FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Difference between revisions of "FAIR Study Aids/Seminary/Old Testament/Week 2"
< FAIR Study Aids | Seminary | Old Testament
(→Day 4: Genesis 3; Moses 4: mod) |
(→Day 2: Moses 1: mod) |
||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
|section=Suggestions for Teaching | |section=Suggestions for Teaching | ||
|teaching=It is comforting to know that God’s work and glory is to help us become like Him. | |teaching=It is comforting to know that God’s work and glory is to help us become like Him. | ||
− | |response=The idea that we are to "become like Him" is a concept that often misrepresented by our critics. Critics claim that the doctrine of human deification is unbiblical, false, and arrogant, with the suggestion that Latter-day Saints believe that they will somehow 'supplant God'. This, of course, is entirely incorrect. | + | |response=The idea that we are to "become like Him" is a concept that is often misrepresented by our critics. Critics claim that the doctrine of human deification is unbiblical, false, and arrogant, with the suggestion that Latter-day Saints believe that they will somehow 'supplant God'. This, of course, is entirely incorrect. |
|link= | |link= | ||
*[[Mormonism and the nature of God/Deification of man]] | *[[Mormonism and the nature of God/Deification of man]] |
Revision as of 12:42, 22 May 2011
- REDIRECTTemplate:Test3
Week 1 | A FAIR Analysis of:
Seminary: Old Testament Teacher Resource Manual |
Week 3 |
Day 1: Abraham 3
Day 2: Moses 1
From the manual section: "Suggestions for Teaching"
"It is comforting to know that God’s work and glory is to help us become like Him."
Commentary
The idea that we are to "become like Him" is a concept that is often misrepresented by our critics. Critics claim that the doctrine of human deification is unbiblical, false, and arrogant, with the suggestion that Latter-day Saints believe that they will somehow 'supplant God'. This, of course, is entirely incorrect.
Learn more
Day 3: Genesis 1–2; Moses 2–3; Abraham 4–5
From the manual section: "Suggestions for Teaching"
"The purpose of the scriptural accounts of the Creation is not to answer such questions as how the earth was created, how long ago the Creation occurred, or how long the process of creation took. Their purpose is to answer the more important questions of why the earth was created and who created it."
Commentary
FAIR WIKI EDITORS: Check sources
Learn more
Common criticisms related to this lesson topic
Was the earth created in only 7,000 years?
Response
The Church has no official position on the age of the earth. Church leaders have been of more than one view on this matter.
For more information
Day 4: Genesis 3; Moses 4
Common criticisms related to this lesson topic
Was there physical death for other creatures before Adam and Eve's fall?
Response
The Church has no official position on whether creatures outside the Garden of Eden were subject to physical death prior to Adam and Eve's fall. Church leaders have been of more than one view on the matter.
For more information
Common criticisms related to this lesson topic
Church leaders do not all agree on many questions.
Response
Church leaders have been of different view on matters that are peripheral to our salvation, such as the age of the earth, and whether there was physical death before the Fall of Adam.
- The Lord allows his prophets and his children to have and express their own views on issues not directly related to the gospel and salvation. "A prophet is only a prophet," taught Joseph Smith, "when he is acting as such." Prophets are not inerrant, and we weaken our ability to follow and sustain them if we act as if they are. Only Jesus was perfect.
For more information
Further reading
None