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Mormon Theology vs. Christianity
By Timothy Oliver
This is the second in a series of articles interacting with Mormon apologist
and BYU Professor Robert Millet's 1998 book, The Mormon Faith (see:
The
Watchman Expositor, Vol. 16, No. 2, pp. 15-18). This article continues
the examination of Scripture passages used by Millet in one of the book's
appendices to challenge the historic, biblically orthodox, Christian doctrine
of the Trinity, and to defend the unbiblical, anti-Christian, Mormon doctrine
of a finite, anthropomorphic God. Millet lists Scripture references in
six categories, according to the questions he thinks they raise against
Trinitarian doctrine. The previous article introduced the subject and dealt
with all the scriptures listed in the first category. This article begins
an examination of those passages Millet puts in the second category (which
are too numerous to cover in one article). These Scriptures, Millet says,
"Suggest that the Father has power, knowledge, glory, and dominion (including
the right and powers to direct that dominion) that the Son does not have
and to which the Son is in subjection. The scriptures and the questions
they raise are numerous."1
Anyone reading Millet's book should ask several questions at this
point. The first is, Do the passages Millet cites actually teach what he
has said they suggest? This is important, because Millet's claim here is
nuanced. He doesn't claim these verses prove his point, only that they
suggest certain things. Comparing suggest to teach, one might say the words
are soft and hard, respectively. If doctrine is to be built on the soft
foundation of mere suggestions then it is no wonder one hears it often
repeated that "You can prove anything you want by the Bible."
This is not to insist that every doctrine must be stated in a formulaic
proposition somewhere in the Bible before it is to be believed. Some true
doctrines, the doctrine of the Trinity among them, are arrived at by logically
necessary inference. Before one can say, however, that particular Bible
verses actually teach any given doctrine, there must be either a proposition
or a necessary inference.
By necessary inference is meant that to deny the inference itself involves
logical contradiction, such as pitting Scripture against Scripture. Also,
if no other inference can be logically drawn or maintained, then seldom
will it be improper to accept the inference as correct teaching, even if
its denial entails no logical contradiction. However, there may sometimes
be multiple, differing, inferences that can be drawn from a passage. Where
none of these is patently absurd, contrary to the literary and historical
contexts in which the passage was written, or contrary to other scriptures
relevant to the issue, then one cannot claim that any one of those inferences
is alone the teaching of that passage. In such a case, whatever one thinks
the passage suggests, it is improper to think of it as proof for that position.
If the verses cited by Millet can do no more than to suggest his conclusions,
then they are essentially irrelevant to his thesis. Do they actually teach,
either by proposition or necessary inference, that the Father has power,
knowledge, glory, and dominion (including the right and powers to direct
that dominion) that the Son does not have and to which the Son is in subjection?
Beyond all the above is another, larger issue. Suppose that these passages
actually do teach what Millet says they suggest. Would the Father having
"power, knowledge, glory, and dominion (including the right and powers
to direct that dominion) that the Son does not have and to which the Son
is in subjection" impinge upon the doctrine of the Trinity? Would it create
any problem for the doctrine of the Trinity that it did not, at the same
time, create for the Mormon doctrine? Would it prove a multiplicity of
Gods as found in Mormonism?
Mark 13:32 (cf. Matthew 24:36): "But of that day and that hour
knoweth no man, no, not the angels which are in heaven, neither the Son,
but the Father." "But of that day and hour knoweth no man, no, not the
angels of heaven, but my Father only." In this first case it must be admitted
that the Son, during the period of His humiliation, did not know the day
or hour chosen by the Father for the return to this earth of the Son-now
and forevermore the God-Man.
When Christ took on human flesh and became a man, there was also a temporary
emptying of Himself.2 No mortal has an
exhaustive understanding of what this emptying entailed. Certainly Christ
did not give up His essential Deity, or exchange it, to take on a human
nature, for He made the claim during His life on earth that He was God.3
Yet there was something of which He emptied Himself, something He gave
up, in order to live as a truly human being on earth. One thing He apparently
gave up or refused to exercise was the use of certain of His divine attributes
without explicit direction from the God the Father through the Holy Spirit.
Omniscience was one of these attributes. One cannot say Christ was not
omniscient while on earth, since He occasionally demonstrated or claimed
that quality.4 Yet in some way unknown
to mortal men He was also able to limit that knowledge, so that as a man
He knew only what God the Father wanted Him to know. Evidently, the day
and hour of His Second Coming was not among those things He was to know
before His ascension.
After Christ's resurrection and initial ascension to the Father, however,
when His disciples next saw Him, Jesus told them, "All power is given unto
me in heaven and in earth."5 He had made
a somewhat similar, though by no means identical statement, earlier: "All
things are delivered unto me of my Father:."6
Within its context this earlier statement may be taken as a simple claim
that all His teaching was from God. A third instance may be more complex:
"The Father loveth the Son, and hath given all things into His hand."7
There being no punctuation in the Greek, scholars and commentators are
divided over whether John the Baptist's testimony extends all the way to
the end of John chapter three or ends at some earlier point. It is possible
that this verse (35) indicative of Jesus' deity and power over "all things"
is inspired post-resurrection commentary from the apostle John. If the
statement came from John the Baptist, however, clearly "all things" given
into the hand of the Son must be limited in some sense, at least so far
as His knowledge of the time of His second advent. In that case the statement
may again be a simple claim that all Christ's teaching came from God (cf.
v. 34) or the assertion that Jesus had power over even life and death (cf.
v. 36).
There seems to be considerable difference, however, between these earlier
statements and Jesus' statement after His resurrection and initial ascension
that, "All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth." In the latter
case, His dominion is clearly co-extensive with that of the Father, being
"in heaven and in earth." It is of no small importance that within that
post resurrection/ascension context, when His disciples again asked Him
about end-time events ("Lord, wilt thou at this time restore again the
kingdom to Israel?"8 ) Jesus did not repeat
his earlier statement that not even He, but only the Father, knew when
that time would come. Instead, He simply told the disciples "It is not
for you to know the times or seasons, which the Father has put in his own
power."9 Jesus does not here acknowledge
any lack of information on the subject; rather, He is kindly telling the
disciples, "That is God's business, not yours." Thus it cannot be said
with certainty that Jesus' lack of knowledge about the time of His Second
Coming was ever more than a temporary condition during His humiliation
as a man on earth.
Given the evidence above it may be concluded that Mark 13:32 and Matthew
24:36 fail to prove that in their essential nature as God, "the Father
has power, knowledge, glory, and dominion (including the right and powers
to direct that dominion) that the Son does not have." That the Father directs
and the Son executes the direction, that the Father and the Son mutually
agree that the Son will always act in submission to the Father, is a matter
of function and not a matter of inequality in the Godhead. Previous articles
in this series demonstrated that the voluntary submission of the Son to
the Father forms no basis for any legitimate objection to the Christian
doctrine of the Trinity.
1 Millet, The Mormon Faith, (Salt Lake City:
Deseret Publishing Co., 1998): 190.
2 Philippians 2:6-8.
3 e.g., John 8:58.
4 e.g. John 2:25; 3:13; 6:64; 13:10-11.
5 Matthew 28:18.
6 Matthew 11:27; cf. Luke 10:22.
7 John 3:35.
8 For the disciples this would have been the functional
equivalent of asking about the Second Coming.
9 Acts 1:6-7.
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