Trevor wrote:BORING.
When did Trevor become Droopy?
Daniel Peterson wrote:Mister Scratch wrote:I am much more interested in Bill Hamblin's Letter. As I noted in the other thread, this letter cannot look good for apologists,
You don't even need to know what was in it to find it damning and A Watershed Moment in the History of Mopologetics.
That's pretty funny.
Mister Scratch wrote:and they have pretty obvious motivations for wanting to bury it and keep it hidden away from critics.
How have "we" buried it and hidden it from "critics"? (You're the only critic, so far as I can recall, who's ever demanded to see it.)
I simply don't care to reminisce with you about it. I think I saw it once, somewhat more than fifteen years ago. It wasn't a big deal. Nothing memorable about it. My memory of it is pretty hazy. And you've already decided that it's bound to make us all look bad "in some way," so anything I say can only add fuel to the flames of a fire that you yourself have already lit -- which would lead to an interminable conversation about . . . what, exactly? My vague memories (which you'll constantly demand that I specify and expand as you look for something self-contradictory or damning) and your predetermined negative conclusions?
Gee. How tempting.
Mister Scratch wrote:The letter from Hamblin came three years after the first Watson Letter. If apologists thought the Tanner's reproduction of it was no biggie, then why not just let it fade from view?
Pal Joey condemns the Hambln article because it failed to mention Watson letter #1. You condemn the Hamblin article (and all apologists) because it signals some sort of alleged obsession with Watson letter #1.
Damned if we do, and damned if we don't.
The damnation is, as always with you, foreordained.
Mister Scratch wrote:Instead, they were obviously boiling with rage over it for some time.
LOL. "Boiling with rage"?
Mister Scratch wrote:Why did Michael Watson take Bill Hamblin's letter seriously? Now, this is very important.
Who knows? Ask Michael Watson.
Mister Scratch wrote:Think about it. What would Bill Hamblin have said in order to get the Secretary to the First Presidency to actually use up his no doubt very busy schedule in order to write this letter?
Maybe it was the line about knowing the schedules and routes to school of Brother Watson's children?
Mister Scratch wrote:To that end, I believe that Bill Hamblin had to have either:
A) Lectured Watson about doctrine, telling the FP secretary that his views are "out of line," as it were.
LOL. I think "lecturing" the secretary to the First Presidency on doctrine would require a degree of chutzpah beyond even my friend Bill Hamblin's reach.
Mister Scratch wrote:B) Ordered/requested Watson to issue a retraction.
I like the notion that Professor Hamblin ordered Michael Watson to issue a retraction.
Let's go with order.
Plainly, this is a watershed moment in the history of Mopologetics.
Mister Scratch wrote:If this is true, then I think we have to assume that Hamblin "scared" Watson somehow.
I suspect that the line about Brother Watson's children must have had precisely that effect.
Mister Scratch wrote:I really think that Hamblin *must* have requested the retraction.
I think we agreed -- didn't we? -- that he ordered it.
Mister Scratch wrote:I have a hard time believe that Michael Watson---no doubt a very busy man---would have just written the letter out of the blue, just for the hell of it, in order to make what is really a very minor and stupid doctrinal clarification.
That seems pretty obvious.
You say that members of your family and your former ward don't like you. Has it ever occurred to you that getting a life might help to rebuild some of those relationships?
Mister Scratch wrote:Actually, you lose either way.
Mister Scratch wrote:Yuk yuk yuk. It is interesting to note how much of your humor is of the "let's kill people's kids!" or "let me blow Mr. Scratch away with my assault rifle!" Tell me: Did you make the same kind of jokes when you were spreading malicious rumors about Mike Quinn?
Mister Scratch wrote:I'll bear this in mind when I write up the versions of this whole fiasco for CARM and RfM. I'm sure they will love to know that you've admitted this.
Mister Scratch wrote:Mister Scratch wrote:I have a hard time believe that Michael Watson---no doubt a very busy man---would have just written the letter out of the blue, just for the hell of it, in order to make what is really a very minor and stupid doctrinal clarification.
That seems pretty obvious.
Thanks for admitting that. This means, then, that Hamblin either ordered or begged him to write the letter.
Mister Scratch wrote:You say that members of your family and your former ward don't like you. Has it ever occurred to you that getting a life might help to rebuild some of those relationships?
Swinging below the belt now, are we? Wow, you must really be desperate to put a lid on this issue.
Daniel Peterson wrote:Mister Scratch wrote:Actually, you lose either way.
I understand that.
It's the beauty and, in its perverse way, the genius of your method.
Mister Scratch wrote:I'll bear this in mind when I write up the versions of this whole fiasco for CARM and RfM. I'm sure they will love to know that you've admitted this.
I didn't realize that you wrote for CARM, too. What handle do you use there? I don't follow CARM much. (Oh well. I suppose we'll find out when you post your report on this topic.)
Of course, I already realized that you post on RfM. That's where, as I believe, I caught you making an obscene remark about me several years ago, which you then lied about on the FAIR board, which is what evidently got you booted from that board. So far as I'm aware, you stopped using your "Mister Scratch" moniker on RfM at that point; presumably, you've used something else since then.
Mister Scratch wrote:Mister Scratch wrote:I have a hard time believe that Michael Watson---no doubt a very busy man---would have just written the letter out of the blue, just for the hell of it, in order to make what is really a very minor and stupid doctrinal clarification.
That seems pretty obvious.
Thanks for admitting that. This means, then, that Hamblin either ordered or begged him to write the letter.
He "ordered" him or he "begged" him? Those are the two options?
Mister Scratch wrote:You say that members of your family and your former ward don't like you. Has it ever occurred to you that getting a life might help to rebuild some of those relationships?
Swinging below the belt now, are we? Wow, you must really be desperate to put a lid on this issue.
You're the one who says that you suspect that members of your family and your former ward have been seeking to do you harm.
I didn't raise the issue. I have no idea who you are nor where you live. In fact, that statement of yours was the first thing I've ever seen that has given me any serious reason to think that you might really be nominally Mormon.
Mister Scratch wrote:Thank you for admitting to Beastie what I suspected: That Hamblin, in effect, told Watson that identifying a New York Cumorah would be a major blow to the faith.
Mister Scratch wrote:You're the one who says that you suspect that members of your family and your former ward have been seeking to do you harm.
I never said such a thing
Mister Scratch wrote:Your lying as "Free Thinker";
Mister Scratch wrote:your various racist and anti-semitic statements;
Mister Scratch wrote:your stalking of Church critics
Mister Scratch wrote:your mudslinging on Skinny-L
Mister Scratch wrote:you would try to use that apartment building fire as an opportunity to smear critics/nonmembers and as a PR opportunity for the Church
Mister Scratch wrote:your Quinn gossipmongering
Mister Scratch wrote:And *that* was truly disgusting, if I may say so.
Daniel Peterson wrote:harmony wrote:I make the same statement against Loran, the Crock, and anyone else who sets themselves up as a judge in Isreal and then doesn't live what they expect others to live.
I didn't "set myself up as a judge in Israel." I was called to be a bishop. I didn't call myself to the job, and I didn't want it.
Nor do I set myself up to judge the moral lives or characters of others here or elsewhere in the ether. I know nothing about how they live their daily lives, and have absolutely nothing to say on the matter.
Likewise, you know nothing whatever about my daily life, and you're in no position whatsoever to pronounce judgment on whether I do or don't "live what [I] expect others to live."
harmony wrote:You did not and do not sustain yourself, then?
harmony wrote:You are not a bishop, a judge of Isreal?
harmony wrote:You realize, of course, that it's possible to turn down a calling?
harmony wrote:Don't try to kid us, even if you've managed to kid yourself; you took it because you wanted to, otherwise you would have turned it down.
harmony wrote:Nor do I set myself up to judge the moral lives or characters of others here or elsewhere in the ether. I know nothing about how they live their daily lives, and have absolutely nothing to say on the matter.
Yes, you do. Often. Virtually every time you converse with me, with Trixie, with Rollo, with lots of people here and elsewhere.
harmony wrote:You judge me without cause and without merit.
harmony wrote:I at least admit I don't live my religion as well as I could; you are unable to get around that idea for yourself.
beastie wrote:
In addition, it's one more example of how apologists are willing to disregard past teachings of prophets and apostles.
No. (As is your wont -- and it's one of the reasons that I don't see you as a serious conversation partner -- your statement is spun, partisan, and question-begging.) It's an example of how we try to be precise in separating official doctrine from opinion or unexamined assumption. One of the foremost tasks of any kind of scholarship is to try to get things precisely right, to distinguish fact from common opinion, reality from appearance, truth from received notions. You dismiss that, but it's the lifeblood of the academic approach to virtually every topic.
You Christians think God's or the universe's sense of justice couldn't be sated unless he agreed to allow his son to be killed? Gotta have that blood, that blood makes it all right. If only a half-god could be killed, then all would be right with the world.
Since we're talking about the disappearing gold plates with reformed egyptian translated by a peep stone, start there.
In addition, it's one more example of how apologists are willing to disregard past teachings of prophets and apostles.
beastie wrote:This is the third time on this thread you have falsely [sic] accused me of phrasing something in a "spun" manner.
beastie wrote:I think it's clear you won't answer me because I'm "uppity". I don't engage in obsequious pandering. I don't go out of my way to make you feel at least partially good about your beliefs.
beastie wrote:And, by the way, by refusing to answer these questions, if asked by me or anyone "like me", of course you have judged me.
beastie wrote:You also make frequent snide comments.
beastie wrote:I'm not criticizing you for these things,
beastie wrote:but please don't insult our intelligence by pretending you are above judging
beastie wrote:and snide comments. You aren't.
beastie wrote:I think that's why you like to post here. You fit right in.