The Decline and Fall of FARMS?
June 23, 2012 by Huston
In short, it seems that a bureaucrat at BYU has railroaded out a whole generation of scholars from their formerly-fine Book of Mormon studies publications. The era of faithful apologetics at BYU may be over, replaced by some vague desire to go in an as-yet undefined direction.
Daniel Peterson, a great advocate of the Book of Mormon, has been unceremoniously given the boot, apparently along with a host of other scholars. I don’t want to rehash the whole sordid affair here, but here’s a brief intro from a longer and excellent summary:
Gerald Bradford, who was never a supporter of FARMS and is not an expert in ancient things, became the director of the Maxwell Institute. He wanted to take it in a different direction than FARMS had done for decades. He has delayed and refused to publish the recent issue, supposedly because it included an article by Gregory Smith regarding Mormon Stories (written by a lapsed LDS, John Dehlin, and often discusses why people leave the Church). While Dan was on a trip to Israel (and now in Europe), Bradford sent an email notifying him that he’s been fired as the editor.
Dehlin claims he heard of Smith’s article and had a General Authority friend stop it. Rumors have it that this event gave Bradford reason to shuffle the deck, firing Peterson as editor, and dismissing his entire board, claiming it will go in a new direction.
My two cents:
I’ve never met Dr. Peterson, but I saw him speak once. A few years ago, he came to Las Vegas to speak to BYU alumni at a stake center. I saw the event listed on the Maxwell Institute web site and got excited. I’m not a BYU alum, but I snuck in anyway. Dr. Peterson spoke about evidences for the Book of Mormon, and it was an exhilarating two hours. His stories and examples had a huge range, and he was funny and personable–an excellent speaker.
I guess I could have seen something like this coming. It seems the MI hasn’t had its heart in it for years. Consider this: A collection of short articles from the FARMS newsletter in the 1980′s, Reexploring the Book of Mormon, had 85 entries and was extremely wonderful–a seminal classic in bringing Book of Mormon scholarship to the non-specialist world. A book collecting their updates of the 1990′s, Pressing Forward with the Book of Mormon, had 74 entries and was almost as good.
There was no collection published of the brief updates in the 2000′s, perhaps because there was nothing substantial enough to print. Or they just didn’t care anymore. The quality and quantity of work went down hill pretty steeply. I subscribed to the Journal of Book of Mormon Studies from 1998-2003, and ended it because I just wasn’t getting my money’s worth. Ironically, I just gave those issue away last week.
If the new direction for the MI is coming from the church, from the General Authorities, then of course I’ll support it. But I don’t think it’s likely that that’s the case. I think the current administrators over the institute are essentially going rogue, trying to fit in with the cool kids. But the larger scholarly world isn’t going to respect LDS research any more because it has a more secular tone or doesn’t engage in apologetics so enthusiastically. It won’t make any difference to them at all. Meanwhile, faithful church members and those who are inclined to be friendly to us in the wider academic community will a poorer intellectual life.
Certainly, the apostle for whom this institute is named–Neal A. Maxwell–supported apologetic work:
Let us be articulate for while our defense of the kingdom may not stir all hearers, the absence of thoughtful response may cause fledglings among the faithful to falter. What we assert may not be accepted, but unasserted convictions soon become deserted convictions.
and
Church critics and enemies should not be permitted to make what Elder Neal A. Maxwell of the Quorum of the Twelve has sometimes called “uncontested slam dunks.”
And church president Gordon B. Hinckley incorporated FARMS into BYU in the first place because he also approved of their mission:
FARMS represents the efforts of sincere and dedicated scholars. It has grown to provide strong support and defense of the Church on a professional basis. I wish to express my strong congratulations and appreciation for those who started this effort and who have shepherded it to this point.
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Number of results for search “Daniel C. Peterson” at LDS.org: ten
Number of results for search “M. Gerald Bradford” at LDS.org: zero
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I have created a Facebook group to defend Dr. Peterson here.
Jamie J. Huston adds his two cents
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Jamie J. Huston adds his two cents
Link.
Last edited by Guest on Mon Jun 25, 2012 12:33 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"Petition wasn’t meant to start a witch hunt as I’ve said 6000 times." ~ Hanna Seariac, LDS apologist
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Re: Jamie J. Huston adds his two cents
Another guy who doesn't get it.
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Re: Jamie J. Huston adds his two cents
Kevin Graham wrote:Another guy who doesn't get it.
Yup. And the number of those who don't is fairly large, it seems.
"Petition wasn’t meant to start a witch hunt as I’ve said 6000 times." ~ Hanna Seariac, LDS apologist
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Re: Jamie J. Huston adds his two cents
Seattleghostrider publishes an article on this subject as well:
http://www.examiner.com/article/profess ... ies-review
http://www.examiner.com/article/profess ... ies-review
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Re: Jamie J. Huston adds his two cents
Kevin Graham wrote:Seattleghostrider publishes an article on this subject as well:
http://www.examiner.com/article/profess ... ies-review
He mentions this board. That is a long piece. Not the best of the bunch, and quite inaccurate at points, but it does address more angles of the issue than some others do.
Last edited by Guest on Mon Jun 25, 2012 12:42 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"Petition wasn’t meant to start a witch hunt as I’ve said 6000 times." ~ Hanna Seariac, LDS apologist
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Re: Jamie J. Huston adds his two cents
Kevin Graham wrote:Seattleghostrider publishes an article on this subject as well:
http://www.examiner.com/article/profess ... ies-review
The Amazing Ron Jeremy Lookalike wrote: This potential danger may become an additional fuel for our critic’s and many disenfranchised members of the Church will become more suspicious of any scholarship that Peterson and others may produce. Meaning, most critics do not consider Mormon Scholarship as being credible in responding to their arguments against the Church, it will further sink into the minds of our critics that there is now good reason to no longer consider anything Peterson publishes.
While it is possible to have a value of less than zero in mathematics, that does not really hold in qualitative assessments of crank apologetic ideas. So the worry that the credibility of Mopologetics will diminish is misplaced.
Furthermore, not only will there be more suspicions and disregard for Mormon Apologetics, but any lay member who enters into the field of Apologetics and relies on the studies and academic research produced by these individuals will be scoffed at even more. It creates an unfortunate segue into more apostasy by those who are struggling with their faith when coming across more and more open criticism against the Church.
I guess the idea that our living prophets and apostles could address these criticisms has not occurred to him, what with their gift of discernment and continuing revelation and all that.
The reality is that this development and public announcement of Professor Daniel Peterson’s dismissal is causing controversy within the Apologetic community. How and in what manner the Maxwell Institute goes in their new direction is yet to be seen. However, there is speculation that FARMS may even be revised as a new aspect of Mormon Apologetics and either become integrated with FAIR or compete with FAIR. Either way, the reality is that without modern scholarship and academic studies where the focus is on apologetic, many members of the Church would not have had resources available to them in order to address the many criticisms launched against the Church and its leaders.
Whatever are we going to do without increasingly ridiculous meta-myths that are even less believable than the mythology they purport to explain? Think of the children!
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Re: Jamie J. Huston adds his two cents
I must say the loss of Seattle ghost writer was a huge blow to this board.
With his sweet porn stash and his awesomely below average soft core porn stories. I knew we would rue the day he left. Now he shows up in the middle of this wonderful carnival teasing us with his awesomeness writing skilz and spot on observations. I'm just sad that he didn't call for a public flogging for Dehlin for all his evilness.
With his sweet porn stash and his awesomely below average soft core porn stories. I knew we would rue the day he left. Now he shows up in the middle of this wonderful carnival teasing us with his awesomeness writing skilz and spot on observations. I'm just sad that he didn't call for a public flogging for Dehlin for all his evilness.
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Re: Jamie J. Huston adds his two cents
Kishkumen: Who is Jamie J. Huston, and will you please post a link to the material you quoted?
Wilma Fingerdoo: I think you mean "porn 'stache." A "porn stash" is an entirely different thing. If you say that Seattle Ghost Writer has a "sweet porn stash," well, you'll get lots of people wanting to break into his house.
Wilma Fingerdoo: I think you mean "porn 'stache." A "porn stash" is an entirely different thing. If you say that Seattle Ghost Writer has a "sweet porn stash," well, you'll get lots of people wanting to break into his house.
"Finally, for your rather strange idea that miracles are somehow linked to the amount of gay sexual gratification that is taking place would require that primitive Christianity was launched by gay sex, would it not?"
--Louis Midgley
--Louis Midgley
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Re: Jamie J. Huston adds his two cents
Dear Shades:
The link has been added above. This is Jamie J. Huston:
His blog tells you much more, but I don't want to post it all here, thus exposing him to the usual ridicule.
The link has been added above. This is Jamie J. Huston:
Gently Hew Stone is an eclectic online journal by Jamie Huston, who lives in his native city of Las Vegas with his wife and six children. He teaches high school and college English.
His blog tells you much more, but I don't want to post it all here, thus exposing him to the usual ridicule.
"Petition wasn’t meant to start a witch hunt as I’ve said 6000 times." ~ Hanna Seariac, LDS apologist
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Re: Jamie J. Huston adds his two cents
Kishkumen wrote:Dear Shades:
The link has been added above. This is Jamie J. Huston:
His blog tells you much more, but I don't want to post it all here, thus exposing him to the usual ridicule.
In Huston's comments there is a link to: http://www.templestudy.com/2012/06/25/rise-fall-farms/
I have not read these through, just glanced, but it appears they are all saying the same thing, to the point of parroting Bill Hamblin. It is as thought he controls their minds!

At first I had some compassion with this situation and felt sorry for the fifteen that they had created such a monster in Peterson, but you know, now I don't. This is the Church that went after gay people with a vengeance in Hawaii, in my home state of California twice and numerous other places; most recently in Washington. The fifteen have created an environment of hate and they are now reaping what they have sown. Not only do they have one monster to deal with, they have tens of thousands.