Rollo Tomasi wrote:the problem comes when they forget their roots and get caught up in the adulation of the membership.
A problem that hasn't been demonstrated.
At any level, a General Authority's day is taken up with meetings in which ermine robes are not worn but often difficult issues are discussed and actions planned, with often uncomfortable travel to sometimes very distant places where their semidivine status isn't recognized, and, yes, with meetings with rank and file members. It's a rather hellish life that I, for one, envy not at all.
Just a few days ago, a retired Slavic Languages colleague was telling me about a visit by Elder Scott, of the Twelve, to the mission he presided over in Russia some years back. They had planned some sightseeing for Elder Scott during the intervals between meetings, but Elder Scott wanted to meet with the members. My friend remarked that Elder Scott spent many hours sitting backwards in a chair patiently answering basic questions about the Church and its doctrine that might just as easily have been posed to a green missionary. This sort of thing is, from what I've seen, not uncommon.
Rollo Tomasi wrote:Daniel Peterson wrote:President Monson doesn't come from Mormon Royalty. Neither does President Uchtdorf.
Agreed, but Eyring certainly does.
As I've said, he comes from a collateral line of your "Mormon royalty." (It's scarcely to be wondered at, incidentally, that a son of the eminent chemist Henry Eyring who, himself born in Princeton, earned a doctorate at Harvard and achieved tenure at Stanford while serving faithfully in the Church, might stand out a bit and exhibit some unusual qualities within the Latter-day Saint community.)
Rollo Tomasi wrote:[And Pres. Monson recently named his daughter as a quasi-GA (to one of the gen'l presidencies), and Eyring's 38-year old son was recently named an Area Authority Seventy.
You're stretching with those.
Rollo Tomasi wrote:Neither does President Packer.
True, but BKP's wife is, and their oldest son was recently named a GA.
You're stretching again.
Rollo Tomasi wrote:Neither does Elder Oaks.
He's related to Martin Harris, one of the 3 Witnesses (hence the "H." in Dallin H. Oaks).
Harris died 133 years ago, holding no position in the Church. How many living relatives does he have today? I don't know. How many of them have served as General Authorities? I don't know, but I'm guessing few, if any.
Do you really seriously imagine that the fact that Dallin Oaks is a fairly distant relative of Martin Harris played any role at all in his call to the Twelve, let alone that it was a more important factor than the abilities he demonstrated as a Supreme Court clerk, acting dean of the University of Chicago law school, local Church leader (he didn't, it's true, serve as a bishop or stake president, but he did serve as a counselor in a stake presidency in Chicago), author of books and studies on Mormonism and Mormon history, president of BYU, and justice of the Utah Supreme Court?
When he was growing up as a son of the widowed Stella Oaks in Provo, I wonder if anybody deferred to him as a prince of "Mormon royalty"? My bet is, No.
Rollo Tomasi wrote:And I'm sure they all fart, too, but their familial connections helped them move up the ladder.
It would be churlish, I suppose, to ask for actual evidence of this assertion.
Rollo Tomasi wrote:But the interesting fact remains that, doctrinally, you're much more closely aligned with the Church of Christ, Temple Lot, than with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
And which one is more closely aligned with God? Many different answers, I suspect.
No doubt about it. But that's not the question at issue.
Rollo Tomasi wrote:Daniel Peterson wrote:In other words, whereas you claim that 75% of them are from "Mormon Royalty," the actual figure -- granting for the sake of discussion that such a concept has any real meaning or relevance at all -- is somewhere between 7% and 14%.
It's closer to 50% (and it would have been 50% until a few weeks ago when Joseph Wirthlin died (his father was presiding bishop, and he was a 1st cousin to GBH)). The current list: (1) Eyring, (2) BKP (by marriage: his wife is a direct descendant of Apostle Luke Johnson), (3) Perry (he's the nephew of 70's president Alma Sonne), (4) Oaks (related to Martin Harris), (5) Ballard (on both sides), and (6) Cook (related to SWK and Heber Kimball). So that's 6 of the current 14, or 43%.
43% is still just a bit over half of harmony's casual 75%.
But your 43% is dubious.
Regarding Elder Oaks, see above. I've granted that President Eyring comes from a good line, though not as clearly as you want to pretend. And, regarding Elder Ballard (whom I already acknowledged as a card-carrying member of whatever "Mormon royalty" may still exist), there can be no question.
But good grief. Do you seriously suppose that the fact that his wife is a direct descendent of Luke Johnson, who resigned from the Council of the Twelve and from the Church in 1837 at the age of thirty (though he was rebaptized in 1846 and ultimately came West, where he died as a bishop near Tooele) propelled Boyd K. Packer to the apostleship?
Do you really imagine that L. Tom Perry was called to the Twelve because of the potency of his relationship with his uncle, Alma Sonne? How many sons of Seventies -- to say nothing of
nephews! -- have
not been called to the Council of the Twelve?
And I'd like a bit more data regarding Elder Cook. How close a relationship to Spencer Kimball? How many other men share that same degree of kinship? How close a relationship to Heber C. Kimball (d. 1868, as, many think, the most married man in American or even Western history)? How many thousand men share that same degree of kinship?