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A Closer Look at the Mormon Concept of God
From - http://www.namb.net/evangelism/iev/Mormon/Concepts.asp
The North American Mission Board web site
"It is the first
principle of the gospel to know for a certainty the character of God . .
. "1
(Joseph Smith, founder of the Mormon Church)
Mormon leaders often
like to portray their faith as merely another branch of Christianity
which, unlike other branches of Christianity, preaches the entirety of
Christ's gospel. However, most people, even some Mormons, are unaware of
how radically the Mormon view of God differs from the picture of God one
finds in the Bible and traditional Christian theology.
Understanding The
Biblical / Christian Concept Of God
In order to compare
and contrast the Mormon concept of God with the biblical/Christian
concept of God, we must first fully understand what we mean by the
biblical/Christian concept.
Though there are
numerous aspects to God's nature that we could examine (such as that He
is a Trinity), for our present purposes it is sufficient to say that the
God of biblical Christianity is at least (1) personal and incorporeal
(without physical parts), (2) the Creator and sustainer of everything
else that exists, (3) omnipotent (all-powerful), (4) omniscient
(all-knowing), (5) omnipresent (everywhere present), (6) immutable
(unchanging) and eternal, and (7) necessary and the only God that
exists. Let us now briefly look at each of these attributes.
1. God is
Personal and Incorporeal.
According to the Bible, God is a personal being who has all the
attributes that we may expect from a perfect person: self-consciousness,
the ability to reason, know, love, communicate, and so forth. This is
clearly how God is described in the Scriptures (see Gen. 17:11; Ex.
3:14
; Jer. 29:11). God is
also incorporeal. Unlike humans, God is not uniquely associated with one
physical entity (i.e., a body). This is why the Bible refers to God as
Spirit (see John
4:24
).
2. God is the
Creator and Sustainer of Everything Else that Exists.
All reality has come into existence and continues to exist
because of God. Unlike a god who forms the universe out of preexistent
matter, the God of the Bible created the universe ex nihilo (out
of nothing). Consequently, it is on God alone that everything in the
universe, indeed, the universe itself, depends for its existence (see
Acts 17:25; Rom. 11:36; 2 Cor. 4:6; Col. 1:16,17; Heb. 11:3; Rev. 4:11).
3. God is
Omnipotent.
Omnipotence literally means "all-powerful." When we speak of God as
omnipotent, this should be understood to mean that God can do anything
that is consistent with being a personal, incorporeal, omniscient,
omnipresent, immutable, wholly good, and necessary Creator. That is to
say, since God is perfect, He cannot sin; because He is personal, He is
incapable of making Himself impersonal; because He is omniscient, He
cannot forget. This is supported by the Bible when its writers assert
that God cannot sin (see Mark
10:18
; Heb.6:18), cease to
exist (see Ex.
3:14
; Mal. 3:6), or fail to
know something (see Job 28:24; Ps. 139:17-18; Isa. 46:10). Since God is
a perfect being, He is incapable of acting in a less than perfect
way--which would include sinning, ceasing to exist, and being ignorant.
None of this counts against God's omnipotence (or "ability to do
everything"), since, as
St.
Augustine points out,
"[n]either do we lessen [God's] power when we say He cannot die or be
deceived. This is the kind of inability which, if removed, would make
God less powerful than He is . . . It is precisely because He is
omnipotent that for Him some things are impossible."2
4. God is
Omniscient. God is all-knowing, and His all-knowingness encompasses the past,
present, and future. He has absolute and total knowledge. Concerning
God's unfathomable knowledge, the psalmist writes: "How precious to me
are your thoughts, O God! How vast is the sum of them! Were I to count
them, they would outnumber the grains of sand. When I awake, I am still
with you" (Ps. 139:17-18). Elsewhere he writes, "Great is our Lord and
mighty in power; his understanding has no limit"(Ps. 147:5). The author
of Job writes of God: "For he views the ends of the earth and sees
everything under the heavens" (Job 28:24). Scripture also teaches that
God has total knowledge of the past (see Isa. 41:22). Concerning the
future, God says: "I make known the end from the beginning, from ancient
times, what is still to come. I say: My purpose will stand, and I will
do all that I please" (Isa. 46:10). Elsewhere Isaiah quotes God as
saying that knowledge of the future is essential for deity (see Isa.
41:21-24), something that distinguished God from the many false gods of
Isaiah's day.
5. God is
Omnipresent.
Logically following from God's omniscience, incorporeality, omnipotence,
and role as Creator and sustainer of the universe is His omnipresence.
Since God is not limited by a spatiotemporal body, knows everything
immediately without benefit of sensory organs, and sustains the
existence of all that exists, it follows that He is in some sense
present everywhere. Certainly it is the Bible's explicit teaching that
God is omnipresent (see Ps.139:7-12; Jer. 23:23-24).
6. God is
Immutable and Eternal.
When a Christian says that God is immutable and eternal, he or she is
saying that God is unchanging (see Isa. 46:10; Mal. 3:6; Heb.
6:17) and has always existed as God throughout all eternity (see
Ps. 90:2; Isa. 40:28; 43:12-13; 57:15; Rom. 1:20; 1 Tim. 1:17). There
never was a time when God was not God. Although God certainly seems to
change in response to how His creatures behave--such as in the case of
the repenting Ninevites--His nature remains the same. A God who is
responsive to His creatures is certainly consistent with, and seems to
be entailed by, an unchanging nature that is necessarily personal.
Although all
biblical Christians agree that God is eternally God, they dispute
whether He exists in time (i.e., the temporal eternity view) or out of time (i.e., the timeless eternity view).3
7. God is
Necessary and the Only God that Exists. The Bible teaches that although humans at times worship some beings as if these beings were really gods (see 1 Cor. 8:4-6), there is
only one true and living God by nature (see Isa. 43:10; 44:6,8; 45:5,18,
21-22; Jer. 10:10; John 17:3; 1 Cor. 8:4-6; Gal. 4:8; 1 Thess. 1:9; 1
Tim. 2:5). Moreover, since everything that exists depends on God, and
God is unchanging and eternal, it follows that God cannot not exist. In other words, He is a necessary being, whereas
everything else is contingent (or dependent on God for its existence).
The Mormon Concept Of
God
Although there is
certainly disagreement among Mormon scholars concerning some precise
points of doctrine, it is safe to say the LDS church currently teaches
that God is, in effect, (1) a contingent being, who was at one time not
God (not necessary and not eternally God); (2) limited in knowledge (not truly omniscient), power (not omnipotent), and being (not omnipresent or immutable); (3) one of many gods; (4) a corporeal
(bodily) being, who physically dwells at a particular spatiotemporal
location and is therefore not omnipresent like the biblical God
(respecting His intrinsic divine nature--we are not considering the
Incarnation of the Son of God here); and (5) a being who is subject to
the laws and principles of a universe He did not create.
The Mormon concept
of God can best be grasped by understanding the overall Mormon world
view and how the deity fits into it. Mormonism teaches that God the
Father is a resurrected,"exalted" human being named Elohim who was at
one time not God. Rather, he was once a mortal man on another
planet who, through obedience to the precepts of his God,
eventually attained exaltation, or godhood, himself through "eternal
progression." The Mormon God, located in time and space, has a body of
flesh and bone and thus is neither spirit nor omnipresent. Joseph Smith,
founder and chief prophet of Mormonism, asserts:
"God himself was once
as we are now, and is an exalted man, and sits enthroned in yonder
heavens!... I am going to tell you how God came to be God. We have
imagined and supposed that God was God from all eternity. I will refute
this idea, and take away the veil, so that you may see.... It is the
first principle of the gospel to know for a certainty the character of
God, and to know that we may converse with Him as one man converses with
another, and that He was once a man like us; yea, that God himself, the
Father of us all, dwelt on an earth, the same as Jesus Christ Himself
did; and I will show it from the Bible . . . Here, then, is eternal
life--to know the only wise and true God; and you have got to learn how
to be gods yourselves, and be kings and priests to God, the same as all
gods have done before you, namely, by going from one small degree to
another, and from a small capacity to a great one; from grace to grace,
from exaltation to exaltation, until you attain to the resurrection of
the dead, and are able to dwell in everlasting burnings, and to sit in
glory, as do those who sit enthroned in everlasting power." 4
"The Father has a body
of flesh and bone as tangible as man's . . ." 5
Omniscience,
according to Mormon theology, is one of the attributes one attains when
reaching godhood. Mormons appear to be divided, however, on the meaning
of omniscience. It seems that some Mormons believe omniscience to mean
that God has absolute and total knowledge about the past, present, and
future.6 This view is consistent with the biblical view.
However, the dominant Mormon tradition teaches that God increases
in knowledge and, consequently, God does not have absolute and total
knowledge.7 This is why Brigham Young, Smith's successor
as president of the Mormon church, and his counselors pronounced (both
in 1860 and 1865) as false doctrine Orson Pratt's claim that "God
cannot learn new truths."8 Ironically, Pratt's claim is
consistent with the biblical view of God. Wilford Woodruff, a
recognized Mormon authority, taught, "God Himself is increasing and
progressing in knowledge, power, and dominion and will do so worlds
without end."9 And yet another church authority, Lorenzo
Snow, declared, "We will continue on improving, advancing, and
increasing in wisdom, intelligence, power, and dominion, worlds without
end."10
Once Elohim attained
godhood he then created this present world by "organizing" both
eternally preexistent, inorganic matter and the preexistent primal
intelligences from which human spirits are made. Mormon scholar Hyrum L.
Andrus explains:
Though man's spirit is
organized from a pure and fine substance which possesses certain
properties of life, Joseph Smith seems to have taught that within each
individual spirit there is a central primal intelligence (a central
directing principle of life), and that man's central primal intelligence
is a personal entity possessing some degree of life and certain
rudimentary cognitive powers before the time the human spirit was
organized.11
For this reason,
Joseph Smith wrote that "Man was also in the beginning with God.
Intelligence, or the light of truth, was not created or made, neither
indeed can be."12 In other words, man's basic essence or
primal intelligence is as eternal as God's and was not created by God.
The Mormon God, by
organizing this world out of preexistent matter, has granted these
organized spirits the opportunity to receive physical bodies, pass
through mortality, and eventually progress to godhood--just as this
opportunity was given him by his Father God. Consequently, if human
persons on earth faithfully obey the precepts of Mormonism they, too,
can attain godhood like Elohim before them. Based on the statements of
church authorities, some Mormon scholars contend that a premortal spirit
is "organized" by God through "spirit birth." In this process, human
spirits are somehow organized through literal sexual relations between
our Heavenly Father and a mother god, whereby they are conceived and
born as spirit children prior to entering the mortal realm
(although all human persons prior to spirit birth existed as
intelligences in some primal state of cognitive personal existence).13 Since the God of Mormonism was himself organized(or spirit-birthed) by
his God, who himself is a "creation" of yet another God, and so on
forever, Mormonism teaches that the God over this world is a contingent
being in an infinite lineage of gods.14 This is why Joseph
Smith can declare, "Hence, if Jesus had a Father, can we not believe
that He had a Father also? . . . I will preach the plurality of
the Gods."15 Brigham Young clearly understood the logic of
Smith's theology: "How many Gods there are, I do not know. But there
never was a time when there were not Gods and worlds."16 Thus, Mormonism is a polytheistic religion which denies that God is a
necessary being who has eternally existed as God.
Mormonism therefore
teaches that certain basic realities have always existed and are
indestructible even by God. In other words, God came from the
universe; the universe did not come from God (although he did form
this planet out of preexistent matter). For Mormonism, God, like man, is
merely another creature in the universe. In the Mormon universe, God is
not responsible for creating or sustaining matter, energy, natural laws,
human personhood, moral principles, the process of salvation (or
exaltation), or much of anything. In fact, instead of the universe being
subject to Him (which is the biblical view), the Mormon God is subject
to the universe. The Mormon God is far from omnipotent. He is not the
God of the Bible.
CHRISTIAN
CONCEPT OF GOD17
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MORMON
CONCEPT OF GOD
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1. Personal and
incorporeal
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1. Personal and
corporeal (embodied)
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2. Creator and
sustainer of contingent existence
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2. Organizer of
the world, but subject to the laws and principles of a
beginningless universe
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3. Omnipotent
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3. Limited in
power
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4. Omniscient
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4. Increasing
in knowledge*
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5. Omnipresent
in being
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5. Localized in
space
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6. Unchanging
and eternal
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6. Changing and
not eternal (as God)
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7. Necessary
and the only God
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7. Contingent
and one of many gods
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*Some Mormon
authorities disagree on this point.
Notes:
1. Joseph Smith, History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 7 vols.,
introduction and notes, B.H. Roberts, 2d rev. ed. (Salt Lake City: The
Deseret Book Company, 1978), 6:305. (Hereafter HC)
2.
Saint Augustine
, City of
God
(Garden City, NY:
Image Books, 1958), 5.10.
3. See Thomas V.
Morris, Our Idea of God: An Introduction to Philosophical Theology (Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 1991), 119-38; and Ronald H.
Nash, The Concept of God (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1983), 73-83.
4. HC, 6:305-6.
5. Doctrine and
Covenants, 130:22.
6. See, for
example, Bruce R. McConkie, "The Seven Deadly Heresies," speech at
Brigham
Young
University
,
1 June 1980
.
7. For an overview
of the differing Mormon views on God's omniscience, see Blake T.
Ostler, "The Mormon Concept of God," Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon
Thought 17 (Summer 1984): 76-80.
8. According to
Oslter (in Ibid., 76), these official pronouncements are recorded
in James R. Clark, ed., Messages of the First Presidency, 2 vols.
(Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1965-75), 2:214-23; and Millennial Star 26 (21 Oct. 1865): 658-60.
9. Wilford Woodruff
in Journal of Discourses, by Brigham Young, President of the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, His Two Counsellors, the Twelve
Apostles, and Others, 26 volumes, reported by G.D. Watt (Liverpool:
F.D. Richards, 1854-1886), 6:120. (Hereafter JD)
10. Conference
Report, April 1901, p. 2.
11. Hyrum L. Andrus, God, Man and the Universe (Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1968), 175.
12. Doctrine and
Covenants, 93:29.
13. Bruce McConkie, Mormon Doctrine, 2nd ed. (Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1966),
386-87, 516-17, 750-51.
14. See HC,
6:305-12.
15. HC, 6:476,474. See also McConkie, 577.
16. Brigham Young in
JD, 7:333.
17. This chart,
changed slightly for this pamphlet, originally appeared in Francis J.
Beckwith and Stephen E. Parrish, The Mormon Concept of God: A
Philosophical Analysis, Studies in American Religion, vol. 55
(Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press, 1991), 38.
The North American Mission Board, SBC
All Scripture
quotations are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version. Copyright 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society. Used by
permission.
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