“He is God”

Joseph F. McConkie, Robert L. Millet

My soul delighteth in proving unto my people that save Christ should come all men must perish, Nephi wrote. For if there be no Christ there be no God; and if there be no God we are not, for there could have been no creation. But there is a God, and he is Christ, and he cometh in the fulness of his own time.“’ (2 Nephi 11:6-7, italics added.)

Elder Bruce R. McConkie wrote:

”Christ-Messiah is God! Such is the plain and pure pronouncement of all the prophets of all the ages. In our desire to avoid the false and absurd conclusions contained in the creeds of Christendom, we are wont to shy away from this pure and unadorned verity; we go to great lengths to use language that shows there is both a Father and a Son, that they are separate Persons and are not somehow mystically intertwined as an essence or spirit that is everywhere present. Such an approach is perhaps essential in reasoning with the Gentiles of sectarianism; it helps to overthrow the fallacies formulated in their creeds.

But having so done, if we are to envision our Lord’s true status and glory, we must come back to the pronouncement of pronouncements, the doctrine of doctrines, the message of messages, which is that Christ is God. And if it were not so, he could not save us.”

(Promised Messiah, p. 98, italics added.)

Doctrinal Commentary on the Book of Mormon, Vol. 3

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