Daniel Peterson wrote:Does she have a point?
Here's hoping the point arrives sometime before page 23.
Daniel Peterson wrote:Does she have a point?
beastie wrote:Get the point yet? Or will it take 20 more pages of stubborn repetition until one of you stops pretending that such a simple point is beyond you?
truth dancer wrote:I have an idea... :-)
How about this, Dan which one of the following statements fits best with your opinion:
1. The LDS church would gladly support and spend millions of dollars to help some of its employees write a book that would harm and damage the testimonies of many believers.
2. The LDS church would not support or spend millions of dollars to help some of its employees write a book that would harm and damage the testimonies of many believers.
Just trying to clear things up... ;-)
On the whole, when we read historical books, we are obliged to rely upon the good faith of those who researched and wrote them. That's true in non-Mormon as well as Mormon historiography. We're seldom if ever in a position to really check them.
How would one go about determining whether, in fact, Massacre at Mountain Meadows lives up to that pledge? I can't think of a better or more effective way of setting out to do that than by first reading the book.
beastie wrote:You’re just playing the game you always play.
beastie wrote:Of course I will read the book carefully. But since neither I nor other researchers are going to have access to this material, there really is no way for me to evaluate the accuracy of its claims, no matter how carefully I read it, is there?
beastie wrote:the face of two known facts:
1 – the church has a serious conflict of interest in this issue
beastie wrote:2 – two very influential and powerful leaders of the church – Packer and Oaks – have already gone “on the record” regarding their view that not only is suppression of damaging historical evidence justified, but it is the only ethical choice for church employees.
beastie wrote:You can dismiss these two facts all you want
beastie wrote:All you have, in response, is to repeat that the authors – who are church employees under the ethical obligation already clearly stated by Packer and Oaks – have assured us that, despite the conflict of interest and despite Packer and Oaks’ statements, the historical integrity of the work is intact.
This is like asking us to simply accept the words of the employees of NicStix that their study adhered to the highest standards of research integrity – with no ability to judge for ourselves whether or not that is an accurate assessment.
beastie wrote:Does the process involve a spiritual witness? ;)
Puncturing pretense and exposing vacuousness.
Then it's hopeless.
And I'm guessing that somebody who didn't even know what the Joseph Smith Papers project is probably doesn't follow Mormon historiography very closely.
But look on the bright side: At least you know that you'll be reading a book that very likely distorts and misrepresents history. So you can be on the alert, unlike the other cases where you've been in very much the same position, unable to check the author's sources, but you haven't even realized that the book was biased and misleading.
A serious conflict of interest that, in my view, the Church doesn't appear to have recognized. As I've noted, Church leaders and the authors and the researchers and knowledgeable insiders have said, in public, in private, and to me, that they wanted the full truth told and that it was in the interest of the Church to see that this occurred.
Just for the record -- I don't have time for an eighty-page thread today -- I have accepted that characterization of their positions only for the sake of discussion. I'm not convinced that you read them correctly. [3000 by 20?]
Those of us who are extensively engaged in researching the wisdom of man, including those who write and those who teach Church history, are not immune from these dangers. I have walked that road of scholarly research and study and know something of the dangers. If anything, we are more vulnerable than those in some of the other disciplines. Church history can he so interesting and so inspiring as to be a very powerful tool indeed for building faith. If not properly written or properly taught, it may be a faith destroyer.
President Brigham Young admonished Karl G. Maeser not to teach even the times table without the Spirit of the Lord. How much more essential is that Spirit in the research, the writing, and the teaching of Church history.
If we who research, write, and teach the history of the Church ignore the spiritual on the pretext that the world may not understand it, our work will not be objective. And
if, for the same reason, we keep it quite secular, we will produce a history that is not accurate and not scholarly--this, in spite of the extent of research or the nature or the individual statements or the incidents which are included as part of it, and notwithstanding the training or scholarly reputation of the one who writes or teaches it. We would end up with a history with the one most essential ingredient left out.
Those who have the Spirit can recognize very quickly whether something is missing in a written Church history this in spite of the fact that the author may be a highly trained historian and the reader is not. And, I might add, we have been getting a great deal of experience in this regard in the past few year.
President Wilford Woodruff warned: "I will here say God has inspired me to keep a Journal and History of this Church, and I warn the future Historians to give Credence to my History of this Church and Kingdom; for my Testimony is true, and the truth of its record will be manifest in the world to Come."2
There is a temptation for the writer or the teacher Of Church history to want to tell everything, whether it is worthy or faith promoting or not.
Some things that are true are not very useful.
Historians seem to take great pride in publishing something new, particularly if it illustrates a weakness or mistake of a prominent historical figure. For some reason, historians and novelists seem to savor such things. If it related to a living person it would come under the heading of gossip. History can be as misleading as gossip and much more difficult--often impossible--to verify.
The writer or the teacher who has an exaggerated loyalty to the theory that everything must be told is laying a foundation for his own judgment. He should not complain if one day he himself receives as he has given. Perhaps that is what is contemplated in having one's sins preached from the housetops.
Some time ago a historian gave a lecture to an audience of college students on one of the past Presidents of the Church. It seemed to be his purpose to show that that President was a man subject to the foibles of men. He introduced many so-called facts that put that President in a very unfavorable light, particularly when they were taken out of the context of the historical period in which he lived.
Someone who was not theretofore acquainted with this historical figure (particularly someone not mature) must have come away very negatively affected. Those who were unsteady in their convictions surely must have had their faith weakened or destroyed.
That historian or scholar who delights in pointing out the weaknesses and frailties of present or past leaders destroys faith--A destroyer of faith--particularly one within the Church, and more particularly one who is employed specifically to build faith--places himself in great spiritual jeopardy. He is serving the wrong master, and unless he repents, he will not be among the faithful in the eternities.
One who chooses to follow the tenets of his profession, regardless of how they may injure the Church or destroy the faith of those not ready for "advanced history," is himself in spiritual jeopardy. If that one is a member of the Church, he has broken his covenants and will be accountable. After all of the tomorrows of mortality have been finished, he will not stand where be might have stood.
I recall a conversation with President Henry D. Moyle. We were driving back from Arizona and were talking about a man who destroyed the faith of young people from the vantage point of a teaching position. Someone asked President Moyle why this man was still a member of the Church when he did things like that. "He is not a member of the Church." President Moyle answered firmly. Another replied that he bad not heard of his excommunication. "He has excommunicated himself," President Moyle responded. "He cut himself off from the Spirit of God. Whether or not we get around to holding a court doesn't matter that much; he has cut himself off from he Spirit of the Lord."
In the Church we are not neutral. We are one-sided. There is a war going on and we are engaged in it. It is the war between good and evil, and we are belligerents defending the good. We are therefore obliged to give preference to and protect all that is represented in the gospel of Jesus Christ, and we have made covenants to do it.
And I want to say in all seriousness that there is a limit to the patience of the Lord with respect to those who are under covenant to bless and protect His Church and kingdom upon the earth but do not do it.
There is much in the scriptures and in our Church literature to convince us that we are at war with the adversary. We are not obliged as a church, nor are we as members obliged, to accommodate the enemy in this battle.
President Joseph Fielding Smith pointed out that it would be a foolish general who would give access to all of his intelligence to his enemy. It is neither expected nor necessary for us to accommodate those who seek to retrieve references from our sources, distort them, and use them against us.
Suppose that a well-managed business corporation is threatened by takeover from another corporation. Suppose that the corporation bent on the takeover is determined to drain off all its assets and then dissolve this company. You can rest assured that the threatened company would hire legal counsel to protect itself.
Do you not recognize a breach of ethics, or integrity, or morality?
I think you can see the point I am making. Those of you who are employed by the Church have a special responsibility to build faith not destroy it. If you do not do that, but in fact accommodate the enemy, who is the destroyer of faith you become in that sense a traitor to the cause you have made covenants to protect.
Thanks. I've already dismissed those "facts."
Cute. But, as you well know, an insult without relevance.