Trevor wrote:bcspace wrote:BC is right, the Hinckster could have said almost anything to the media. It may have upset some folks, but it didn't change the doctrine. Essentially, what you have in Hinckley's waffling on eternal progression is a kind of wimpy dodge. Pretty damn disappointing, no doubt.
---But that was the point: Regardless of whether it was officially changed or not, Hinckley publicly denied the doctrinal status of the engine of all Mormon theology, and it didn't matter to believers. The "man who cannot lead the church astray" might as well have come out and said, "I don't know that we teach that Jesus Christ literally was resurrected". It wouldn't have mattered. Guys like BC would just say, "even the prophet gets things wrong sometimes", or "he'll have to answer for his own faith, and I'll answer for mine", or some other thought-terminating cliché. There's always some "out", some mindgame, some thought-terminating cliché which can do the job of keeping us in just that state I mentioned, no matter who says or does what. Smith lies to, and then deflowers, a fourteen year old? Smith EATS a fourteen year old? It wouldn't matter - there's always a new mindgame.
The church could open up its archives and publish letters from Smith confessing fraud, and it probably wouldn't matter. All we'd hear from the Johnnie Cochran types at FARMS is, "John the Baptist had moments of weakness in his faith; why shouldn't Joseph Smithhave had his moments, too? He was human", and then, "in the end, we don't know exactly why the prophet said these things. What we do know, however, is that God has told us, in an unmistakable way through the Holy Ghost, that the Book of Mormon is true, and that Joseph Smith, for all his imperfections, was a true prophet of God". The confession of fraud wouldn't matter - why would it, when irrefutable evidences of fraud
are already abundant, and they make NO DIFFERENCE to the BCSpaces of the world?
Consider Trevor, that IF Hinckley had issued a signed, joint First Presidency and Quorum of the Twelve statement saying that "it is not necessarily true that God was once a man", that that WOULD have "changed the doctrine" - but that that wouldn't have mattered either, because all it would have done for the true believer is make him feel GREAT that "we have continuing revelation!". It would just be, "Joseph could get things wrong; he was allowed to speculate; thank goodness we have a living prophet now to reveal to us what the truth is". No problem.
See what I mean?
Even calling it "belief" is a misnomer, because "belief" implies subscription to
some substantive proposition. Mormon "belief" is only just a
psychological state anchored by substanceless, infinitely mutatable, imaginary totems.