Navigator wrote: Tue Oct 26, 2021 10:16 pm
The reason I start with the idea that God the Father and Jesus Christ are separate individuals is that most can understand where this is coming from. If you look at the New Testament in this light, it makes a lot more sense.
Another reason I started with this concept is that it leads directly to the next one. The reason he is called God the Father. I believe that it is because he is the literal Father of our spirits. Hence, he is the Father of every spirit that has ever or will ever inhabit a body on this earth. (Hebrews 12:9 states:
Furthermore we have had fathers of our flesh which corrected us, and we gave them reverence: shall we not much rather be in subjection unto the Father of spirits, and live?)
This is how he knows each of us intimately. And, how he was able to design the history of this world before it was created. (In Job 38, God describes about the creation of the world:
4 Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth? declare, if thou hast understanding.
5 Who hath laid the measures thereof, if thou knowest? or who hath stretched the line upon it?
6 Whereupon are the foundations thereof fastened? or who laid the corner stone thereof;
7 When the morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy?)
I believe that we lived with our Heavenly Father prior to our births, prior even to the creation of this world.
I believe that he created this world to both gift us with a physical body, and to allow us to prove ourselves worthy of him by being tested outside of his presence.
Let me know point out some of the implications of this concept that Heavenly Father is literally the father of our spirits, as well as a completely separate individual from Jesus Christ, and who exists as a perfected and glorified being (meaning like Christ after his resurrection).
I believe that we lived with our Heavenly Father for a long long long time. So long that he knew each of us intimately as individuals. He knew us so very well that he knew how to design history around us interacting with each other.
Each of us existed as an individual. We had different talents and personalities. We were taught by our Heavenly Father, and we learned, progressed and matured. This is alluded to in God’s interaction with the prophet Jeremiah (ch1:4-5):
4 Then the word of the LORD came unto me, saying, 5 Before I formed thee in the belly I knew thee; and before thou camest forth out of the womb I sanctified thee, and I ordained thee a prophet unto the nations.
To me, this means that Heavenly Father knew Jeremiah perfectly well, BEFORE he was born, and that Jeremiah had stood out from among his peer spirits, so much so that he was chosen by Heavenly Father for the specific mission he was given in mortality.
At some point, we had progressed as far as we could as purely spiritual beings. To progress further, and to prove worthy of becoming an heir of our Heavenly Father (as preached by Christ), we would need to experience physical existence.
Furthermore, in this physical existence, we would be subjected to trials and temptations. It would be our choice how we would react to these.
Heavenly Father recognized that all of us, except one, would at some point give in to temptation and sin. The only one who would not was Jesus. I believe, like Jeremiah, Jesus was chosen for his particular mission, which was to provide all of us with a means to be able to be forgiven of our sins, so that we could return to our Heavenly Father. I believe that Jesus fulfilled his mission, and was the sinless sacrifice that pays for our sins if we will let him.
In order for us to go through the trial of life, we would need to have our memories blocked of our pre-existence. This way we are required to search for truth, to exercise faith, and to prove ourselves. Like little children, we often act very differently when our parents aren’t around. We need to prove ourselves in a similar way to our Heavenly Father.
Our lives and our circumstances in mortality are different because we are different individuals. We progressed differently, had different talents, strengths, weaknesses and even different personalities, even before we were born. Our lives are designed specifically for us based on what we did in the pre-existence, what our talents and interests are, and what Heavenly Father felt would be the appropriate test for us.
This has a number of significant implications, some of the primary ones being:
1. Mortality’s experiences for people are vastly different for good reasons.
2. We are NOT taking the exact same test. Our lives are designed to test each of us individually. What is a proper test for me in mortality can be vastly different from the proper test for someone else.
3. Mortality is NOT the utmost of our concerns. It is a very small fraction of eternity. What matters is what we DO in Mortality, do we follow Christ's example in doing good, or not.
4. Bad things can happen, even to very good people. It may be that what is happening is part of their test, or of the test of those they interact with.
5. In the end, each of us will be judged (by Christ) on how we did on our test. The results will be fair, and this will be acknowledged by all participants. The results of the test will determine our fates, rewards, and punishments for the eternities to come.