truth dancer wrote:To whom was the first letter written?
If not to Hamblin, why would he write to the first presidency to clarify a letter written to another individual?
Tanners?
cksalmon wrote:truth dancer wrote:To whom was the first letter written?
If not to Hamblin, why would he write to the first presidency to clarify a letter written to another individual?
Tanners?
(emphasis added)Dear Bishop Brooks:
I have been asked to forward to you for acknowledgment and handling the enclosed copy of a letter to President Gordon B. Hinckley from Ronnie Sparks of your ward. Brother Sparks inquired about the location of the Hill Cumorah mentioned in the Book of Mormon, where the last battle between the Nephites and Lamanites took place.
The Church has long maintained, as attested to by references in the writings of General Authorities, that the Hill Cumorah in western New York state is the same as referenced in the Book of Mormon.
The Brethren appreciate your assistance in responding to this inquiry, and asked that you convey to Brother Sparks their commendation for his gospel study.
Sincerely yours, (signed) F. Michael Watson Secretary to the First Presidency
As much as the mopologists try and dismiss this, when printed out, folded into a paper airplane, it becomes a stealth bomber when viewed at the wrong time by a wandering member who finds themselves at the trailhead of doubt.cksalmon wrote:
Daniel Peterson wrote:When imagination is completely severed from any mooring in evidence but blended with weirdly obsessive hostility and a zest for conspiratorial fantasies, the sky's the limit.
Daniel Peterson wrote:Mister Scratch wrote:I would be willing to bet that he demanded a retraction printed on Church letterhead. "The antis will win unless you act now!" he might have said.
He might also have said "I know where your children go to school, their bus routes, and their pick-up times."
Or he might have said, "I'll reveal our secret love affair if you don't pony up the statement that I demand."
Or, alternatively, he might have said "I'll put a spell on you."
Or, conceivably, he might have said, "We are the knights who say Ni" and demanded a shrubbery.
When imagination is completely severed from any mooring in evidence but blended with weirdly obsessive hostility and a zest for conspiratorial fantasies, the sky's the limit.
Daniel Peterson wrote:There was never an official "doctrine" that the last Nephite battle occurred in upstate New York.
There was, for obvious reasons, a widespread commonsense assumption that it did.
When examined, that assumption is found to rest upon less than compelling grounds. (It finds no support, for example, in the text of the Book of Mormon.)
A major contribution in any field of scholarship is when commonsense assumptions are revised or when the evidence leads them to be abandoned.
I'm perfectly happy if and to the extent that LDS scholarship is leading us to be more careful and precise in our claims and in distinguishing between what we know and what we don't know. That's exactly what it should do.
But there is no basis to any suppositon that Bill Hamblin somehow compelled Michael Watson to retract the statement in his first letter, or that the Maxwell Institute has some sort of leverage over the First Presidency.