charity wrote:So much ignorance, so little time. *sigh*
1. Abrahamic covenant: ". ..he [Abraham] entered into celestial marriage (which is the covenant of exaltation), gaining assurance that he would have eternal increase; finally, he received a promise that all of these blessings would be offeed to all of his mortal posterity." Mormon Doctrine (1979) p. 13
2. Patriarchal blessings: "Patriarch blessings contemplate an inspired declaration of the lineage of the recipient, and aslo when so moved upon the theSpirit, a inspired and prophetic statement about the life mission of the recipient." MD (1979)p. 558
3. Abraham himself: You can say myth if you want. Prove it.
4. Genealogical numbers: Of course, genealogical lines cross. Some king of Portugal, I forget which, had only 167 different individuals where he should have had 256. (As I recall there were also a number genetic anomalies.) Any individual who has done any degree of genealogical research knows that while there are places where lines merge, there are still very large numbers of progenitors involved. People who do not do generalogical research are generally pretty ignorant of this fact.
5. Beastie, "Those silly little ignorant people, who actually believed the Lehites moved into a previously unoccupied land."
Not silly. They just didn't read the text of the Book of Mormon very carefully.
6. Mishie: "I thought we all agreed they were definitely NOT any of the ancestors of the American Indian." Who is WE?
7. Who knows: " How does changing it to 'among' make it 'more understandable' and consistent with your definition of 'principle'?" It removes the necessity for understanding evidently the complicated concept of "principal ancestor" from the equation. The student of the book (not just the skimmer) will get it eventually.
8. cksalmon: "Now, wait just a minute, Charity. This issue has come up on FAIR/MADB and the apologetic answer was that "principal" means "most important"--not numerically largest.
I absolutely agree here.
But this change completely obliterates that apologetic line of reasoning. "Among the ancestors" doesn't mean, in any sense, "the most important ancestors."
It doesn't have to say that. To know that the person is a descendant of Abraham is the important part.
You argue that "principal ancestor" has always meant merely "among the ancestors." And then you go to argue the same apologetic line referenced above. The problem is that "principal ancestor" has completely disappeared from the DoubleDay publication. It's not there, if Scott Lloyd is to be believed. So, the proposal in the DoubleDay edition is much more modest and much less falsifiable than the proposal in the official LDS edition.
I have always said "principal ancestor" meant the most important. I will repeat again, so you won't have to misunderstand anymore, the important part is to know that Abraham is a progenitor. But this is obviously only important to those who believe in the Abrahamic covenant. To those who don't, it isn't a point worth arguing.
9. Mishmagnet said, "I've got it. When it said they were ancestors it didn't mean DNA-like ancestors but rather spiritual ancestors. Kind of like Jesus is my older brother, but we aren't related even a little bit. Kind of like we were all brothers and sisters at church but we weren't related. Just in spirit."
Wrong, you don't get it. Do you have the DNA imprint of every single one of your ancestors back 2,000 years? Like I said, people don't really understand genealogy or genetics. Take you mtDNA, for instance. It will identify one line of your family tree. The very right hand side all the way back. Your mother's mother's mother' . . . . mtDNA. What about your father's mother. or your mother's father' mother? Do you have any of their mtDNA? The answer is no. Does that mean you are not a physical desceandant of all these other women? Not at all. You are their physical descendant and not just their "spiritual" descendant. Now do you get it?
10. guy sajer said: "So, Charity, if we polled 1,000 randomly selected rank and file believers unacquainted with the DNA issues and apologetic dismissals of it (which is, probably, the large majority of members), what % do you think would interpret "principle ancestor" similarly to the erst of us ignorant types and what % would intepret it similarly to you?
I don't know. But it doesn't matter. If 90% of the population believes that the moon is made up of green cheese, it doesn't change the facts. Since when is truth up for majority vote?
The context is clear, until recently, Mormon doctrine was that the American Indian was a direct blood descendent of Father Lehi. All, or almost all of us, who served missions taught this, prophets have taught it, the rank and file have believed it, and it's only in your apologetic mind (and those of your apologists in arms) that Mormons have historically taught and believed anything else.
The Church still teaches that American Indians are direct blood descedants of Father Lehi. And yes, that recognizes that it may not be 100% of American Indians. But such a statement would mean "most." But where you get off thinking this means that to be a blood descendant requires your DNA to be Hebrew (whatever that would have been in 600 B.C.), go back and read the previous posts.
11 who knows said: "So tell me again, for us dumb people, how changing the wording to 'among' makes your theory more 'understandable'?" It takes the word "principal" out of the statement. I don't know why the decision was made, but if it was me, I would have made it because perseverating anti's keep jumping on it because they are constitutionally incapable of understanding what the word means.
12. liz posted the definitions, and finally admits that "principal" meant most important, not just numerically significant. Thanks liz. But notice in the defintion of "among" that she does not bold is this: "in the group, number of ,class of." Thus Lamanites are in the group of ancestors of America Indians." Not just happening to be standing next to. Talk about a stretch.
DANG. I just got involved in another one of those time-killer topics.
That's a lot of self delusion for a single person. Congratulations!
Tell you what, I'll prove to you that Abraham didn't exist, if you prove to me that Prester John never existed:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prester_John.
As for the vote, it has nothing to do with "truth," but with what the Mormon Church and it's leaders have taught for well over 1.5 centuries, and something that you appear to deny--that American Indians are the direct descendents of Father Lehi.
Is this really the best you can do? Gotta say, I'm underwhelmed.
God . . . "who mouths morals to other people and has none himself; who frowns upon crimes, yet commits them all; who created man without invitation, . . . and finally, with altogether divine obtuseness, invites this poor, abused slave to worship him ..."