I have a question wrote:kjones wrote:Just as "rational argument" does not create faith, study and research alone cannot be used to sustain it. This is why the scriptures say that the ideal way to learn is "by study and faith".
This is all that I am saying, and I think Elder Oaks was saying something similar.
No. Oaks was suggesting that members with doubts drop the "study" part of learning about the Church and it's history.
Maybe we aren't talking about the same talk. This is the talk I read:
https://www.LDS.org/church/news/preside ... -?lang=eng
Quote:
President Oaks acknowledged that some Latter-Saint couples face conflicts over important values and priorities. Matters of Church history and doctrinal issues have led some spouses to inactivity. Some spouses wonder how to best go about researching and responding to such issues.
“I suggest that research is not the answer,” he said.
The Church does offer answers to many familiar questions through its Gospel Topics essays found at LDS.org.
“But the best answer to any question that threatens faith is to work to increase faith in the Lord Jesus Christ,” he said. “Conversion to the Lord precedes conversion to the Church. And conversion to the Lord comes through prayer and study and service, furthered by loving patience on the part of spouse and other concerned family members.”
Elder Oaks on learning by "study and faith":
https://www.LDS.org/manual/missionary-p ... 2?lang=eng
Quote by Pres. Oaks:
“In modern revelation the Lord has told us to ‘seek learning even by study and also by faith.’ (D&C 109:7.) Seeking learning by study, we use the method of reason. Seeking learning by faith, we must rely on revelation. Obedient to heavenly decree, we should seek learning by reason and also by revelation. …
“The things of God cannot be learned solely by study and reason. … We cannot come to know the things of God while rejecting or failing to use the indispensable method God has prescribed to learn these things. The things of God must be learned in his own way, through faith in God and revelation from the Holy Ghost” (The Lord’s Way, 16, 56).
To me, Pres. Oaks is a good example of someone who combines "study and faith", and I don't think it is wise to judge him by one statement of "research is not the answer", rather we should seek to place this statement in the context not only of the talk it comes out of but also in the context of what he has said all during the last 30-40 years about "study and faith", including the time when he served as BYU prez. He has written scholarly works, not only when he was a Chicago law professor but he has also written at least one scholarly work (in partnership with historian Marvin Hill) about church history, the book "Carthage Conspiracy"; and of course he has written and spoken extensively about faith since his call to the Twelve.