Everyone has shown that it's racist.
No one has shown that yet. Neither the doctrine or even the speculation has the cause of the ban being based on skin color or any inborn phenotype.
Everyone has shown that it's racist.
I suppose I can agree that the explanation "We don't know" is less racist than the other explanations that Church leaders, "scholars," and apologists have given. Then again, the ban itself and the various explanations for the reasons for the ban are two different things. I don't see how anyone can seriously argue that the ban itself was somehow not racist.
bcspace wrote:It is done by noting the cause of the ban, disobedience (emphasis added)
bcspace wrote:
It is done by noting the cause of the ban, disobedience, and the basis for who is under the ban, lineage, have nothing to do with racism which is a judgement of inferiority based on some inborn phenotype.
The "actual cogent evidential connections" are very simple: the ban excluded blacks. "Black" is a designation used to describe race. Therefore, the ban was racist.
Even if you want to head down the rabbit hole of bizarre, scripturally-based, exegetical "explanations" for the ban, the fact remains that, in practice, it was racist.
I don't know what additional "facts, or documentary evidence" you need:
there are mountains of statements from GAs, scripture, Church articles, news articles, and so on documenting all of this.
If you consistently refuse to speak with or look at people of a specific race, it doesn't really matter what your explanation is for doing so; the fact remains that your behavior is racist.
You can say that you have a scriptural basis for shunning these people--that it actually has to do with lineage, or a message from God, or whatever.
You can say that you "don't know" why you consistently shun and exclude these people. Your explanation ultimately doesn't matter if your actions are demonstrably racist. And the same is true of the priesthood ban. Cook up whatever rationale you want: it's not going to change the practical facts of the matter.
Droopy wrote:The claimed basis in lineage and culture (clearly elucidated in the Book of Mormon with another people), as over against "race" (a conept appearing nowhere in either the Book of Abraham or Book of Mormon) implies that black skin was never more than correlated with the ban. Further, the "curse" requiring restriction of priesthood was not the ban itself. The ban was a consequence of the restriction placed in primordial antiquity upon a specific lineage descending from Noah.
Doctor Scratch wrote:Droopy,
If the ban was purely about "lineage" and "culture" or whatever, then why don't you provide just one example of a non-black person of "African descent" who was denied the priesthood? If this didn't have anything to do with skin color, then surely you can find just one example of a person of this lineage who happened to have light skin who was nonetheless denied the priesthood.
I believe that in Brazil people were asked whether they had African ancestry. Not that it matters. The doctrine and practice were clearly racist, no matter how many convoluted, obscure, and pseudo-sophisticated explanations these yahoos conjure.