cksalmon wrote:wenglund wrote:cksalmon wrote:dartagnan wrote:I am convinced that this hair-splitting nonsense about “official doctrine” is relatively recent concept in the Church and it is deeply rooted in the apologetic movement. I was thinking about this lately because I am in the middle of a discussion over at MAD where I am told that the LDS notion of Elohim = God the Father was only a “recent” thing in Mormonism as if that was somehow supposed to make LDS less tied down to it as doctrine.
Kevin,
This is a great point. From the reading I've done, the intricacies involved in determining whether Brigham Young's statements were "official" or not would probably have been scoffed at by the man himself.
Actually, I think the so-called "hair-splitting nonsense" has been a function of rigid and narrow-minded critics and members attempting to pigeon-hole the restored gospel of Christ in ways that were never intended--I.e. as a systematic theology.
It is, indeed, difficult to have a systematic theological system when there are so many contradictory data in the historical record.
In short, the real nonsense is in quibbling over what doctrines are "official" or not, rather than striving to follow Christ.
And then one ends up with a nebulous, impenetrable body of quasi-beliefs that not even lifelong members have a hope of parsing.
Don't you, in your own faith tradition, call that "the mysteries of God". ;-)
I'm all for striving to follow Christ, but what one believes about Christ is equally important. Anything beyond absolute basic theological claims leaves LDS in a morass of contradictory proclamations.
You mean like this proclamation from James: "Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this, To visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction, and to keep himself unspotted from the world." (Jm 1:27)
Most LDS, it seems, are just as uncomfortable as myself with regard to such inconsistencies. And thus, the "we're more about praxis than knowledge."
Could you point me to the survey where you, as a non-member, supposedly discovered this about "most LDS". I ask because it doesn't comport with my 50+ years of experience in the Church. I think you would be hard pressed to find members who think there are inconsistencies (at least of any significance or bearing upon them and their salvation), let alone are supposedly made uncomfortable by them, not to mention that being the supposed reason behind LDS favoring "praxis than knowledge"--as if the latter isn't a function of the former (to me it is).
Granted, Christ did pray: “This is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent” (John 17:3). However, when I read through the gospels, I find very little, if any, attempts by Christ to deliniate the nature of God--certainly not in any systematic way. Rather, I see him behaving in godly ways and telling his disciples that seeing and know the Son is to also see and know the Father, and commending his disciples to obey his commandments and follow him. In other words, as I understand things, Christ intimated that one may come to know the God, not so much by reading about him in books or scholastically studying him, but by following the path set by Christ and thereby becoming like Christ. I believe Paul understood this, as illuminated in
1 Cor. 13, particularly verse 12: "For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known." And, how is one known? Christ said: "Wherefore by their fruits ye shall know them. Not every one that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven." ([url=http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?book_id=47&chapter=7&version=9&context=chapter]Mt 7:20-21)
The way I figure it, if it is good enough for Christ, it is good enough for me. Others, such as yourself, are free to think otherwise.
Thanks, -Wade Englund-