Dr Moore wrote:It seems incredibly problematic to insert unknown spirit intermediaries between the living prophet and God.
Prophets have contact with angels and spirits. We often do not know who they were. Sometimes it seems the prophet does not know their precise identity. I don’t see anything unprecedented here.
Dr Moore wrote:Mormon theology about spirit service is pretty wide open due to the mysterious idea that spirits teach other spirits about the gospel in the spirit world while awaiting resurrection. But that’s a situation where the parties involved purportedly are doing things face to face, no secrets. And Joseph taught it explicitly.
Sure, when those involved are on the same side of the veil. But we both know of situations, including ordinances, in which they are not. One does not immediately know who is on the other side helping us.
Dr Moore wrote: A group of spirit translators coopting Joseph’s translation means that God commissioned a hidden intermediary to do the work for Joseph, didn’t tell Joseph about it, and this group effectively stands in between God and Joseph to produce what we have in the Book of Mormon.
They are not coopting. God assigned them to this committee, and I do not see anything untoward about Him using the mechanism He deems best.If you are familiar with the endowment, then you know how priesthood delegation works.
Dr Moore wrote: Consider the twisting turns of a theology that evolves from God <> Prophet to a messy orgy of opinions erupting when God <> Committee <> Prophet.
The Council is a normal part of the heavenly society. In the beginning were the gods. I am not seeing the problem.
Dr Moore wrote: It’s not just difficult for something billed as a single step miraculous translation by Joseph by the gift and power of God. But that is a challenge to Mormon theology in which God commands angels to go down and do this or that specific thing. Now he also commands a group of intellectual spirits to undertake a scholarly task with outcome unknown?
We know the outcome. It is the Book of Mormon. I am not seeing the contradictions and inconsistencies you imagine. The text was communicated to Joseph by the gift and power of God. An angel or group of angels is assigned to a task. A group of spirits is assigned to a task. It works according to the same divine power, authority, and method.
Dr Moore wrote:It also begs the question of whether committee voices get to bypass the holy ghost. Do they? I mean, committee got their Early Modern English verbiage into the channel. What else? And continuing on the thread, we should now ask which old opinionated prophet influenced the current leader to perpetuate bad ideas well beyond their expiration date? How many living prophets did Brigham scare into perpetuating exclusionary racism? For that matter, which ancient racist spirit gave Brigham his racist ideas in the first place? Do dead prophets sometimes prank living ones with nutty ideas just for fun — such as the name on Bigfoot’s realID?
In short, does the prophet, seer and revelation speak for God, in a clean line of inspiration, or does the prophet have to sort through the din of dead prophets first? (note: practically speaking, this happens anyway)
The conceptual framework also starts to look increasingly fringe conspiracy if we give full credit to Joseph’s own writings and statements about himself and the provenance of the plates and his translation, his revelations and the purity of the Book of Mormon text.
I think the issue would be at least as divisive as the heartland movement if it gained more momentum by any faction of apologists. My view is the subtlety with which Skousen attempts to crack open a door of miraculous mystery will never be opened further by LDS leaders or apologists.
The more you argue against this, the greater the advantages I see in it. It is the nature of our mortal minds to demand perfection and simplicity when, in fact, the world disappoints our expectations. In this case, the version that cuts out the family of God for the simplicity of a transcendent God working directly with the single individual that seems desirable reflects a less developed faith with lower tolerance for how things are.
The door that you are concerned about opening is opened.
"Petition wasn’t meant to start a witch hunt as I’ve said 6000 times." ~ Hanna Seariac, LDS apologist