I noticed that a companion thread was launched (it has by now been shut down by the moderators--probably LifeOnaPlate, in his Nemesis sockpuppet) on the ironically named Mormon Dialogue board:
http://www.mormondialogue.org/topic/554 ... -doubtful/The thread is speculating on whether or not it's possible that Elder Oaks could have been angered by Valerie Hudson's recent FAIR talk, as was alleged by my informant. This is one of those cases where I'm left wondering about the intelligence of the MDD board's participants. Here is the OP:
baddonkey wrote:I just read on another board that that guy who has "informants" had one of them supposedly tell him that Dallin H. Oaks was "infuriated" by Valerie Hudson Cassler's FAIR talk about polygamy. I find this VERY difficult to believe. First of all, Elder Oaks has stated in an interview that to state that we will practice polygamy in the hereafter, he would be making a statement that the living Prophet has not spoken about. This tends to support Valerie's position. Second of all, I found nothing in her presentation that would be infuriating to a genuine LDS member. Instead of relying on hearsay and folk traditions and unofficial sources, as those do in support of eternal polygamy, she went to the scriptures and simply stuck to the clear message of D&C 132 in her presentation. I enjoyed her remarks and think they will help bring clarity to that troublesome subject in the future. Maybe that's why the antis and apostates are so eager to disagree with and discredit her.
Later, Calmoriah helpfully provided a quote from Elder Oaks himself:
Dallin Oaks wrote:If I talked about that I'd be making doctrinal statements where the prophet has not chosen to make doctrinal statements, so I think I shouldn't say anything except to affirm that a lot of people, myself included, are in multiple-marriage situations. Look at the significance of that.
http://newsroom.LDS.org/article/elder-o ... ocumentaryNow look at this passage from Valerie Hudson:
If this interpretation of Doctrine and Covenants 132 is correct, then some interesting things begin to happen to our casual acceptance of certain “folkways” accepted uncritically in LDS culture. A whole new vision begins to appear when we understand from God’s own reasoning that monogamy is the rule, polygamy is the exception, and he is not indifferent between the two because the second is an Abrahamic sacrifice in his eyes and the first is not. Serious doubt is now cast on a variety of pervasive assumptions concerning polygamy in our culture.
http://squaretwo.org/Sq2ArticleCasslerPolygamy.htmlHere are the two key elements again, side-by-side:
Elder Oaks wrote:the prophet has not chosen to make doctrinal statements, so I think I shouldn't say anything except to affirm that a lot of people, myself included, are in multiple-marriage situations.
Valerie Hudson wrote:that monogamy is the rule, polygamy is the exception, and [God] is not indifferent between the two
Now, maybe I'm reaching here, but if *I* were Elder Oaks, and *I* were in a "multiple-marriage situation," and if I happened to hear of a "so-called intellectual" saying that "[God] is not indifferent" and that "monogamy is the rule," I might take some issue with this sort of rhetoric. Notice that Elder Oaks is hesitant to actually weigh in, whereas Hudson comes right out and tries to make a much more definitive argument. And yet, all of this seems to sail right over the heads of the MDD TBMs. I wonder how confident "Scotty Dog" Lloyd or Pahoran would feel telling Elder Oaks to his face that "monogamy is the rule."
"[I]f, while hoping that everybody else will be honest and so forth, I can personally prosper through unethical and immoral acts without being detected and without risk, why should I not?." --Daniel Peterson, 6/4/14