Buffalo wrote:Runtu, I must have missed it, can you explain (or link to a previous explanation) the official COB stance on what is doctrine?
Approaching Mormon DoctrineThe church's statement is consistent with what J Green and I were taught at the Church Office Building: "This doctrine resides in the four “standard works” of scripture (the Holy Bible, the Book of Mormon, the Doctrine and Covenants and the Pearl of Great Price), official declarations and proclamations, and the Articles of Faith."
Where we differ from bcspace is in his interpretation of the following statement: "With divine inspiration, the First Presidency (the prophet and his two counselors) and the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles (the second-highest governing body of the Church) counsel together to establish doctrine that is consistently proclaimed in official Church publications."
bcspace interprets this to mean that church publications are doctrine, whereas J Green and I were instructed, verbally and in writing, that doctrine is authoritative in the places it "resides," as stated above. Church publications that have been through a Correlation review and approved are "consistent" with doctrine, or as J Green put it, they are "doctrinal" or "doctrinally based." They are not doctrine, per se. It's not a huge distinction, but at least when I worked for the church, it was an important one for us in producing curriculum and other materials.
Correlated materials used to carry the church's copyright, but now they bear the "Intellectual Reserve, Inc." copyright. This is how we know that a publication has been through a Correlation review, making it official. Church-affiliated organizations, such as BYU or the Thrasher Research Fund, have their own separate copyright, and in BYU's case they explicitly assert their ownership of the copyrighted material such that no one could confuse it with official church publication.
Where bcspace gets into trouble is that McConkie's speech, though given at BYU, bears an IRI copyright, meaning it has been through Correlation, which would explain why the published speech is different from the more inflammatory speech he gave from the pulpit.
According to bcspace, the speech is official doctrine of the church because, as he said, if it's in an official church publication, it's doctrine. Of course, he doesn't agree with the speech, so his first response was to say it was not doctrinal and add that his rather tormented interpretation of the speech meant that evolution is not heretical. Finally, when shown that the speech is officially published by the church, he made the astounding statement that not all official church publications are official.
Like I said, it's not a big deal. In fact, I'd say J Green and I are more generous and fair toward the church than bcspace is because we don't hold the church to every statement ever made in a church publication. I'm surprised that the church published McConkie's speech, as leaving it with a BYU copyright would have allowed people to dismiss the talk as personal opinion.