Today I clicked on Huston Temple Construction.
Shields offers its stern, athoritative warning about the story,
Shields wrote:As with all faith promoting stories, we encourage you to NOT pass them around.
I suppose some of this abrupt disgust over Mormon culture might score a point with a senior apologist or two at the Institute.
As I continued, I was expecting a story filled with visitations of the Three Nephites and "remarkable events" as Shields puts it -- speaking in tounges? The dead being raised?
I read and I read, looking forward to the objectionable material of the kind that so raises the dander of the apologist convinced of his own scholarly invincibility. But I just for the life of me couldn't find the problem.
The story goes basically like this. A Mormon guy gets brought in on a contract job to construct a temple. He's the only Mormon. He expects disrespect shown by the "Baptists" and hard-living workers, but everyone is considerate and it's revealed in the end that the boss has a huge respect for Mormon temples because of the commitment to quality workmanship.
Ok, what on earth do the Mopologists gain by pouncing on this story? It seems awful desperate to go after material so benign. Maybe, the problem was the story had a true "bridge-building" element to it, and portrayed Baptists and Mormons getting along rather than Baptists as evil anti-Mormons that exist to fuel Mopologetic persecution complexes? Whatever the motive, the apologists went way overboard to take Chapel Mormonism down a notch with this one.
And not surprising as we've come to learn, the apologists end up only revealing not just their anger, but their own bad scholarship. Keep in mind this story is filed as a dangerous "hoax". Now think about their comments in the introduction:
Shields wrote:In doing some checking (not having contacted the supposed author), we are told that these sorts of occurrences are not unusual
So the basic plotline of the story is viable. This not only contradicts their statement one paragraph above that the events are "remarkable", but raises questions about it's quick relegation to the "hoax" file. Then, the apologists reveal they haven't even tried to contact the supposed author! It's believable, they haven't even tried to contact the author of it, yet it's a hoax all LDS should be wary of? And they conclude with:
Shields wrote:However, we have not verified that the story is true.
So because Shields hasn't verified the story is true, and this is partially the case because they won't try and contact the author, it must be a dangerous hoax, and the SHIELDS website adds huge credibility to themselves and apologetics by pointing it out?
In the irony of ironies, we're left with a story that holds the exact status of the Book of Abraham and the Book of Mormon according to the apologists. All are stories that are per the apologists, plausible, but not verified to be true (and for the Mopologists, proving something is true is not the work of scholars, but fundamentalists and "positivists"). Yet, the Chapel Mormon example is a hoax, and the Mopologetic stuff is overlooked revolutionary scholarship that would rival the output of Mendel.
Fascinating, indeed.