The Nehor wrote:Coca Cola wrote:This whole "speaking as a man" s*** really gripes me. This goes totally against everything I was taught my whole life about prophets, why we need prophets, the role of prophets. etc.
If the prophet "speaks as a man" then why do we need a prophet anyway?
If a prophet has access to God, from whom he could learn all truth, why would he need to speculate and "speak as a man?"
It's just doesn't make any sense.
Because some/most of the members of the LDS Church are not powerful enough to dictate revelation in a manner akin to the D&C. Those that can't need to hear the truth and then have the power to verify it. As one grows in power the need for prophets diminishes somewhat (though they can still be helpful) as the person develops strong enough avenues of communication with God.
Is it really a matter of [spiritual?] power? What about member-sanctioned creativity?
In other words, not only do most members not have the power to dictate revelation in a manner akin to D&C, but the prophet doesn't, either.
Why not?
I know, I know: we need to live up to what we have received thus far, and then, perhaps, the heavens will open up again and shower down new revelation.
GC seems rather trite, predictable, and utterly non-prophetic over the last two years (that is, since I've been watching). I could be wrong, since I have a limited knowledge base. But, goodness, have the leaders really been stymied by a lack of divine interaction into talking about sweet pickles gestating in a jar?
Or, the number of earrings in a woman's ear?
Originally, as I understand the situation, the
seer was the most important and influential leader in the Church. But, the LDS church has no seers now. Just corporate managers who voice platitudes (that is, as it appears from an admittedly outsider perspective).
Goodness, one of the most theologically-bereft books I've read was penned by Stephen Nadauld, entitled
Justification By Faith, which was, despite its title, not really about justification or faith, but more about charts, graphs, and diagrams (that would have been more at home in a boardroom than a theological treatise) detailing the various sinful states (in graphical gray-scale glory) of Latter-day Saints, presumably.
Meh, Nadauld was a GA of the 2nd Council of 70's for some time. And CEO of a dairy coop, author of books on finance and management, etc.
In other words, one prone to expressing himself in charts and graphs.
Not a theologian.
And this is one of my biggest obstacles in accepting the Mormon Church as true: the current leaders appear to just be hand-picked managerial types who've done their time in lower callings.
There's no compelling revelation emanating from SLC these days. Just a steady-as-she-goes corporate mentality.
Who was the last real-life LDS prophet? John Taylor? I dunno.
Chris