bcspace wrote:But BRM, the likely author of the Introduction, is very clear (from my quote above) that the dominant blood lineage of American Indians is Hebrew, which has everything to do with "DNA in the cells."
I agree completely. This is what the previous generations have understood though I think you'll be hard pressed to find such enshrined in official doctrine.
But science has shown this to be false; hence, the need to deal with that troublesome Introduction.
And I (as far as I know, I was the first to point this out) have noted that the definition of the word 'principal' can include that which does not have to speak to genetics (such as 'most important'). Therefore, as long as there isn't any official commentary on principal ancestors implying genetics descent, no revision or clarification is required.
In other words, who cares what the Prophets, Seers, and Revelators
meant when they wrote what they wrote, what matters is what the Oxford English Dictionary allows me to justify based on the specific words used.
BCSpace, you're playing word games trying to "win" and be able to continue seeing your bankrupt belief system as still plausible. When faced with an uncomfortable reality, you choose to parse words and play language lawyer rather than reevaluating whether or not you might have gotten it all wrong. You do the exact same stuff with regards to this Earth's natural history and the origin of man, the Fall of Adam, Garden of Eden stuff, etc. Can't you see that reality is what it is, regardless of what word games you can use to score your little points here and there?
And what is the sense in trying to maintain the form of belief when the substance has been eviscerated? What sense is there in clinging to the notion that Joseph Smith's church is still "true", for some definition of "true", when you don't even believe what Joseph Smith taught anymore? I swear, you guys are willing to give away almost anything in the face of a harsh reality, so long as you can cling to the notion that the church is, ultimately, still "true".
Mormonism ceased being a compelling topic for me when I finally came to terms with its transformation from a personality cult into a combination of a real estate company, a SuperPac, and Westboro Baptist Church. - Kishkumen