harmony wrote:
I know the source, but some may not, so please link to this talk.
And it helps to remember some of the other things this gentleman said.
http://speeches.BYU.edu/reader/reader.php?id=6843
harmony wrote:
I know the source, but some may not, so please link to this talk.
And it helps to remember some of the other things this gentleman said.
Parley P. Pratt wrote:We must lie to support brother Joseph, it is our duty to do so.
B.R. McConkie, © Intellectual Reserve wrote:There are those who say that revealed religion and organic evolution can be harmonized. This is both false and devilish.
Buffalo wrote:I think it's the other way around. The talk about not worshiping Christ was given in 1982. Those lyrics were written at least 10 years earlier.
Daniel Peterson wrote:beastie wrote:Mormons declare EVs don’t believe the right thing and will be eternally divided from Heavenly Father and will no longer have families. What an anal, obsessive-compulsive, controlling God, with ego issues. Just the type of fellow to worship.
This is peripheral to the main focus here, and I hate to suddenly break the amicable rapport, but I confess that I just don't understand this issue, which you've raised yet again just now: You seem to think that the default position, before the Mormons came along, was to assume that families would all be together in the eternities, and that the Mormon abruptly declared eternal divorce for husbands and wives unless they complied with Joseph Smith.
But this seems historically untrue. Read Dante's Commedia. There are no family units to be found in it. Not in the Inferno, not in the Purgatorio, and not in the Paradiso. Every soul is punished or purged or blessed in individual isolation. That was the default setting. The Mormons didn't arrive with the bad news of permanent divorce and family break-up unless you toe the line. They arrived with the good news of the possibility that families might remain intact after death.
Runtu wrote:Buffalo wrote:I think it's the other way around. The talk about not worshiping Christ was given in 1982. Those lyrics were written at least 10 years earlier.
Here's the difference: the church adopted the hymn and therefore endorsed its content in 1985. McConkie's 1982 talk was never adopted or endorsed by the church.
Parley P. Pratt wrote:We must lie to support brother Joseph, it is our duty to do so.
B.R. McConkie, © Intellectual Reserve wrote:There are those who say that revealed religion and organic evolution can be harmonized. This is both false and devilish.
Buffalo wrote:I agree that McConkie was an outlier in that view, but doesn't it say something when one of the top leaders of the church isn't clear on whether worshiping Jesus is appropriate or not? How does one become an apostle and have that view? Do you suppose even the shallowest televangelist shill would have trouble deciding whether or not it was appropriate to worship Jesus?
Buffalo wrote:When you've got an LDS apostle telling students that it's not proper to worship Jesus, it's time to reevaluate your status as a supposedly Christian church.
Buffalo wrote:Either you do or you don't.
Buffalo wrote:If it's up for grabs, then Mormonism isn't ready to be called Christian yet.
Buffalo wrote:I'm afraid it's you vs. God's apostle, here, Daniel.
Buffalo wrote:I know you're just as fond as we are of dismissing the teachings of the apostles, but at least we're not calling ourselves believers.
JohnStuartMill wrote:You're glossing over half a millennium of evolving religious thought. . . . Your version of history is oblivious to the Protestant Reformation.
JohnStuartMill wrote:Dante's conception of heaven may have been the "default setting" in the 14th century,
JohnStuartMill wrote:but by the time Mormonism was founded, the idea that Christians would be united with their loved ones in the afterlife was already pretty popular.
JohnStuartMill wrote:Mormonism wasn't innovative on this score; it merely crystallized a popular religious belief into a core doctrine, in a process similar to its absorption of the ideas of the temperance movement.
Daniel Peterson wrote:There are multiple shades of meaning for the term worship, and Mormons worship Jesus (and always have) in just about every one of them. Nor was Elder McConkie advocating anything different.
We do not worship the Son, and we do not worship the Holy Ghost. I know perfectly well what the scriptures say about worshipping Christ and Jehovah, but they are speaking in an entirely different sense--the sense of standing in awe and being reverentially grateful to him who has redeemed us. Worship in the true and saving sense is reserved for God the first, the Creator.
Parley P. Pratt wrote:We must lie to support brother Joseph, it is our duty to do so.
B.R. McConkie, © Intellectual Reserve wrote:There are those who say that revealed religion and organic evolution can be harmonized. This is both false and devilish.
Buffalo wrote:Perhaps you're referring to a different McConkie.
Catholics have as many issues with “work versus grace” as Mormons do.
Not hardly.