Kevin, I am not sure I agree with the shifting is not a strength.
Well, the main reason I think it is a weakness is because so much of it is
ad hoc and created out of necessity. Apologists appeal to continuing revelation and speak of it in terms that sound appealing as a “concept,” but
in practice one wouldn’t expect continuing revelation to involve contradictions.
Much is made of the fact that modern prophets really don’t “reveal” anything new in terms of revelation never before heard of. And this I believe is true. Someone asked me what prophets have revealed over the past century and I couldn’t name a single thing worth noting. All the unique LDS doctrines can be attributed to Mormonism’s first two prophets. Ever since then all the prophets seem shy about rocking the boat with new doctrines. But modern attempts prove that the “revelations” appear to be driven by society. For example, do any of us really believe it is just a coincidence that the “revelation” giving the priesthood to Negros, happened to be given during the civil rights movement? And when the Church was trying to expand in Brazil, where virtually everyone has someone in their family who is a negro? Brigham Young said they would never be given the priesthood but the Church knew that it had no future if it tried to implement this standard LDS doctrine at the end of the 20th century.
It seems to me that the real revelation in the LDS Church can be attributed to society, and not the people running the Church. I mean, really. Was it “revelation” that we really needed to hear about blacks being equal to whites in every sense? Wasn’t that already established by those wiser than LDS prophets? It is their influence that permeated the Church and its need to survive.
Same thing goes for polygamy, and the reason it had to be done away with. If we want to really say it was just God’s idea, then let’s apply some logic here. What purpose would polygamy serve when it was introduced for such a short period of time before it was removed? I mean didn’t God know the Church would be legally compelled to do away with it within the century?
I don’t see traditional Christianity back-pedaling like this in order to cover its tracks, especially on crucial themes that proved to be central to the faith. It has changed some doctrines, but not out of necessity. And the changes certainly don’t negate any of their truth claims.
Charity quips,
Sorry, Kevin, you have got it pretty much all wrong. You write about what people thought. Of course, people can think things. But you can't speak for the Church.
Prophets speak for the Church don’t they?
Tell us charity, what unique truths have the “prophets” provided over the course of the last century?
I am right about the Church of the Devil. Not only is it the only logical interpretation of the verse, but McConkie’s view was hardly fringe. Even on my mission everyone knew these other Churches belong to the devil. You’re just blowing smoke.
You asked, Who in 20th century Mormonism would have thought indians weren't the principle ancestors of the Lamanites? The answer to this is nobody. We don't t hink Indians were the ancestors of Lamanites. Descendants is the correct word
My goof, and yes, that is how the Church generally understands them, even today. FARMS apologetics hasn’t taken hold of the Church like it wished it could have.
And did you deliberately use the word "principle" instead of "principal?"
No, I type in word and sometimes outlook and sometimes it corrects typos with the word it thinks I intended to use.
Do you want us to give you a little leeway, that you misspoke instead of deliberately tried to mislead? Okay. You are let off the hook on this one.
Well golly gee, how charitable of you charity. Do you want an, “I gave a critic the benefit of the doubt” merit badge? You spent more time trying to dig up a possible case of duplicity, just so you could forgive and appear gracious. Get over yourself already. While you’re blathering away at the lip about a minor misstatement, you still haven’t addressed the issue. The fact is this understanding would have been foreign to most 19th century Mormons.
Nest issue: You asked, "Who before 1967 would have thought the Book of Abraham wasn't really "translated" from Egyptian?
(charity reaises her hand.) In 1960 I knew that we can't use 20th century definitions of "translate" when referring to the Book of Mormon, the JST, the Book of Moses or the Book of Abraham.
This is not true, and yes, I believe you are deliberately lying – sorry, but track records mean something in this forum. This apologetic trip didn’t appear until it became obvious that he couldn’t translate Egyptian. The historical evidence makes it perfectly clear Joseph Smith believed he could. And he believed he could, even according to 19th century definitions, which don’t help you out here.
Joseph Smith produced these works by the gift and power of God. The manner is not important. It never has been.
We’re not talking about the manner. The manner in which someone builds a house is irrelevant to the fact that someone actually built it. If someone built it, then they were able to do it. Joseph Smith was not able to translate Egyptian by natural or revelatory means.
That is why we don't care if Joseph had the plates in front of him, or if he was reading words off a seerstone or if he was physically looking at the papryi or not. That is something that critics don't seem to understand.
Who is we? You think all Mormons think this way? FAIR addicts have this nonsense emblazed on their brains.
Next: "Who in the 19th century Church would have thought it was possible to reject the historicity of the Book of Mormon while remaining a faithful LDS?
The answer is who does now? There has been no leader who has ever suggested that the Book of Mormon is not exactly what it says it was.
David P Wright, myself, and quite a few others who have made this paradigm shift to accommodate inductive reasoning. Your follow-up question is irrelevant since no leader has ever said one my accept the historicity of the Book of Mormon. And even if he did, it could be blown aside as mere opinion. People are allowed to think right? The historicity of LDS scriptures has never been “official doctrine” according to modern apologetic standards, so this is why people are not booted from the Church or having their TR rejected because they reject Book of Mormon historicity. But in the 19th century the idea that the Book of Mormon wasn’t real history probably would have been considered blasphemy.
“All knowledge of reality starts from experience and ends in it...Propositions arrived at by purely logical means are completely empty as regards reality." - Albert Einstein