The Cosmology of Jesus
Jesus was all about the ability of people to "know" the truth directly, through their spirit essence, in theory at least. He didn't degrade any kind of method for learning anything. He respected teachers, he respected tradesmen, and farmers, and government officials. .. . all in their capacities. . . .and he was willing to teach them in their own ways of "knowing" with the use of parables based on their knowledge base. . . .
But there was, in the final truth, no substitute for prayer, or for a committed relationship to the person of our Father. And with all Jesus said about who he is, and who His Father is. . . there is actually no latitude given for thinking anything but that God is in fact our Father, and that he, Jesus, was His Son and our brother.
But it is such a personal, overwhelming truth we just can't process it, or accept it, in an offhand manner, as perhaps our CommonCore texts would render it to a student as "informational" material. It can only be processed and understood after we put ourselves in a committed pattern of searching and enquiring, seeking understanding. And then it can only come in bits and pieces, line upon line, precept upon precept, here a little, and there a little. It is just "undigestible" in whole to any mortal person.
Still, Jesus said those who do seek will find. . . . and that those who live by His teachings will find more, and understand better, and gain a higher knowledge. . . . and that those who follow Him may one day be "like Him" and "like His Father".
In short, nobody in mortality is there yet.
It follows that all of us here are insufficient as points upon which to "believe" or place faith. Even Jesus denied that he was that point exactly, denying that his teachings were his own, and that the program was his, always pointing to His Father.
Jesus did say He was the Way, the Truth, and the Light. . . . but he was the Way to the Father, and he taught the Truth that came from His Father, and he was the Light, or example, to show us the path towards the Father.
Hence, my statement at the outset. . . . that neither Joseph Smith nor even Jesus is the basis of my faith. And certainly no lesser light. . . . nor I myself in my comparative darkness and confusion. . .. can be a sufficient point for placement of faith. It is no one short of our Father in Heaven. That is the One God, the only relevant God to us, and the one person referred to in the Ten Commandments as our God. Jesus was sent from our Father to make a way for us to come home again. To come back to our Father.
No, indeed, you credulous modern LDS folks. Jesus in not the Jehovah of the Old Testament, and old man Talmadge got that point wrong in his wrong-headed purpose to make the Mormons conform to other Christians who didn't understand it either. The only thing I can say in defense of the modern LDS image-shapers is that God might put up with us for a while, until we want to actually know the truth, no matter how ignorant we are, as long as we fundamentally still love Him.
But that doesn't change the fact that we owe our existence here, and our total allegiance, to the God who chose Abraham, and sent Moses, and Jesus, and others who have in some way served us on His behalf. . . . and that He is indeed our very Father in Heaven.
and, yeah, we get to choose what we will do about all that, if we will do anything at all. . . . but we do not get to set up our own vain notions as "right", and we do not slip in any way around the consequences for our choices, our beliefs and actions, here.
The choice we make against seeking God, and against being willing to be subject to God, is fundamentally an eternal choice. Every day of our lives is an eternal choice, a final choice.. . . . perhaps made incrementally but day by day we lose the day we might have had, living in the Light.