Daniel Peterson wrote:I've been absolutely forthright and on the record in condemning all Mormon terrorist groups. Whenever militant Mormons have decapitated somebody, or hijacked an airliner, or blown up a building, I've spoken out.
I get the cynicism, Dan. But you were the one who said that if Mormonism wasn't true, it would be "unutterably sad".
For some it has been "unutterably sad".
It hasn't been for me, because I never grew up in the Church.
It really doesn't matter what BYU pays you for "officially". You know that they expect you to defend the Church, and they will finance 200 tours of Islam so you can get a word in about Mormonism. To say that you're doing this of your own accord, for Islamic studies, is to deny that BYU and the Church see a great stake in this. And Rachel Kohn didn't just interview you about Islam. She's fascinates about you as a Mormon.
So you're killing two birds with one stone. And I think the delivering the Mormon message is far more important to you than any speech you ever gave on Islam. That has always been a stepping stone, never a purely objective scholarly study. If I was real cynical, I'd say your ultimate objective is to prove Mormonism true. You don't study Islam objectively and as a socio-religious phenomenon, you study it to compare it, also, with the "truth of Mormonism". And, of course, Mormonism trumps all. Because, simply, you don't apply the same objective and critical assessments to Mormonism, that you do to Islam. If you did this, you might be accused of being in apostasy.
You are prepared to assign myth to Mohammad, but you're not prepared to assign that to Joseph Smith. Because he stands outside any such testing and criticism, as far as you are concerned. You will never entertain the idea that Joseph Smith could have manufactured all this, just like no Muslim could manufacture the idea that Muhammed created the Qur'an.