John Larsen wrote:krose wrote:I think it's interesting that no one seems to question Smith's statement clarifying the revelation that became Sec. 89. Even though the canonized scriptural text says it's "hot drinks" that are not for the body, he later said that the Lord meant coffee and tea, specifically, with those two words.
From all I've seen, this wasn't an additional revelation, but it changed the meaning of the words, and now Mormons everywhere avoid iced tea and chilled coffee because (strangely) they qualify as "hot drinks," but consume steaming-hot cocoa to their hearts' content. To me this looks like a great candidate for a prophet expressing his own opinion "as a man," but I've never seen this clarifying interpretation questioned by any LDS scholar.
When did Joseph ever say it was only coffee and tea?
From
A Voice from the Mountains, by Joel Hills Johnson (my G-G-GF, by the way), p. 12:
On a Sabbath day, in the July following the giving of the revelation, when both Joseph and Hyrum Smith were in the stand, the Prophet said to the Saints:
"I understand that some of the people are excusing themselves in using tea and coffee, because the Lord only said 'hot drinks' in the revelation of the Word of Wisdom.
"The Lord was showing us what was good for man to eat and drink. Now, what do we drink when we take our meals?
"Tea and coffee. Is it not?
"Yes, tea and coffee.
"Then, they are what the Lord meant when He said 'hot drinks.'"
This reference is used to justify the modified restrictions, as in the CHI, p 185. But in my view, it's an obvious candidate for the prophet "speaking as a man" to change the clear language of a god-given revelation. Of course, if it was not an actual revelation, but something Joseph Smith made up on his own, he could modify and re-interpret the words any way he wanted.
My point is that this looks like a clear parallel to his words regarding Book of Mormon geography, and most TBMs accept it without question.
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"The DNA of fictional populations appears to be the most susceptible to extinction." - Simon Southerton