Sethbag wrote:Loap, with all due respect, that's bullsh**. Sorry, but this is pretty obvious.
The appearance of a bodyslam was all too obvious if they actually considered the pros and cons of using "Mr.", and the perported advantage of the use of "Mr." supporting the scholarliness of the article could not possibly have outweighed the perceived slam in the context of LDS culture.
Not only that, but part of their critique included judgment calls on the religious appropriateness of Meldrum's referencing his own revelations, which pretty conclusively removes the critique from the realm of scholarship and into the realm of religious squabble, submarining the whole justification you just asserted.
I ask again: when have you ever seen two factions of LDS apologists refer to the other as "Mr." rather than "Brother", if a title was used at all, in a discussion about LDS belief and religion?
I'll see what I can find out. From what I have seen, most of the people at FAIR have been very concerned about the Meldrum thing, and it has been difficult overall to negotiate. Meldrum himself is not easy to work with, to say the least. Keep in mind that there are people at FAIR who favor different geography theories of the Book of Mormon. Meldrum has introduced his almost-testimony into the discussion. FAIR has approached that aspect from the standpoint that Meldrum goes further than revelation would dictate, in the past, or coming from Meldrum himself rather than through what believing members would see as proper channels. Not that truth only comes from those channels, but that truth announced in behalf of the Church does. If you have a specific problem with the review I would prefer from now on that you cite specific passages you find inappropriate. Generalizing does not help me see where you are getting your perceptions from.
And by the way, the "all due respect" phrase is completely meaningless. :) And I say that, of course, with "all due respect."