Does LDS Faith Depend on Empirical Evidence?
Posted: Thu Nov 29, 2007 6:05 pm
There is a second very good thread dealing with LDS scholarship over on the aptly named MADboard. In this thread, the very interesting (and probably soon-to-be-banned) critic named Yme is asking why LDS academics failed to submit a Book of Mormon geography article to a recent issue of Smithsonian. DCP has basically reiterated what Trevor has said elsewhere, which is that Book of Mormon geography is "manifestly religious." (I disagree, and think that claims pertaining to the historicity of the Book of Mormon can be examined from a secular standpoint, as Michael Coe has done.) In other words, Mopologists are merely saving secular academics from having to step over some imaginary line, as a matter of decorum. (Or something like that.)
Anyways, here was an especially interesting tidbit:
There are a couple of funny/odd things about DCP's remarks here, I think. One is that he seems to admit the possibility that Book of Mormon historicity may all be one big fraud. The other thing which is striking to me is his insistence that Book of Mormon historicity is "inescapably sectarian." Now, I disagree with this, but if one is to follow the logical chain of though implicit in The Good Professor's statement, wouldn't you therefore have to admit that LDS faith is dependent upon whether or not Mopologists can find real evidence for the Book of Mormon? Obviously, the Church would have no problem revising current doctrine in order to suit the facts, but this thread, and DCP's remarks therein, struck me as being highly significant.
Anyways, here was an especially interesting tidbit:
(emphasis added)DCP wrote:Gervin wrote:I could see the Smithsonian doing a story of the ancient cities and lifestyle of the Book of Mormon peoples … as long as the scholarship is valid, i.e. as you say, the papers don’t “appear to have arrived at their conclusions before the data were collected.”
No. I'm sorry, but that's simply wrong. I could see the Smithsonian doing a story of the ancient cities and lifestyles of the Book of Mormon peoples if their existence were essentially impervious to doubt and if accepting their existence did not entail theological advantage for a denominational claim.
But their existence is debated, and that debate inescapably involves sectarian controversy -- something in which government agencies may not, and mainstream secular academic venues do not, involve themselves.
There are a couple of funny/odd things about DCP's remarks here, I think. One is that he seems to admit the possibility that Book of Mormon historicity may all be one big fraud. The other thing which is striking to me is his insistence that Book of Mormon historicity is "inescapably sectarian." Now, I disagree with this, but if one is to follow the logical chain of though implicit in The Good Professor's statement, wouldn't you therefore have to admit that LDS faith is dependent upon whether or not Mopologists can find real evidence for the Book of Mormon? Obviously, the Church would have no problem revising current doctrine in order to suit the facts, but this thread, and DCP's remarks therein, struck me as being highly significant.