rdfs:comment
| - The condition to be more vulnerable to injuries than others. Opposite to Immortality and Invulnerability.
- Mortality is a pirate on the Viridian Ocean. He is a senior officer of the crew New Beginnings, and a member of the flag Shadows of Viridian. He is also a lieutenant in the Jubilee Island Navy in the Garnet Archipelago. Image:Pirate.png Arr! This article about a pirate in Puzzle Pirates be a stub. Ye can help YPPedia by [ expanding it].
- Mortality is the time between birth and death. The word "mortality" has no meaning, however, unless there is such a thing as "immortality." The doctrines of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints teach that mortality is a vital part of the Plan of Salvation, which is God’s plan for His children. Latter-day Saint doctrine teaches that God's desire is to prepare mankind to be exalted: For behold, this is my work and my glory—to bring to pass the immortality and eternal life of man (Moses 1:39).
- Mortality, also called the New Dawn is the ultimate goal for most Prometheans. When a Promethean succeeds on their Pilgrimage, a change takes place; the Azoth powering the Promethean is replaced with a true soul, the Disquiet ends, their Transmutations disappear, and any benefits they get from maintaining an Athanor become part of their new form. Exactly how this happens is unknown; the only common factor is the methods vary wildly from individual to individual.
* Promethean: The Created: Promethean: The Created Rulebook, p. 70
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abstract
| - The condition to be more vulnerable to injuries than others. Opposite to Immortality and Invulnerability.
- Mortality is a pirate on the Viridian Ocean. He is a senior officer of the crew New Beginnings, and a member of the flag Shadows of Viridian. He is also a lieutenant in the Jubilee Island Navy in the Garnet Archipelago. Image:Pirate.png Arr! This article about a pirate in Puzzle Pirates be a stub. Ye can help YPPedia by [ expanding it].
- Mortality is the time between birth and death. The word "mortality" has no meaning, however, unless there is such a thing as "immortality." The doctrines of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints teach that mortality is a vital part of the Plan of Salvation, which is God’s plan for His children. Latter-day Saint doctrine teaches that God's desire is to prepare mankind to be exalted: For behold, this is my work and my glory—to bring to pass the immortality and eternal life of man (Moses 1:39). The "Plan of Salvation" teaches that before we were born on earth, we lived as spirits with God, and that God is the literal father of our spirits. God created the earth whereupon we would live through His son, Jesus Christ: And there stood one among them [Jesus Christ] that was like unto God, and he said unto those who were with him: We will go down, for there is space there, and we will take of these materials, and we will make an earth whereon these may dwell; And we will prove them herewith, to see if they will do all things whatsoever the Lord their God shall command them; And they who keep their first estate [pre-mortal life] shall be added upon; and they who keep not their first estate shall not have glory in the same kingdom with those who keep their first estate; and they who keep their second estate [life on earth] shall have glory added upon their heads for ever and ever (Abraham 3:24-26). One of the main purposes of mortality is the obtaining of a physical body. The passions and appetites of the physical body certainly provide a way through which men and women can be tested, but the body also provides power to act. A physical body is a great blessing. Love cannot be fully expressed without it. Through the physical body, family relationships can be formed, men and women can become co-creators with God by bearing and raising children, ordinances can be performed, and men and women can learn charity by providing for the poor, sick, and afflicted. Man's sojourn on this earth gives him experience, helps him to develop wisdom and compassion and faith. Another purpose of mortality is a deliberate separation from God. Mormon doctrine teaches that a "veil of forgetfulness" keeps people in mortality from remembering their pre-mortal existence. Therefore, men must develop faith in order to retain and improve their connectedness to God, their Father. God does not leave men comfortless. Every person born on the earth brings with him the light of Christ, which behaves as a conscience, guiding the person to have a natural sense of right and wrong. Man is given his agency, his freedom of choice. The more righteous his choices, the greater the light that abides with him, and vice versa. God has given mankind prophets, scripture, personal prayer, and greatest of all, the gift of His Only Begotten Son, an infinite sacrifice to bridge the gap between man and God. Through the atonement of Christ, men may leave this life prepared to meet God and inherit a portion of His glory.
- Mortality, also called the New Dawn is the ultimate goal for most Prometheans. When a Promethean succeeds on their Pilgrimage, a change takes place; the Azoth powering the Promethean is replaced with a true soul, the Disquiet ends, their Transmutations disappear, and any benefits they get from maintaining an Athanor become part of their new form. Exactly how this happens is unknown; the only common factor is the methods vary wildly from individual to individual. Prometheans who become mortal are pure human with no benefits, other than the lingering Athanor benefits. As a result, they are eligible for Embrace or the Awakening; if either happens, they lose their Athanoric benefits. It is also possible for a Promethean who has been gifted with Mortality to die, and have their corpse be remade into a new Promethean.
* Promethean: The Created: Promethean: The Created Rulebook, p. 70
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