Steeple unnecessary to get closer to God
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It is unfortunate that lessons of old have not been learned today
(“Height of Mormon steeple contradicted,” Wednesday). Is there a
compromise that can be reached over the height of the proposed Mormon
temple? Rather than residents, city staff and church officials
warring over this question, wouldn’t it best be answered by God,
through Jesus Christ, from whence the name “Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints” comes from?
About 7,000 years ago, man labored in vain to build a tower that
would reach to the heavens so that one king could rest his throne
closer to God, to be as God, and to better oversee and rule over his
subjects. God destroyed this tower of Babel and dispersed mankind
into races each with new languages to prevent the folly of man from
attempting to rule as God.
Jesus Christ taught “that the kingdom of God is within you.” Luke
17:21. This was later revealed to mean that, to be close to God did
not mean erecting the highest, most glorious “building” in which to
worship in; it meant humbling oneself to allow the spirit of God to
enter one’s own temple (man’s body, mind and soul through his heart)
to allow God to commune and fellowship with man personally, through
the perfect sacrifice of his son Jesus Christ, by recognizing that
sin, not the height of our throne is what separates us from God.
Yet today, we still have “kings” enslaving men to build glorious
man-made “idols,” teaching that believing in and worshiping them will
bring mankind closer to God, and some go as far as to promise to
become Gods. To believe that building a great temple will bring you
closer to God is just pure foolishness, and proves that the greatest
downfall of modern man is illiteracy.
Those seeking to get closer to God need not stones or steeples,
they only need to take refuge in the living word of God and forsake
the foolishness of man and the things made by man.
RUSSELL NIEWIAROWSKI
Santa Ana Heights
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