Ray A wrote:What I find interesting is the contrast between Dr.Midgley's views of Shipps' Mormonism (a book I actually read, LOL), and Richard Bushman's.
Bushman's comments"This may be the most brilliant book ever written on Mormonism. It is insightful, inspiring, and original and sure to become a landmark work on the subject."--Richard L. Bushman, author of Joseph Smith and the Beginnings of Mormonism
And Midgley's ReviewWhy then do the Saints believe that the Book of Mormon is true? The answer provided by Shipps is both circular and superficial: the Saints, she claims, believe that the Book of Mormon is true because it was "defined as truth by the prophet whose rising up was prophesied therein, the book became true for those who believed, in much the same way that the entire body of Christian Scripture has become true for biblical literalists."102 [snip]
As I have shown, the portions of the book that might be of interest to readers of this review are really cautious extensions or elaborations of themes, resting on naturalistic assumptions, initially set out much earlier in her career.
So would it be fair to put Bushman as a New Mormon Historian and Midgley as an Old Mormon Historian? (age having nothing whatsoever to do with the distinction).
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