Let me clarify that, shooting 7 year olds (or forcing puberty on five year olds so as to create babies before the parents are 8 and killing the parents before they turn eight so that it is a systematic sustained process
Oooh, good thinking. Religion really isn’t set up to handle munchkins!
(asking your sunday school teachers about such questions (or others like what happens if you pushed an angel into a black hole) can get strange reactions out of them
Angels should be no big deal. You can fit, like, a gazillion of them on the head of a pin so they shouldn’t even feel much in the way of tidal forces. Don’t Angels have teleportation powers anyway?
If you already were a psychopath then me sharing this won’t change much.
You can fit, like, a gazillion of them on the head of a pin so they shouldn’t even feel much in the way of tidal forces. Don’t Angels have teleportation powers anyway?
Not in the LDS perspective. For us there are three (sort of five) types of angels. There are the spirits of people that haven’t been born, the spirits of people that are dead but not resurrected, and the people that have been resurrected. The other are people sent from God that are not dead, being both those that are mortal and those that have been translated. The mortal one is uninteresting, one could probably find a grad student willing to do the experiment with the promise of a PHD. The others are the more interesting ones, being what effects does gravity have on spirit matter (being that for the LDS spirit is a type of matter) and what effects would it have on a resurrected body or a translated body. Destruction of the spirit is not a possible outcome. I have determined that, unfortunately, God is not likely to allow test subjects to volunteer themselves for the experiment and/or provide a convenient black hole for said experiment. Presumably once one is resurrected one will gain that knowledge.
Something like Teleportation, I am unclear on the details.
How much pressure can the immortal bodies endure? None of this (apart from mass) matters from the point of view of outside the event horizon. Just what things look like inside.
Oooh, good thinking. Religion really isn’t set up to handle munchkins!
Angels should be no big deal. You can fit, like, a gazillion of them on the head of a pin so they shouldn’t even feel much in the way of tidal forces. Don’t Angels have teleportation powers anyway?
I love the irony.
Not in the LDS perspective. For us there are three (sort of five) types of angels. There are the spirits of people that haven’t been born, the spirits of people that are dead but not resurrected, and the people that have been resurrected. The other are people sent from God that are not dead, being both those that are mortal and those that have been translated. The mortal one is uninteresting, one could probably find a grad student willing to do the experiment with the promise of a PHD. The others are the more interesting ones, being what effects does gravity have on spirit matter (being that for the LDS spirit is a type of matter) and what effects would it have on a resurrected body or a translated body. Destruction of the spirit is not a possible outcome. I have determined that, unfortunately, God is not likely to allow test subjects to volunteer themselves for the experiment and/or provide a convenient black hole for said experiment. Presumably once one is resurrected one will gain that knowledge.
Something like Teleportation, I am unclear on the details.
How are the bodies with being exposed to a vacuum indefinitely?
I assume they would be fine, being immortal.
Physical beatings? And how much do they weight?
How much pressure can the immortal bodies endure? None of this (apart from mass) matters from the point of view of outside the event horizon. Just what things look like inside.