Daniel Peterson wrote:guy sajer wrote:I thought that God revealed truth to the prophet. But apparently sometimes Sidney Rigdon does (or did).
If the Prophet defers to others on points of doctrine and, it appears, gets doctrine wrong on occasion, how does this differentiate him from others professing to understand the mind and will of God? I mean, where's the real value added?
Certainly a much different picture than God directly revealing his word to his chosen mouthpiece on earth as Chapel Mormons are prone to believe, and which the Church teaches directly and by implication.
I don't have to believe that the
Lectures on Faith were "revealed" -- a thought that has never crossed my mind before -- or to believe that the Prophet receives express divine dictation on every issue at every hour of every day, or to believe that Joseph was completely in command at every stage and that Church structures and principles were thoroughly and immutably in place
ab initio, in order to recognize an
enormous amount of "value added."
And, as I've pointed out several times before, whenever I've taken the Shades test, I've come out an unambiguous "chapel Mormon."
Dan you're misconstruing my remarks, plus you are using a straw man by suggesting I've somehow implied that a Prophet receives express divine dictation on every issue at every our of every day etc.
On critical issues of doctrine (and the nature of God and other issues covered in the Lectures of Faith fall, in my opinion, in the category of critical doctrines) it appears to me that this is an area in which revelation would be quite helpful. If the Prophet (God's numero uno mouthpiece uniquely selected to communicate the mind and will of God to his children etc.) defers to others on such important issues, why then the need for a Prophet? If he makes important doctrinal statements based on opinion or based on opinions of others, rather than revelation, why the need for someone with a presumed pipeline to God? More, how do we know whether other doctrinal statements are based on revelation, based on personal opinion, or based on deference to someone else's opinion? Which again raises the question, what is the value added of a Prophet in this case?
Plus, the Church clearly teaches, and the Chapel Mormons clearly believe, that God reveals important doctrine to his Prophet and that, therefore, members of obliged to obey the Prophet, which is the same as obeying God.
Such issues may not bother you, who appears to have created a rather complicated belief framework, but they are issues that concern others. They concerned me, and this was one of many inconsistencies I found in Mormonism that convinced me it was no more than an invention of humans. (I found the type of complex, ex-post rationalization you engage in to be very unsatisfactory for a variety of reasons.)
Are you willing to concede that such things can create legitimate confusion, doubt, and even, after a point, disbelief among sincere believers, or should this all be a non-issue for them as it is for you?
God . . . "who mouths morals to other people and has none himself; who frowns upon crimes, yet commits them all; who created man without invitation, . . . and finally, with altogether divine obtuseness, invites this poor, abused slave to worship him ..."