This past Sunday I
went to the gospel principles class for Sunday school. We talked about the
Family Proclamation. It started with a brief discussion about how we are
children of God. The teacher has a read a couple of scriptures. We read Romans
8:16-17 and something struck me that hadn't before. I know that we frequently
use that scripture to teach that we are children of God, but there is a phrase
in vs. 17 that says "if so be that we suffer with him". I asked if
that conditional phrase was applied to us being children of God or heirs with
Christ. Someone said it must be conditional upon being heirs with Christ, but
when I asked why there wasn't any scriptural reference that we talked about. So
for the next part of the class I wasn't paying any attention at all because I
was thinking about the doctrinal base for us being children of God. I wondered
if it was in the bible or just modern scriptures, especially since it is a
doctrine very unique to Mormon theology.
My preliminary search of the canon
unique to Mormon theology left me surprised. Not only did I not find any
scriptural references to us being literal children of God, there were many
others that suggested we actually become children of God (Matt 5:9; 3Ne 12:9;
Matt 5:44-45; 3Ne 12:44-45; Moroni 7:19; D&C 11:30; D&C 25:1; D&C
34:3; D&C 35:2; D&C 39:4; D&C 42:52; D&C 45:8; D&C
76:23-24; D&C 76:58- the context of this one is talking about those who
inherit a celestial glory). How can we become what we already are?
I think this is
another example of a divine paradox, the paradox of our potential. Each of us
has the same spiritual father, but before we get high and mighty about that, it
is important to remember that Satan's spiritual father is one and the same. He
is made from the same divine stuff. Does that make him a Child of God? (Moses
5:13) In one sense yes but in another sense no. And what does he inherit?
nothing.
Being a literal spirit
child of God the Father is an amazing and wonderful blessing and gift, but I
think we miss the mark when we leave it to that. I think Heavenly Father wants
us to see each other as His children so that we treat each other better. But
there is something more to be had. We are in our natural man state, very fallen
and to be honest we don't act like God, we don't act like His children most of
the time. Without His son, without His light, without making covenants with
Him, we don't really get to be treated like children of a King because we don't
get to be with Him, we don't get to enjoy what He does. We are kind of like
Satan without the Savior. We are "children of God", but not really.
From what I read, it seems we aren't really children of God unless we act like
it. And yet, the potential is there for every single person on this planet
because they are made from the same spiritual matter that God is. Hence the
paradox of our potential.
Frequently people in
the church pull out Psalms 82:2, or Romans 8:16-17. We did in the Sunday school
class. But a careful reading of these scriptures in context yields to the fact
that through Christ, covenants, and actions we become sons and daughters of
God. It isn't something we already are (and yet it is). Cross reference the
scripture in Psalms with D&C 76:50-58, and read the context of the scripture
in Romans (specifically vs. 14-15... we are adopted through Christ). It seems
that our literal kinship with God isn't scripturally based. What is
scripturally based is a literal kinship with God through the Savior (Mosiah
5:7). I wonder where it came from? Maybe it was just revelation to Joseph
Smith? I don't know. If you find any scriptures supporting the doctrine, I'd
love to know them.
I also looked up
scriptures relating to inheritance/heir. Mosiah 15:11, 4 Ne 1:17, and D&C
52:2 were interesting. They tie into the same theme though. As do Mosiah 27:26;
Alma 5:51, 58; Alma 9:12; Alma 39:9; 3 Ne 11:38; Alma 40:26; Alma 41:4; 3 Ne
11:33; Ether 12:34; D&C 6:37; D&C 10:55;; D&C 50:5; D&C 63:20;
D&C 51:19; D&C 78:22; D&C 59:1-2; D&C 63:49; D&C 72:4;
D&C 85:9, 11; D&C 88:17, 26, 107 (107 is really interesting to me);
D&C 132:19; Moses 6:57. Into to be an heir and inherit all that the father
has we have to be changed from this fallen state we are in. We have to overcome
the natural man. For the natural man is an enemy to God, and has been from the
fall of Adam, and will be forever and ever (Mosiah 3:19). The enemy of God is
not his Child.
That is very
interesting to me. We have this dual nature... the natural man side which is
the enemy of God, and this spiritual man side, that is to inherit kingdoms,
thrones, principalities, and essentially everything (D&C 88:107; Romans
8:17). We are and we aren't, all at the same time. It is the paradox of our
potential.
I read a talk by Elder
Russell M. Nelson called, "We are children of God" and it gave me an
idea. One of the footnotes stated "Looking up scriptural references that
refer to create or form (or their derivatives), with either man, men, male, or
female in the same verse, I found 55 instances that attest to our divine
creation. One may represent the many that convey the same message: “The Gods
took counsel among themselves and said: Let us go down and form man in our
image, after our likeness. … So the Gods went down to organize man in their own
image, in the image of the Gods to form they him, male and female to form they
them” (Abr. 4:26–27)." Maybe I should look up those references to see what
I can find about our relationship to our divine creator. I don't think it will
say Son or Child or Daughter. But I do know that God made us. He is the creator
of our spirits and he wants us to call him Father.