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Mormons reject core doctrines
Redding.com (Record-Searchlight) ^ | Feb. 14, 2012 | Brian Larsen

Posted on 02/15/2012 5:09:18 AM PST by Colofornian

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To: Graybeard58
Looks like WE have a JOB to do!!!

Go ye into all the world....

41 posted on 02/16/2012 4:45:04 AM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going)
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To: Graybeard58
On the other hand though, many people, already dismissive of Christianity or worse, down right antagonistic are perfectly willing to see Mitt as one of those nutty “Christians” and typical of the lot, no nuttier than any of the rest.

And, even if we HAD no MORMONs; we'd still have ME!

42 posted on 02/16/2012 4:46:12 AM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going)
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To: PilotDave

God didn’t say there were other gods. It has already been thoroughly explained to you that context matters. You have negated the context of the verses you quoted to arrive at a meaning that is very different from the original author.

Jews and Christians have universally interpreted the Old Testament as teaching God is monotheistic long before the mormon cult ever arrived. There will always be trouble makers like you that will pick a couple verses from the Bible, ignore the context of those passages, and render a completely distorted view. That is how false teachers work. They take the Truth and distort it to fit their faulty reasoning.


43 posted on 02/16/2012 9:16:50 AM PST by Turtlepower
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To: Turtlepower

“God didn’t say there were other gods”

Yes he did.
1st commandment.
Direct quote.
Spin it all you want.
I just hope you don’t burn in hell for spinning your false beliefs.


44 posted on 02/16/2012 10:30:46 AM PST by PilotDave (No, really, you just can't make this stuff up!!!)
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To: PilotDave

bttt


45 posted on 02/16/2012 11:59:00 AM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going)
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To: PilotDave

LOL

There is no spin in the interepretation of the Old Testament that is accepted by all of Christianity and Judiasm. It’s called using the CONTEXT in order to determine the meaning.

You’re concerned that my believing that God is monotheistic will send me to Hell???!!!! So, you’re saying that God(s) will send me to Hell because I don’t believe that (they) are really more than one God???!!! Your delusion knows no bounds.

You have no reading comprehension skills or ability to interpret the Bible and now you want to throw this garbage around. Clearly, you’re trolling...I regret wasting any time conversing with you.


46 posted on 02/16/2012 12:10:30 PM PST by Turtlepower
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To: imardmd1
NOTE: 1621 is a tad late for the start of Protestant settlement in what became the United States.

King Philippe III is the fellow who started it off. When his father, Philippe II died in 1598 (along with a number of other European notables) that opened up the Americas to smart young people with advanced thinking ~ so Philippe III and his friends came up with the Treaty of London (1604) which crammed down the idea of American settlement according to an Hapsburg or Spanish division of the territory.

He gave his cousin James an area called Acadia. He gave his other cousin, the King of France, Canada. He then carved out a colony called Carolana (now North and South Carolina) ~ probably because they'd discovered gold there.

The rest, West of the Alleghenies was identified for future settlement as time, circumstance and energy would allow, and the part East of the Alleghenies was an experiment where Protestants from Europe, except "the Dutch", could settle.

Virginia was not all that big ~ it encompassed everything we now call Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Downstate New York, Long Island, Maryland, Delaware, Virginia and West Virginia.

By the standards of the time that was huge though.

Over the next couple of centuries Spain weakened, France weakened, England strengthened, and the custom of Protestants going to America to settle continued.

We date our family's arrival to as early as 1502 ~ with various other individuals coming here over the 1500s to work as surveyors, researchers, or just adventurers ~ one of their cousins was a noted Catholic dissenter in Spain who advocated opening the American missions up to all the various orders and brotherhoods and not just to one group of priests (as had been the case). Schism was avoided when even King Philippe II saw the wisdom of that action and convinced the Popes to go along with it (they still having civil authority over each and every priest in every order).

By 1598, as the news of the death of Philippe and Elizabeth spread there was an aggressive rush to carve chunks out of the Americas and tens of thousands of Europeans began history's greatest landrush.

By 1621 there were actually places with names around here, but it wasn't until the 1670s that it became necessary once again to be concerned with whether or not someone was Catholic or Protestant. Implicit in the Peace of Westphalia (which ended the Thirty Years War) was the concept of "the national church", so the freewheeling Americans were reined in. Charles II took the English throne as a quite tamed monarch.

In brief, Our America began as a Protestant "geto" protected by the Catholic King of Spain ~ which is something we've forgotten about. He was one of history's good guys and he loved to party hearty!

47 posted on 02/22/2012 4:52:01 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: muawiyah
NOTE: 1621 is a tad late for the start of Protestant settlement in what became the United States.

That is very interesting! Thank you! I have read that the individual, Squanto, who kept the Pilgrims from starving to death (half of them already gone) knew the "invaders'" language, because he had been to Europe. I had never learned that back in public school. And, of course, the Jamestown settlers must have been largely Protestants? And, also, I left out the Hugenots (when?) down at St. Augustine --

48 posted on 02/22/2012 5:49:37 AM PST by imardmd1 (Jude 3c "... earnestly contend for The Faith which was once delivered to the saints.")
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To: imardmd1
The Huguenot settlment North of Jacksonville is well known because it got wiped out. The leader of that particular venture had purchased our old family estate and manor house in Brittany ~ his family lived there for a number of years afterward.

There are 30 other KNOWN early settlement archaeological sites on the East Coast that have not yet been examined.

There are a number of suspected Spanish settlements from the early 1500s as well ~ but they weren't as well developed so there's not a lot of debris to work with.

A new site is in Long Island where the Shinnecock Indian Nation has a small reservation. A plant grows there called CLOUD BERRY. The particular subspecies grows only in Scandinavia.

Otherwise the Cloud Berry doesn't live in the lower 48!

So, why? Obviously it was partially domesticated before it's arrival here ~ probably planted by SOMEBODY in an early time. No doubt the Shinnecock will get someone in there to make some archaeological hay out of that plant.

At the moment I have my eye on about 25 probable 1500s Spanish sites (mining or fur trade) in the Midwest EAST of the Mississippi.

No one has looked at these places ~ one of them even seems to have been one of those "La Villa Real" places, just like St. Louis, Santa Fe, etc.

NOTE, for Spain there were two kinds of Dutch. Good Catholics ~ living in what is now Belgium and Southern Netherlands. Bad Protestants - living in what is now Northern Netherlands (Holland).

During the very earliest periods of exploration and settlement in the New World the Spanish were accompanied by Dutch! The New York settlement of 1621 was just the latest in a number of Dutch trading villages set up all over the America. We lose site of that because we don't read Spanish history! Instead, we read English history.

49 posted on 02/22/2012 8:02:23 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: muawiyah
There are 30 other KNOWN early settlement archaeological sites on the East Coast that have not yet been examined.

Any gold tablets found up around Palmyra region, brought in by adventurers?

50 posted on 02/22/2012 10:05:49 AM PST by imardmd1 (Jude 3c "... earnestly contend for The Faith which was once delivered to the saints.")
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To: PilotDave
So, there are other Gods, and our God is insecure.

Don't know about insecure, but jealous, yes; at least, He says so --

51 posted on 02/22/2012 10:23:28 AM PST by imardmd1 (Jude 3c "... earnestly contend for The Faith which was once delivered to the saints.")
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To: imardmd1

If there were I’m not telling anybody. Rich gold hunters never tell.


52 posted on 02/22/2012 10:40:30 AM PST by muawiyah
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