charity wrote:in the student study guide. The teacher's study guide says to read it along with 14 passages of scripture in the Book of Mormon and the Doctrine and Covenants. The teacher's lesson suggestions do not even mention the introduction.
Now would you tell me how "critical" it is?
The study guides didn't mention anything about multiple wives either, yet that principle is integral to the message of the early Church prophets.
President Kimball was a really nice man who tried to be positive and upbeat. Go pick on someone else.
Pres Kimball is not given a free pass here. His words are critiqued as well as any other prophet's.
That is not my argument at all. People can say things that other people disagree with. I don't know if you are as inflexible as you portray, or you are only trying to project inflexibility on us, but you sure do seem to get your knickers in a knot when something doesn't appear to be what you had a misperception of it all along.
Actually, no. Members cannot disagree with church leaders, at least not publically. To do so often results in forfeiting one's membership.
And the only misinterpretation going on here is yours. We all figured out what McKonkie meant years ago. You are the one struggling with the obvious.
Also, a person with a certain degree of light and knowledge can say something that another person, not so blessed, will misunderstand completely. Why didn't they ever say anything before? Because they didn't see it as important. I don't think you can ever say anything that someone won't misunderstand. So you go with the reasonable statement, and let a few people yap and whine. It is more about the nature to yap and whine than about the statement itself.
Balderdash. "Not so blessed"? Blessings have nothing to do with clear communication. They didn't say anything before because they had no one pointing out how incongruent the statement was. With the latest research, it's obvious that the backpeddling is in response to the science.