charity wrote:1. The truths of the Gospel do not depend on what fallible individuals believe them to be. If I misunderstand some of those truths, it doesn't not diminish them.
It's amazing how many LDS see this only from one side of this equation.
2. Fallible people may get something wrong now and again. If all the prophets from Joseph Smith to present believed that ALL the Native Americans were descendants of Lamanites,(and if there isn't even one Lamanite ancestor on the pedigree charts of some) that doesn't mean that the prophets weren't inspired at other times or that they never received revelation.
Jason Bourne wrote:2. Fallible people may get something wrong now and again. If all the prophets from Joseph Smith to present believed that ALL the Native Americans were descendants of Lamanites,(and if there isn't even one Lamanite ancestor on the pedigree charts of some) that doesn't mean that the prophets weren't inspired at other times or that they never received revelation.
How many things can a fallible prophet get wrong and still be a prophet?
BishopRic wrote:
But one would think that if they are "prophets of God," they would get these things right at least some of the time! I tend to follow the principle of Occam's razor and conclude they ARE just fallible people, like the rest of us, and we're all doing the best we can.
But until I see a real indication that for some reason God is telling a few choice men something that he is not telling the rest of us, and reality finally backs it up , then I'll live my life as if I can determine good and bad myself. When other "men" tell me I should live my life a way they say is from God, I expect their words to be consistent with reality. When it is not, logic forces me to conclude they are not what they claim to be.
charity wrote:BishopRic wrote:
You haven't noticed any thing they have gotten right?
God doesn't tell them things they don't then tell us. They are conduits for the revelations of God. We have all the words God has given them. Now, if we don't understand what God said, that is our fault.
BishopRic wrote:charity wrote:BishopRic wrote:
You haven't noticed any thing they have gotten right?
God doesn't tell them things they don't then tell us. They are conduits for the revelations of God. We have all the words God has given them. Now, if we don't understand what God said, that is our fault.
They get much right. So does the Pope and other leaders of faith, as well as the Dalai Lama, etc.. No, I don't see anything superior to these others, and it seems they make many more of these "fallible" mistakes than others.
I think they all do the best they can, and they all make mistakes.
harmony wrote:
That's because they're just men and they don't talk to God directly anymore than anyone else does. They see through a dark glass just like the rest of us.
LDS biologist Trent Stephens thinks he may have triggered the change in the Book of Mormon's introduction that became public last week.
charity wrote:harmony wrote:
That's because they're just men and they don't talk to God directly anymore than anyone else does. They see through a dark glass just like the rest of us.
You might want to talk to the bishop about that on your next temple recommend interview when you get to Question #2.