He's the source of divinity, but we can have the fullness of divinity through the Mormon
church. Does that mean that there is the ability, I truly say asking this out of just not
knowing, does the Mormon theology teach that if you reach the fullness of divinity, you're in the
highest celestial kingdom, that you have the same power that God has on earth?
So this gets into a subject where a lot of people are like, are you going to get your own
planet or something like that.
I haven't said that. I haven't said that. I know you haven't, but I know that a lot of people
think that. And I actually think that this is a very appropriate thing the church put out on this.
They said, do Latter-day Saints believe they will get their own planet? It says, no, this idea
is not taught in Latter-day Saint Scripture, nor is it a doctrine of the church. This misunderstanding
stems from speculative comments, unreflective of scriptural doctrine. Latter-day Saints believe
that we are all sons and daughters of God, and that allows us to have the same potential to grow
during this life and after this life to become like our Heavenly Father. The Church does not,
and is never purported to fully understand the specifics of Christ's statement that in my father's
house, there are many mansions. C.S. Lewis famously said, there are people that, in mere Christianity,
one of my favorite books, he talks about people that kind of caricature heaven. They're like,
I don't want to go and spend, you know, eternity playing harps in heaven, right?
And he says, there's no need to be worried about facetious people who try and make the Christian hope of heaven seem ridiculous by saying they don't want to spend eternity playing harps.
The answer to such people is that they cannot understand books written for grownups, they should not talk about them.
And the reality is, is that we don't know exactly what it means to have the fullness of the divine nature and what that looks like in eternity.
There's been people who speculate about that.
There are still people who speculate about that.
But I generally go back to our canon of scripture to try and get an idea of what's most solid.
So how do you interpret Isaiah 4310 that before me know God was formed, nor shall there be any after me?
So I actually, I remember I heard that verse, and I remember it kind of troubled me until I did more research about the nature of Hebrew idioms in the Old Testament.
Including Psalm 82 when it says you are gods?
Because you take that literally.
Well, yeah, I do.
but what I'm saying is that...
But Isaiah 43, well, there's very specific scholarship that's been done on this actually by a Christian scholar named Michael Heiser.
And he points out something really interesting.
He said, quote, saying there is no God other than the God of Israel is akin to someone from Green Bay,
boasting that there is no football team other than the Packers.
Passages which say there is no other God, these are not statements of denial.
They are boasts of incomparability.
So what I want to get to here is that there are even our scripture,
in the Bible, such as Isaiah 47, where it says, where Babylon says, quote, I am and there is no one
besides me. And then again, in the book of Zefaniah, it says, this is the city of revelry that lived in
safety and said to herself, I am the one, and there is none besides me. So obviously there were
other cities. What there was in that time period where there were these boasts that were being
made, especially by the rulers of other nations, saying there is none besides me, I am so
great, right? And what the Hebrew scriptures are actually doing is they're actually playing on
those words that are being said by other rulers, and they're essentially saying to them, like,
they're putting their words ironically in the mouth of God to say, like, I'm actually the greatest,
because the ancient Israelites, and the scholarship on this is very, very clear, they did not believe
that no other gods exist. They even compared their God Yahweh to other deities. Like,
Imagine comparing God to like a leprechaun or something like that would be ridiculous.
So they actually did believe that there were other deities that did exist, but they believe that their God was the most high and ruler over all.
Okay. So you don't believe necessarily in monotheism.
I would say that I believe what the Bible teaches. And in the Bible, it's very clearly a henotheistic text or a monologous text.
Is there any other Christian denomination or Christian sect that,
believes in what you call hynotheism or I would call polytheism? Well, I would say that, well,
the Bible very much teaches that. So, but the Mormons have it right, but we don't. The rest of
the monotheistic Christians do not have it cracked. Even, even to call Christianity hard monotheistic
metaphysically is a very difficult claim to justify. Muslims, for example, will make that,
that observation that if you want to say that you have three persons who are all full
divine beings that all have the divine nature, you have three things, not one thing. And hard metaphysical
monotheism, that must reduce to one single simple entity. And if you can't, and I don't see how
you reconcile one single entity that is simple with no parts, no passions, with the God of the Bible.
So your argument is that you agree with the Muslims, Christianity is not really monotheistic.
It shouldn't be, according to your theology.
with the Muslims as much as I would agree with people like Dr. Situade, Dr. Heiser, and others
who point out that... Is Dr. Heiser a polytheist? No, he's a Christian. He's a Christian who
actually is a Trinitarian. He actually recently passed away. He's a great Christian scholar,
widely respected. So that's when you say you agree with him. But they don't... You don't.
The term monotheism, okay, is... But you don't agree with Michael Heiser on the Trinity.
Well, the only thing I disagree with Michael Heiser on is that he makes an ontological difference
between God and man. But Michael Heiser and I agree that the Old Testament clearly teaches the existence
of multiple divine beings with Yahweh being the most high amongst those divine beings that are called
gods. Did Jesus ascend to godlikeness? No, I believe he descended from eternity, passed into
humanity, went through the mortal experience showing us how to love so that he could reascend
to the place that he existed previously. Okay. I'm not sure if I fully understand.
that, that he ascended in God-likeness when he was here on Earth?
When he came to Earth, he descended. He emptied himself of the fullness of the divine nature,
as Philippians talks about. So he came to our level to live amongst us and showed us through a
perfect life and example what it means to love God and to love one another. And then through
his death, resurrection, showed us the path that we two can take to rise.
to, as it says, be co-ears with him to sit on his throne with the Father.
So we read that in Philippians 2, though he was in the form of God,
did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself,
taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men,
and being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death,
even death on a cross.
Therefore, you know, God highly exalted him.
We also read in Hebrews 138 that Jesus Christ is the same yesterday,
today, today, and forever. We read in Colossians 1 that by him, all things were made without him,
nothing was made, which I think Mormons would also agree with. And so to me, if we interpret
scripture with scripture, Philippians 2 doesn't mean that he descended in God-likeness and then
re-ascended in God-likeness. The incarnation doesn't mean that the nature of Jesus changed,
that he did have the power as Satan tempted him within the wilderness to call upon the angels and to
save him. He chose not to do that, even though he had the power to. He had the power to remove himself
from the cross, and he chose not to do that. But the Mormon belief is that he descended not only
physically and became, you know, an embryo and was embodied, but actually that he descended in
his nature, in his godlikeness and then re-ascended in godlikeness to show us that we can also
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that he descended into mortality, but there isn't, there's sort of two categories that you're creating
that that I don't believe that the Bible justifies. And that is that there is a different genus
that God is, and then there's a genus that human beings are. And so when Jesus came down,
he came in the form of a man. And to this day, like you do believe that Jesus still has his body
to this day. And that he, and, and, and you would agree that that body exists somewhere in a
physical space, right? Yes. Yeah. So, and so, and so, and so, and so this all, this all
seems to suggest to me that, like, you have God who to this day is an embodied,
man in Jesus Christ. Okay. And so I don't, the, the, the, his dissension into his condescension,
his emptying himself, as Philippian says, what is he emptying himself of? He's emptying himself of the
fullness of divinity to come down to where we are, where we don't have the fullness of divinity
in us, to show us the path, to fully realize our potential, uh, as human beings, which is to
be fully
be joint heirs with him.
I mean, to sit on the throne,
to return to his father and our father.
Through the Mormon Church.
We believe that covenant relationship
is part of that because ultimately
Christ established a church
and he had ordinances and he invites
and we invite all people everywhere
to come and partake in these ordinances
and come into a
and to come into the fullness
of the kingdom of God.
As man now is God once was,
as God now is man may be.
that I know that's not in the Book of Mormon, that's just a little maxim that an LDS president
came up with as God was, so we are. So God himself was like us and ascended to being God.
I always thought the whole premise of the Christian message was that God once became a man.
Yes, but we're talking before the incarnation.
Yeah, and there are people that hold to that view.
I, um, so the question here is, you know, was, was God the father once a man?
There's nothing in our scriptures that, as you pointed out, that said that, you have to
separate the realm, and this is what a lot of people do in dealing with LDS.
They look at sort of theology that has been held, even by presidents of our church.
Who are considered prophets.
Correct.
But we don't hold to prophetic inerrancy.
Okay.
So we don't believe that everything that a person is.
prophet ever said was right because, you know, we could even look to, you know, Peter, who very clearly
was of the opinion that the works of the law of Moses were still necessary even after Jesus Christ.
He even believed that people couldn't eat pork, for example, after the death of Jesus Christ.
It wasn't until God came and revealed something to him and gave him greater light and knowledge
that that teaching was corrected. So I would look at it as you have to recognize that there's
a realm of that which has been revealed by God through his prophets. And those, those, you know,
Those are generally where I go.
And so there is a discussion amongst Latter-day Saints, just like there's discussions among many different Christian groups on different subjects about the nature of the father into eternity past.
Those who are distinguished and named prophets in the Bible don't get something incorrect.
They don't predict something that doesn't come true.
We just don't see that.
They're imperfect.
And I actually think that's one of the beautiful things about the Bible and why to me it is so trustworthy and reliable is because the right.
of the Bible don't try to make themselves look better. They're just like, this is how it was.
We said something that was wrong and then it was corrected. And I think that's important.
But we don't actually see that prophets from scripture when they are saying this is a prophecy
are incorrect or something doesn't come true. Go ahead.
Could I press back on that a little bit? I mean, I would see like Ezekiel predicted that
Tyre would be destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar, but it didn't happen. Even Jesus in Matthew 24,
and I'm not saying that Jesus got things wrong.
I'm saying that maybe we don't understand what he's saying.
He says, truly, I tell you, this generation will certainly not pass away until all these things have been, all these things have happened.
And in that specific chapter, he talks about the destruction of the Temple of Jerusalem, which did happen in that generation.
But it also said that he would return in that generation.
And so there are many instances in the Bible where it seems as though prophecies are contingent.
And so, and also, as I pointed out, to say that they never get anything wrong, you know, again, I would look at Peter and say, it seems as though, at least to me, that Peter thought that you couldn't eat pork, for instance, for quite a while even after the ascension of Jesus Christ.
Yeah, well, he was a human, and I don't think that we read there that he prophesied that that was true, but he had a misconception.
A lot of early churches did.
But in Deuteronomy 18, God says, if the word does not come to pass or come true, that is a word that the Lord has not spoken, and the prophet has spoken presumptuously.
So I do think that any word that comes from the Lord and actually comes from the Lord through a prophet has to come true in order for God to not be a liar, which I think we agree he's not.
And I would agree.
I would just, I would nuance it a little bit with the idea that there are contingents.
in prophecy, that the Lord will, as he did with Jonah, with the city of Nineveh, that Jonah prophesied
that the city would be destroyed, but then the Lord changed his course of action, which is why
I also believe that the sort of metaphysical view of God's unchangeability, I don't think it's
easy to square with scripture, because if God is radically unchangeable, then I don't know how to make
sense of things like God changing his mind on the city of Nineveh. Yeah, it does seem that at the same
time, God is completely sovereign, that nothing catches him off guard, that nothing takes him
aback, that nothing surprises him because he is suspended in the eternal now. He is not limited
by time and space and on the linear timeline that we are. And yet, that is an interesting passage
where he says he changes his mind. Maybe that's a colloquial phrase to help us understand that
he communicated one thing to Jonah and it was his plan all along for redemption and salvation for
his people. I'm not sure that that posts, that that supports the idea that his nature changes or that
he is a changing one. Would you agree with that? And I would agree. I don't think God's essential
nature changes. I don't think that his love for us, for example, changes. I believe that God will
adjust according to that which is best to accomplish his purposes. But yeah, I'll leave that one there.
Okay, I have three more clarifying questions. Three more clarifying questions for you.
Okay, so there is this verse. Second Nephi, am I pronouncing that correctly? Yeah, is a Nephi?
You got it. Okay, 2523. It is by grace we are saved after all we can do. Can you clarify that?
Yeah, absolutely. So some people,
think of that as, and especially if you go back to the language that was used in that time,
um, in the 1820s when that was, was given. The idea is that it's not because of all we can do,
um, but it's actually more like in spite of all we can do, we're saved by grace. I would, I would
actually quote one of our recent apostles who gave a, uh, a talk on the idea of the gift of grace.
Um, he says, grace is a gift of God. And our desire to be obedient to each of God's
commandments is the reaching out of our mortal hand to receive this sacred gift from our heavenly
father. I wonder if sometimes we misinterpret the phrase after all we can do, and we must
understand that after does not equal because of. We are not saved because of all we can do.
Instead, the Savior's grace allows and enables us to overcome sin. So the idea of
here is, is it's not because of all we can do. It's after everything you do, Allie, it's still
grace that saves you. Kind of like the analogy with the car going down the hill. Like, don't think
because you took his hand that you're the one who got yourself out of the mess. It's still
him who's taking you out of the mess. But you made the good choice to choose him. And that is something,
that is an action that contributes to your salvation because you don't believe that he's going to scoop us
out of the car if we don't reach up.
Well, I mean, would you believe that God leaves some people in the car when he could save all of us, but he just...
I believe that we're dead in our sin apart from Christ, like Ephesians 2 says, and I don't know any dead
people who have ever reached up to you?
So, and maybe, and I would, I just look at that interpretation of that scripture, and I struggle
with it because of other scriptures, like Joshua 2415, where he says, to everyone, choose ye this
day whom you will serve. Deuteronomy 3019 says, I have set before you life and death,
therefore choose life. We don't, we don't believe that people don't have choices and they don't
have responsibility and they don't have a sense of agency. But we do believe that God is completely
sovereign over salvation. Now again, that's like a Calvinist, Armenianism debate that I'm
not as interested in having with you, just because I think that there are other things that we can
debate about. But I do think it's just an important distinction between what we believe, what grace
accomplishes, and when it actually kicks in, I think you believe. And there are some Protestants
who believe that grace kicks in a little bit later, and I believe it kicks in earlier.
Well, and we would view it very much. Well, we believe that in all phases, it's God's grace
that's working on us. We believe that it's only through him reaching out to you. Now, you have to
respond to that. We do believe that. But I would agree, we, Latter-day Saints are not Calvinist.
we side with the 97% of Christians who are not Calvinists.
And we believe that...
On that particular issue.
On that issue.
Yeah.
On that issue of a belief.
A Baptist Armenian will be, will have the fullness of relationship with God because they
haven't gone through the Mormon church.
I do want to just clarify something that I remembered that when you said that God's nature
changes, the Malachi 3-6 says, for I, the Lord, do not change.
And do not change.
Therefore, our children of Jacob are not consumed.
So I just do think it's important that God himself describes.
himself is unchanging. And I do, well, I'll give you the chance to respond because I don't want it
to just be like I said that. So you can go ahead and then I do have two more clarifying questions.
So no, I would agree with the idea that God doesn't change in his essential nature and love. I think
we, it's a difference in interpretation. And we believe that God has different things for different
times. For example, in the Old Testament, it very clearly says, if a man lies with another man,
as with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination, they shall be put to death.
Now, you believe that God doesn't want us to stone gay people to death.
And, you know, some people would look at that and say, well, that's a change.
Now, I would think that God doesn't change, but that he can have certain commands for certain
times and in certain contexts.
And so what may look like a change isn't actually a change in his essential nature.
Well, Jesus fulfilled the law.
And so that's what we know of Jesus, that he became our cleansing, he became our reconciliation,
He became our reconciliation. The whole book of Galatians is saying, look, if you're trying to abide
by any one law for your salvation, you better be ready to abide by all of them, because perfection
is the only thing that God accepts. So you can try to do it through perfectly keeping the law,
which none of you could ever do. Or you could do it through Christ, who has fulfilled the law and
has died for your sins in accordance with the prophecies and the scriptures. And so it's not that
God changed. It's that Jesus fulfilled the law. It's not that, well, God sees homosexuality different.
does see homosexuality different. Times change. We change. Yes, cultures change. We are not ancient
Israel. We are not governed by the same theocratic law that we were before. It's not God who changed.
I don't think that he sees homosexuality as any less of an abomination. But Jesus came, he fulfilled
the law. He gave us a new dictate. Same God, new dictate. Go therefore and make disciples of all
nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. So we're not under the same
dictates, that doesn't mean the nature of God changed. I mean, do you believe God has changed when it
comes to homosexuality? No, I would say, I would say that God definitely has a, God's nature does not
change, but the circumstances under which he's dealing with us, we change. We change. And so he has to,
but God doesn't change. You're right, in his essential nature, but sometimes people can look at that and
think that it's God changing when it isn't. But you're saying that he changes. No, I don't believe,
I would say 100% over it. You said he doesn't change in his essential nature, which seems to mean
that he changes in some way.
Well, he very clearly changed his mind
about the destruction of Nineveh.
Yeah, we talked about that.
But I don't actually believe
that it is possible for God
to be controlled by a linear set of circumstances.
Well, are there, I mean,
there are multiple times in Scripture
where God seems to be in a genuine relationship
and a give and take with a people.
For example, Jesus looks over the city of Jerusalem,
and he says, Jerusalem,
how often I would have gathered thee
is a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not. So the idea here is that
there's a cooperation that needs to happen between God and man. He will extend his hand,
but that we need to take it. And when someone fails, it isn't because God abandoned them.
It's because they chose not to take the hand that was offered.
Yeah. We have this idea, theological idea, which maybe you do too, of concurrence, where God
is completely sovereign, that he's completely powerful. There's not something I can do to stop God
from doing what he sets out to do. But at the same time, which is kind of strange, and this quandary
is really explained in Romans 9, and even Paul himself is like we just kind of have to glorify God
for his sovereignty and his wisdom and understanding. At the same time, we do have a responsibility.
We do have consequences. We do have agency. We have choices that we are going to make. At the same time,
he makes vessels of wrath and vessels of mercy. And then you have people, as Paul said in Romans
nine, but how can a potter, or how can Clay say to the Potter, why did you make me this way? And so
we've dealt for a long time with the seeming injustice of God's sovereignty and yet our responsibility.
And we have to reconcile that with Ephesians 1, where it says, in love, he predestined us for
adoption as sons. Romans 8, which you represented or which you articulated earlier, that those who were
predestined, he also called, those he called, he also equipped, those he equipped, he also glorified.
And so, yeah, we can go into a predestination debate, maybe like another time.
Well, obviously, we have a different interpretation of Romans 9.
But yeah, and Romans 8, and Ephesians 1, and Ephesians 2.
We have a different interpretation of a lot of things.
But you can answer, or if you just want me to ask my last two questions, I can.
I would just say the only thing I would say on the Romans 9 stuff, because I actually just was
recently studying this in quite a quite a bit is that it's a that chapter is actually a meditation on the
house of israel yeah i've heard that at that time um the gospel was being spread to the gentiles
and there was sort of this idea that paul is looking at the the chosen people the jews and he is saying
uh and there's sort of a complaint like well why is like why is the covenant being expanded outside of
of this group of people and so we would look at at that chapter through the lens of it's talking about
corporate and groups of people.
Not individuals. Not individuals.
So in love, he predestined us for adoption as sons, Ephesians 1-5.
So predestined, I would use it in this sense. Imagine that there's two planes.
And from the beginning of the world, God has ordained these two planes to go to the best location
and the other one's going to the worst location. And if Paul, and that is predestined
to go there, the question is just who's going to actually get on the plane? So when I look at
that... God doesn't know? Well, I would say, no, no, I would say.
say that, imagine that what Peter is doing, or Paul, Paul is as if he's on, at the front of the
plane, and he's addressing everyone in the plane. And he's saying, brothers, like, this has all been
predestined for us to go. So it isn't about individuals. It's the predestination or God's
intention. Does God know the individuals? Does God know the individuals? Does he know the individuals
that are going to get on the plane? I would say, and this is, I'm going to give my church as it's kind of like
within, within the Christians, how there's, there's different views on God's foreknowledge.
I personally believe...
Christians, my Christians.
Well, I would say amongst creedal Christians,
amongst creedal Christians,
there are discussions about the nature of God's foreknowledge,
and amongst Latter-day Saints,
there also are discussions about that.
And to a certain extent,
I'm not comfortable enough
with the position that I have to argue for it,
and so I'll kind of leave that one in the Rome discussion.
So we don't know if God knows everything,
or you don't know if God knows everything.
The question is, is if God's knowledge of the future,
does it actually determine someone's actions?
If God is all knowledgeable and all powerful, is it possible for someone to oppose him?
Well, the issue is, and then that creates the issue where everything is predestined,
including the death of Anne Frank in the camps and her eternity in hell for not accepting Jesus.
Are you saying God couldn't have stopped the Holocaust if you wanted to?
What I'm saying is, well, not if men have free will.
So he's not all powerful.
If he doesn't have free will.
If he wants to, it creates a logical contradiction when you talk about someone being free,
free? Like what God wants is a loving relationship with us. A loving relationship requires people to be
free to choose that relationship or to reject it. Otherwise, it's not love. And so in the nature of
God's plan is that men have to be free. And so we do not believe that God is the, we believe because
human beings are free, as C.S. Lewis puts it, that is the reason that this, that there is evil in the
world because freedom is necessary for love as well. In love, he predestined us for adoption as
sons. So it was loving for him to choose that. And while I agree, he has sovereignly given us
some freedom to choose an agency and consequences in all of that, I do believe that God is all
powerful. He could stop evil any time he wanted to. And I agree, but would it accomplish the purposes
of love is the thing. Is it loving to predestine someone before this world to go to hell?
I mean, was it loving for him to allow the Holocaust?
Well, I would say that the Holocaust was allowed because he gave men agency.
He gave us our agency, and that allows us to do evil, but it also is the thing that allows
for good. Yes, I would agree that God allowed it. I think that we kind of got off track there
when it seemed like you were saying God doesn't know everything. He can't do everything,
because you won't say whether or not he knows who is going to be saved and if he can do anything about it.
Well, the question, the question is, does him knowing something cause that thing to happen?
Or are people genuinely free, but he knows, like, for example, I may know that if I put my child in a room with a cookie and they're hungry, that they're going to eat that cookie.
But I didn't make my child eat the cookie.
Yes.
And so that is, so there's a, there is a question.
about the nature of foreknowledge as it relates to causality.
Yes, and I would say that's a different question, but you can't tell me if God is all-knowing.
I would say he is as all-knowing as it is possible to know.
So as much as can be known, he knows.
So does he know who's going to be saved and who's not going to be saved?
Does he know who's going to, in your terms, get on that plane?
That is a debatable question that I don't know that I'm ready to answer.
So he doesn't know everything.
No, no, no, that isn't what I'm saying.
I'm saying that that is a question that is debated, even amongst Latter-day Saints, and
amongst Cretal Christians.
And I don't feel qualified to debate that topic because I don't know it well enough.
Okay.
Two other girls, maybe only one.
We're over time, but that's okay.
It's super fun, and I hope people have fun listening to it and watching it.
I'm enjoying this, I'm enjoying this, I hope that this doesn't come across as silly.
I think this is a genuine Mormon belief.
do Mormons believe that Jesus's return will be to Independence, Missouri?
Yes, in essence.
That's outside of Branson.
I would, but I would, I mean, I think it's, it kind of has a shock value because it's
sort of like, well, okay, why, if he's going to return to somewhere else, now, great,
I would say he's going to return, he is going to return to the earth, and we believe that,
or at least it was prophesied, that the American continent would be where kind of the fullness of his kingdom would be established.
Prophecated, not in the Bible.
Well, you're right. But I would say that, and I would say, though, that because I also believe that prophecies are conditional,
I don't necessarily believe that any prophecy that's been made is necessarily set in stone, because as we've seen in the Bible with Nineveh and with Tyre,
and I believe even with the prediction of Jesus coming during the first generation of the disciples,
which are all in scripture, that conditions can change.
And so I believe that that prophecy was made, but I don't claim to know exactly the way that things are going to shake out in the end because conditions change.
Okay.
My last clarifying question, does the Mormon church teach that wives, that they have a secret name that is given to them in the temple and at the resurrection,
their husband, who is the only one who knows that name, will call upon them to go to heaven.
So this gets a little bit into our temple liturgy, and so the temple liturgy is something that is
symbolic in nature. Okay? So there are, and in any liturgical process, there's a question of
how much of this is literal and how much of this is figurative, right? And so within the temple
liturgy, there is an idea that a husband will participate in the bringing forth of their family,
and even other members of the family, for that matter, in the resurrection. So that is something
that exists within our theology. Now, to be honest, I'm not an expert in that subject, really,
but I will say that I know enough that within the temple symbolism and the symbolism of that
liturgy that, yes, there is a notion that we will participate in the coming forth of those who we love.
Okay. So wives? Men hold the priesthood. So this is something that, again, even in Christchurch,
even in the Old Testament, like the men were the ones who held certain sort of priestly offices
for a particular purpose that God has. And as the resurrection is seen, at least within LDS,
thought to be something that involves the priesthood that, that, yes, that a husband would be
involved in in the helping to bring forth of their family.
How do you interpret in Matthew 2230 where for in the resurrection, no one will be married?
You won't get married.
You won't be given in marriage.
Well, if you look at the verse actually specifically, it says that none will be
married or given in marriage. So you believe that pre-existing marriages? Pre-existing marriages. There are
no marriages that will exist after the time of the resurrection. No new marriages will be performed at
that point. If you look at the verse, it doesn't say that no one in heaven will be married. We do believe
that you and your husband will still be a married couple in heaven if you so want to be.
Well, the context of the passage, though, is the Pharisees, right, trying to trap him about marriage.
The Sadducees.
The Sadducee, thank you so much for correcting that.
That does matter.
It does matter.
It does matter.
It does matter.
It does because they didn't believe in the resurrection.
Right.
Yes.
So that's important.
And so they were trying to trap him about marriage.
And then in another part, like Matthew 19, he's asking the Pharisees, I believe in Matthew 19
19 are the ones asking, you know, who are we going to be married to?
Who are we going to be married to in heaven if someone gets married multiple times?
And that's how Jesus answered.
So I think that's why.
if I'm not incorrect, that would be why so many Christians say, well, marriage must not, the earthly
institution of marriage must not be recognized in the resurrection. Yeah, and I've always, you know what's
funny, I've thought a lot about that sort of a view. And to me, I've had a hard time understanding
what marriage's purpose is if it's just for this life. You know, I understand the necessary to bring
forth children into a family and stuff. But the idea that the family structure disintegrates
at death and that people aren't ultimately still like, will my wife still be my wife?
Will my father still be my father?
The LDS conception is that the same sociology that exists amongst us here will exist amongst
us on the other side, but with a greater degree of glory.
Yeah, Jesus is answering this question from the Sadducees specifically about people who have
multiple wives here on earth, not together, but in succession.
And that's how he answers.
They won't marry, nor are they given in marriage.
So actually in context, it doesn't seem like it's new marriages.
They're talking because they're asking him about previous marriages and current marriages, not new marriages.
They're not saying, hey, well, we get married one day.
They're saying, what if you've already been married multiple times?
That's how he answers.
So actually, in context, it doesn't seem to be talking about new marriages, just to clarify that.
Well, and I would look at it.
And Jesus answered them, this is the specific words, and said, you err not knowing the scriptures nor the power of God.
For in the resurrection, they neither marry.
interesting too because the context is being used here. They neither marry. So in the resurrection,
men were the ones who married, and then it's talking about women, nor are they given in marriage.
But these are, but there is the gods of heaven. So they're talking about who is he going to be
married to in the resurrection and just, you know, the position of our church, the position of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Lattery Saints is that no one in the next life will have any familial
relationships that they don't want. They won't be coerced into anything. And we don't claim to know exactly
the way that all these things will shake out in every instance. But we do believe that our families can be
together forever. Okay. Let's just end on this. Last clarifying note so that people understand.
We have so much of the same language. Can you share what you believe the good news of the gospel to be?
Absolutely. The good news of the gospel is for all mankind, not just the elect. It is that Jesus Christ
came to this earth. He died for your sins, and he offers you his hand, the gift of grace, to come
into full relationship with him, to be reconciled to God, to overcome the fallen world that we're in.
The reality is, whether you're an atheist or whether you're a Latter-day Saint or whoever you are,
we all have to agree that we live in a fallen world. It's broken. We are broken. We are
broken. It's unfair. It's unjust. And the only question is, is our way out? What Christ's
atonement represents and what Easter mourning represents when he walked out of that tomb was that there's
hope and that there is good news, that he overcame death, that he overcame sin. And my belief is a
latter-day saint, and my testimony is that Christ is our Savior, that he loves every one of us,
and that he offers you a totally new life through him.
And I believe that with all my heart.
And we often in our traditions say that we leave our testimonies in the name of Jesus Christ.
Amen.
And it's so close because I believe that.
But in your belief system, I don't have in eternity.
If I die as I believe now, if I believe all of that, I don't get eternal communion with God.
It's not enough to you.
Well, in our view, you would get as much communion with God as you're willing to accept.
And what we are offering in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is that people come and participate in the ordinances of the Holy Priesthood of God, which have been restored to the earth, that allow for men to act as his agents on earth, to organize his kingdom, and to bring those who believe in Jesus Christ and seek to follow him into full communion with one another in his church, so that they're going to be in his kingdom, so that we're going to be in Jesus Christ, and to bring those who believe in Jesus Christ, so that we can do.
that we can build his kingdom on earth in preparation for his second coming.
Okay.
Here's what I would say, which I believe is better news,
that by grace you have been saved through faith and this is not your own doing,
that Christ's death, his sacrifice for you on the cross is enough for you
to have fullness of your relationship with God, both here and in heaven,
that there is no other name by which one can be saved.
That's Acts 412.
And that according to Hebrews, Jesus paid the sacrifice once and for all,
that you could have access to God forever. There aren't three levels of heaven. There is full
relationship with God and there is, there is hell. Those are the two options. And thankfully in
scripture, we're not given this very like arbitrary and slippery. Well, you can be bad. What is
really bad? No, it's in Christ or out of Christ. It's dead and sin are made alive in Christ.
And the good news is that death, that Jesus's death and resurrection is enough for you to have
relationship with God and to spend forever in his presence. That is the really good news. And I think
that's true, no matter what your background is. That is the fullness of the gospel. And I just wanted
to make sure that we distinguish that. Thank you so much. Thank you.
