h,
h wrote:I read your response as refering more to Brades item [1] where A and B remain the same, but the C is that God HAS commanded me to kill my own child. The difference being that while I believe it's the case, I don't have the same level of assurance as in [1]
Yeah, you are right here. I concede this point.
h wrote:then I am curious if you could explain why you see them as similar, and deserving the same reaction.
They would not be unequivocally the same, you are right. However, I think they could be the same. To underscore the burden every LDS person carries to act as the Lord's executioner if the occasion should arise, I gave the impression that the call to act in this capacity might be trivial. With your sound clarification, if I felt very strongly I should do the killing, this alone might be good enough reason to act, but it might not be. It depends on why I feel strongly, and I will get to this.
]If God is real as well as good, and a command potentially from this God is questionably "not good", it stands to reason it is equally questionable that it is truly of God[/quote].
Again, you are right.
[quote="h wrote:Therefore, even within this thought experiment the cost of killing one's child but being wrong about it being the will of God far, far outweigh the cost of not killing one's child but it being the will of God that you do so.
Reevaluating my response in light of your corrections above, I still disagree with your final assessment and I may or may not disagree with Brade's friend, depending on what he meant by "evidence" though my position needs some fixing as well. Your sentence above in reference to (3) I think works only to the extent that you remain within the divine command structure assumed from (1). You can't say, God's will is in theory compatible with a killing (because we accept Brade's thought experiment) but we should jump ship and reject God's will by utilitarian cost/benefit analysis. If God willed a person dead, in his mysterious workings, not killing that person could have incalculable eternal consequences. However, you might be able to go this route: We don't have perfect knowledge of God, but faith in God. God has commanded generally, that we should not kill, and killing is one of the worst sins one can commit. Therefore, if we have a "strong belief" that we should do something that otherwise is a near unforgivable sin, and given we can't perfectly know the mind of God, we should error on the side of our own fallibility. And I can nearly come into agreement with this, but there is a major problem.
The scriptures are clear that at times, God has demanded killings in several contexts, and thus, we must be ready for God to so command again, despite the horrible stakes involved if one's apprehension of God's will is fallible. We must work to tune ourselves to God's will such that he may ask the supreme sacrifice from us and we shall obey, without making a mistake. However, having said this, I was wrong to make the request sound as if it could come so easily. You are right that Brade's question merely said we have a "strong feeling" that we should kill, and in an LDS context, this alone isn't enough. From a modern LDS view, the Holy Ghost can only give us "feelings" to act within our stewardship. Many church members have strong feelings about things that are in disagreement with the Brethren, and this leads them to excommunication. But, the prophet and even the fifteen could command you to make this sacrifice. And if they did, you would be required to get a testimony of it, and do it. If you had a good feeling to kill someone after being instructed by the Brethren to do it, then you should do it. At best, Brade's friend's demands for evidence is only a reasonable objection (in an LDS context) if the evidence is in regard to the command's legitimacy through an official LDS channel.
h wrote:That's really scary. And even more, it gets to the heart of why I think anyone who feels the LDS church has no responsibilty for what happened at mountain meadows is flat out wrong. With or without a direct command from Brigham Young to attack the Francher party.
True. The interesting thing here was this guy was otherwise very liberal, he wasn't one of the handful of BYU religion profs who have a reputation for extreme religious views. He was teaching the Laban story, and acknowledged that if God commands to kill, then that is what you must do. The way he expressed the hypothetical scenario for today involved the directive coming from the prophet somehow. Now, I don't believe the brethren would ever ask such a thing in today's world. And I don't believe Mormons are trained to take their prophet seriously, it's all lip service.