"The true God He has extension, and form, and dimensions. He occupies space; has a body, parts, and passions; can go from place to place. He can eat, drink, and talk"
About this Quote
Pratt’s God is almost aggressively physical, a deliberate swing of the hammer against the era’s smoother, more “refined” theology. By insisting on “extension, and form, and dimensions,” he drags divinity out of metaphysical fog and plants it in the world of measurable things. The point isn’t mere literalism; it’s a polemic. In 19th-century America, especially in Protestant intellectual circles, God was often framed as immaterial, without “parts or passions,” a being too perfect to be touched by appetite, location, or change. Pratt flips that ideal on its head and treats abstraction as a downgrade.
The list is the tell: “occupies space,” “has a body,” “can go from place to place,” “can eat, drink, and talk.” It’s not just doctrine, it’s persuasion through accumulation. Each clause is a shove toward intimacy and comprehensibility. A God who eats and drinks isn’t an aloof principle; he’s a person. Pratt’s subtext is pastoral as much as philosophical: if God has a body, then embodiment is not a spiritual handicap but a divine mode of being. That quietly dignifies ordinary human life and makes salvation feel less like escaping matter and more like fulfilling it.
Context matters because Pratt is writing within early Latter-day Saint theology, defending a controversial claim in a hostile environment. Materializing God is also materializing authority: revelation becomes less a private inner light and more a report from a being who can speak, appear, and locate himself. The scandal is the strategy.
The list is the tell: “occupies space,” “has a body,” “can go from place to place,” “can eat, drink, and talk.” It’s not just doctrine, it’s persuasion through accumulation. Each clause is a shove toward intimacy and comprehensibility. A God who eats and drinks isn’t an aloof principle; he’s a person. Pratt’s subtext is pastoral as much as philosophical: if God has a body, then embodiment is not a spiritual handicap but a divine mode of being. That quietly dignifies ordinary human life and makes salvation feel less like escaping matter and more like fulfilling it.
Context matters because Pratt is writing within early Latter-day Saint theology, defending a controversial claim in a hostile environment. Materializing God is also materializing authority: revelation becomes less a private inner light and more a report from a being who can speak, appear, and locate himself. The scandal is the strategy.
Quote Details
| Topic | God |
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