The Premortal Existence: Difference between revisions
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*Tad R. Callister, "The Inevitable Apostasy", pp. 126-134 | *Tad R. Callister, "The Inevitable Apostasy", pp. 126-134 | ||
The Bible Speaks of a Premortal Life. p. 126 | :The Bible Speaks of a Premortal Life. p. 126 | ||
The Early Christian Writers Spoke of a Premortal Life. p. 129 | :The Early Christian Writers Spoke of a Premortal Life. p. 129 | ||
The Doctrine of a Premortal Existence is Banned by the Ongoing Church. p. 131 | :The Doctrine of a Premortal Existence is Banned by the Ongoing Church. p. 131 | ||
Human Experience Confirms a Premortal Life. p. 133 | :Human Experience Confirms a Premortal Life. p. 133 | ||
Why the Doctrine Needed to Be Restored. p. 133 | :Why the Doctrine Needed to Be Restored. p. 133 | ||
*Wordsworth, "Ode: Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood" | *Wordsworth, "Ode: Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood" | ||
"Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting." | :"Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting." | ||
*Enoch 48:1-3 | *Enoch 48:1-3 | ||
Description of the time when Christ ("the Elect One") was foreordained to his mission, "before the sun and signs were created ...". | :Description of the time when Christ ("the Elect One") was foreordained to his mission, "before the sun and signs were created ...". | ||
== Notes == | |||
The Premortal Existence is often referred to as the pre-existence. This usage has been criticized as being wrong, because it is interpreted as implying a reference to a time before our existence, while out intelligences are eternal. This criticism seems to be clearly overshooting the mark of proper pedantry. If we want to be pedantic about this, the most we can say is that the term is ambiguous. The prefix, "pre" does mean before, but a pre-slithy could be either of two things. In the first place it could be something before a slithy (eg. precolumbian, prepubescent, preteen, premarital, etc.) or it could be a slithy that is before (eg. preview, prescience, predrilled, premade, etc.). Clearly, when people say pre-existence, they are using it in the latter sense, but to people who are not familiar with LDS culture, this may be a point of confusion, so it would still be advisable to use the clearer term. | |||
== Cross-References == | |||
* [[Free Will]] | |||
* [[Intelligence]] | |||
* [[War in Heaven]] |
Latest revision as of 20:42, 4 February 2019
- Tad R. Callister, "The Inevitable Apostasy", pp. 126-134
- The Bible Speaks of a Premortal Life. p. 126
- The Early Christian Writers Spoke of a Premortal Life. p. 129
- The Doctrine of a Premortal Existence is Banned by the Ongoing Church. p. 131
- Human Experience Confirms a Premortal Life. p. 133
- Why the Doctrine Needed to Be Restored. p. 133
- Wordsworth, "Ode: Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood"
- "Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting."
- Enoch 48:1-3
- Description of the time when Christ ("the Elect One") was foreordained to his mission, "before the sun and signs were created ...".
Notes
The Premortal Existence is often referred to as the pre-existence. This usage has been criticized as being wrong, because it is interpreted as implying a reference to a time before our existence, while out intelligences are eternal. This criticism seems to be clearly overshooting the mark of proper pedantry. If we want to be pedantic about this, the most we can say is that the term is ambiguous. The prefix, "pre" does mean before, but a pre-slithy could be either of two things. In the first place it could be something before a slithy (eg. precolumbian, prepubescent, preteen, premarital, etc.) or it could be a slithy that is before (eg. preview, prescience, predrilled, premade, etc.). Clearly, when people say pre-existence, they are using it in the latter sense, but to people who are not familiar with LDS culture, this may be a point of confusion, so it would still be advisable to use the clearer term.