Trevor wrote:charity wrote:C'mon, Trevor. You sound like you have some knowledge of shclarly matters. Don't pretend that you don't understand the basic difference between the Book of Mormon, and the Books of Abraham and Moses. Any other religious booik has a secular history which can be easily separated from its "religiosity."
Anyone who listens to the anyone speak on any religious material produced by Joseph Smith (however he did it) has to accept angels. It takes the truly mature individual to do that and not feel threatened. Not too many of those around.
The Book of Mormon has a secular history which can be easily separated from its religiosity too. You simply don't accept it. Other do, and these people do take scholarly interest in the Book of Mormon, as I have mentioned before. They do not have to believe in angels to take an interest in the founding documents of Mormonism. To state otherwise is to speak absurdly.
Whatever you meant in your initial statement, which, taken on its own, remains one of the silliest things I have seen posted here, you have not done much to regain ground in this follow-up. One does not have to believe in angels to take scholarly interest in Mormon texts, period.
Without any malice, charity, I encourage you to take a step back and reconsider what you are saying.
Without any malice toward you, either, trevor, you must be very naïve if you think you are going to find any faithful LDS speaking to any group on the basis that the Book of Mormon was written by a farm boy in his 20's. Or discussing in some academic setting how a group of individuals produced a 19th century work of fiction and got an ignorant but charismatic charlatan to market it for them.
A faithful LDS will be discussing a book put forward as the product of angelic visitation and revelations from God. And just where would that be?
harmony wrote:
charity wrote: "First, the Church does not decide where individuals speak or don't speak."
That depends on who the individuals are. If you don't believe me, ask anyone employed by BYU. They have to watch not only where they speak but what they say... and what they write in letters to the editor. And I believe Dr Gee is employed by BYU. So yes, the church will decide where and what he says.
How many shooters?
(Note to all lurkers, harmony doesn't speak for the Church, for BYU, or even for any other member of the Church but herself when she makes pronouncements on what the Church will or won't do.)
harmony wrote: charity wrote:"Second, deathknell to misisonary work? IF such a talk were to occur, IF Gee were laughed out of the building, it would have no effect on missionary work.
Uh huh. And the church's PR department sits around doing nothing all day long. Try again, charity. The church is very careful about what its employees say (see above paragraph). [/quote]
The Church's PR department has more important work to do than watchdog academics who speak before arcane societies.