The Twin Falls, Idaho paper, Time-News (May 31, 2007), showed on the front page headlines—Moroni being put in place on the new construction of the Twin Falls LDS temple. (more…)
Mormonism
Vern Swanson’s LDS orthodoxy, Part 4
Here are some more quotes from Swanson’s book, Dynasty of the Holy Grail (2006) for your consideration. The final part 5 will be tomorrow.
I had no idea that Luther believed Jesus had sexual affairs. I would like to get to the bottom of this accusation. Are there any other sources? I will be sharing John 4:27 this Sunday morning with the church family. (more…)
God’s Greater Glory
– Taken straight from the first page in Bruce A. Ware’s book, God’s Greater Glory: The Exalted God of Scripture and the Christian Faith(Wheaton: Crossway Books, 2004):
Whether we behold, and believe, and adore, and trust, and honor, and love the true and living God, or whether we belittle, and distort, and minimize, and diminish God as we conceive him in order to magnify and enlarge and overextend the significance of “us” — this, at bottom, is what is at stake. In a culture saturated with the esteem of the “self” and marred by the decline of Deity, we stand in need of beholding God for who he is. We need desperately to be humbled and amazed at the infinite splendor of his unrivaled Greatness and the unspeakable wealth of his lavish Goodness. We must marvel at his blinding Glory and fall astonished at his benevolent Grace. If we are to escape the culf of self and find, instead, the true meaning of life and the path of true satisfaction, if we are to give God the glory rightly and exclusively owed to him–that is, if we are to know what truly promotes both our good and his glory–we must behold God for who he is.
Vern Swanson’s LDS orthodoxy, Part 3
Now in these quotes, Vern is putting forth an orthodox LDS view of God and also some of his personal angle on soteriology. Am I correct on this? And one of these quotes presents the view by Magaret Toscano on God. I am highly interested in any link that shares Margaret’s view in her words. (more…)
Vern Swanson’s LDS orthodoxy, Part 2
This morning, I desire to showcase some of Swanson’s thoughts on Mary & Heavenly Father, Jesus & Marriage, and polygamy as acceptable. I appreciate J. Stapley’s links yesterday. I am just wondering if there is any public and official LDS Church critique on these particular topics defended by Vern. I tend to think Swanson squarely sits within LDS orthodoxy. I will list here almost a dozen quotes. (more…)
CNN Live tonight: Inside Polygamy
This topic just won’t go away.
Vern Swanson’s LDS orthodoxy, Part 1
Is this book, traditional LDS orthodoxy?
Dynasty of the Holy Grail: Mormonism’s Sacred Bloodline (Springville: Cedar Fort, Inc., 2006) by Vern Grosvenor Swanson
Francis Beckwith on Mitt Romney
The newly publicized convert to Rome weighs in on Mitt Romney.
Beckwith’s conversion is one of the reasons why our church family is using the Geneva Bible this summer.
Beth on Baloney in Isaiah
Get Out of that Pit (Nashville: Integrity Publishers, 2007) by Beth Moore
On Isaiah 30, Beth writes, “Israel didn’t need Egypt. She needed God. At his best, man can make a mighty fine man, but he’s a useless god. Contrary to the serpent’s suggestion in the Garden, people simply can’t be divine. The higher the expectation we have for them, the further they’re going to fall. (And somehow, when it’s all over we feel disgraced. Embarrassed. Sometimes we don’t even know why.)
People can help us but they can’t heal us. People can lift us but they can’t carry us. On occasion people can pull us out of a pit, but they cannot keep us out. Nor can they set our feet upon a rock. When we come out of a pit, if our idea of stability is standing on another human’s shoulders, his clay feet will inevitably crumble and we’ll take a tumble. The job’s too big for him.
Since pit-dwelling is primarily a state of mind, effective deliverance also takes the ability to read people’s minds, because what we say often doesn’t match where we are. Only God can hang with us through the length and depth of our need. And the length and depth of our baloney. Maybe I’m just talking about myself, but whether or not I realized it, I usually found a way to frame my pit to make me look like a victim. Not only is God omniscient, His Word is “sharper than any double-edged sword” cutting our baloney so thin He can see straight through it. He knows when we’re kidding others. He knows when we’re kidding ourselves. Knowing all we are, all we feel, and all we hide, God overflows with love and willingness to deliver us. Even after Israel sought the help of the Egyptians, inviting the chastisement of God, Isaiah 30 testified, “Yet the LORD longs to be gracious to you; / he rises to show you compassion” (v. 18). (95-96).
Rather than blogging baloney, we “can opt for God.”