ldsfaqs wrote:MrStakhanovite wrote:I listed to all of it today, whilst laying in agony on the couch. I enjoyed it, and I was amused at all the stuff that surprised them (Smith’s polyandry and such) while being active employees for the CES for years, putting the lie to the tired mopologist rant about how apostates never researched their faith.
CES employees teach the "Gospel"..... They don't teach every nuance of history.
It is upon every CES employee to study and prepare their subjects themselves.
Thus, it's not the Churches fault that these particular CES employees didn't know certain things of history, it's their own faults.
I am not sure that such things as the practice of polygamy by the founder of the CoJCoLDS at the scale of 30+ women will be seen by many as mere 'nuances of history'.
It's good, however, to see such a clear statement of the defensive position that goes "If we didn't tell you about it, you should have found out for yourself".
And by the way, surely CES employees with teaching responsibilities are not only not obliged to study any materials other than those provided by church authorities in preparation for their teaching, but are positively discouraged from doing so?
See "Lesson 11: Keeping the Doctrine Pure," Part B: Basic Principles of Gospel Teaching—Teach the Doctrine, where we find:
Use Church-Produced Lesson Materials
To help us teach from the scriptures and the words of latter-day prophets, the Church has produced lesson manuals and other materials. There is little need for commentaries or other reference material. We should study the scriptures, teachings of latter-day prophets, and lesson materials thoroughly to be sure we correctly understand the doctrine before we teach it.
So much for independent study to find out about things the church does not tell you.
and ...
Private Interpretations and Unorthodox Views
President J. Reuben Clark Jr. said, “Only the President of the Church, the Presiding High Priest, is sustained as Prophet, Seer, and Revelator for the Church, and he alone has the right to receive revelations for the Church, either new or amendatory, or to give authoritative interpretations of scriptures that shall be binding on the Church, or change in any way the existing doctrines of the Church” (in Church News, 31 July 1954, 10). We should not teach our private interpretation of gospel principles or the scriptures.
Elder Spencer W. Kimball stated: “There are those today who seem to take pride in disagreeing with the orthodox teachings of the Church and who present their own opinions which are at variance with the revealed truth. Some may be partially innocent in the matter; others are feeding their own egotism; and some seem to be deliberate. Men may think as they please, but they have no right to impose upon others their unorthodox views. Such persons should realize that their own souls are in jeopardy” (in Conference Report, Apr. 1948, 109).
In other words, if you do carry out independent research and come to conclusions at variance with what the manuals say, shut up about it.