charity wrote:Gadianton wrote:
The funny thing is. .
The funny thing, Gadianton, is that you can't see the difference between research and apologetics. Research does not "argue a position." It presents data, and interpretations of data. Then if someone takes that data and says "this supports my position that. . . ." this is aplogetics.
Suppose a researcher looks at Egyptian language influences in the Book of Mormon, that is a scholarly endeavor. He isn't saying, "This proves the Book of Mormon to be true." Egyptian language influence is what it is. But if someone else, then takes that study and says, "see, the Book of Mormon is true because there are Egyptian language influences" that is not the work of a scholar.
Can you see the difference now?
Too bad that Professor Peterson disagrees with you. He has been arguing at length that *NO* study of the Book of Mormon can ever really be considered "scholarly," since it will always be "tainted," as it were, by questions of faith. Thus (I guess), following his logic, and yours, FARMS and such engages purely in "apologetics," and doesn't bother with "real" scholarship.
Gadianton wrote:As church members point fingers at ministers, apologists point their fingers at anti-Momons as money makers. Anti-Mormonism is a money-making industry, devoid of any principle.
The true situation of the Church is that there is a very large, unpaid, part time, volunteer lay ministry. Individuals are not expected nor required to devote their full time to their callings, and can therefore work to support themselves and to serve at the same time. There are a few, very few in comparison to the part time lay ministry, who are expected to devote most of their time to a Church calling. These individuals are given a stipend for their expenses, since they do not have the time to work for their own support.
The work of the Church is to preach the gospel, redeem the dead, and perfect the Saints. There is not a dime of Church money that goes to tearing down any other church, destroying anyone's faith. The work of anti-Mormon ministries does not build. It destroys. That makes its paid ministers paid to destroy. Pitiful.
The apologists---particularly those who publish in FARMS Review---are most definitely interested in destroying people's credibility and reputations. A very brief perusal of that journal will provide ample evidence for this.