bcspace wrote:.
Yes, I am a (classical) liberal and a (first and second wave) feminist. Of course today's classical liberals are also known as conservatives...........
Sure you are, bcspace. If there's one thing that is the hallmark of a classical liberal, it's the view that positive law should impose your personal value judgments and religious dogma on society at large.
By the way, I remember your triumphant thread about the Boy Scouts voting to continue keeping out teh gheys, and I look forward to your reasoned, principle-based explanation for why a conservative should favor the BSA getting subsidized by the federal government.
All a woman needs to do is have at least one child to avoid the whole daughter of perdition problem ... right BC?
JFS - Doctrines of Salvation
Incorrect. Non-doctrinal work unless you can find the same or similar in a work published by the Church.
I can find Doctrines of Salvation all over the place cited as an authoritative source in LDS curricula and in talks by General Authorities.
E.g.:
Dallin H. Oaks, October 2008 General Conference
In his writings on the doctrines of salvation, President Joseph Fielding Smith teaches that we partake of the sacrament as our part of commemorating the Savior’s death and sufferings for the redemption of the world. This ordinance was introduced so that we can renew our covenants to serve Him, to obey Him, and to always remember Him. President Smith adds: “We cannot retain the Spirit of the Lord if we do not consistently comply with this commandment” (Doctrines of Salvation, comp. Bruce R. McConkie, 3 vols. [1954–56], 2:341).
Russell M. Nelson, October 2010 Liahona
President Joseph Fielding Smith wrote, “Through the power of this priesthood which Elijah bestowed, husband and wife may be sealed, or married for eternity; children may be sealed to their parents for eternity; thus the family is made eternal, and death does not separate the members.” (Joseph Fielding Smith, Doctrines of Salvation, comp. Bruce R. McConkie, 3 vols. (1954–56), 2:118.)
David A. Bednar, September 2010 New Era
President Joseph Fielding Smith taught the following principle.
“This work of salvation for the dead came to the Prophet like every other doctrine—piecemeal. It was not revealed all at once. When the Angel Moroni came to the Prophet Joseph Smith, one of the things he told him was that the hearts of the children should turn to their fathers and the hearts of the fathers to the children, so that when the Lord should come the earth should not be smitten with a curse. That is significant. That was the first inkling the Prophet had concerning salvation for the dead, and he did not know just what it meant. He had a very vague idea of the meaning of the words that Elijah would come to ‘plant in the hearts of the children the promises made to the fathers,’ and I suppose he pondered over it a good deal” (Doctrines of Salvation, comp. Bruce R. McConkie, 3 vols. [1954–56], 2:168).
Since bcspace is all about intellectual honesty and philosophical coherency, I am sure he will happily explain why apostles can cite Doctrine of Salvation as an authority for church teachings, but a person on a message board cannot.
I would just hate it if people got the impression that bcspace offers nothing but sophomoric, ad hoc rhetorical games to his interlocutors.