MCB wrote:OK, I am exploring
http://www.gnosis.org/library.html Since you mention hermeticism, that is probably the area I ought to concentrate on. Any other recommendations?
No, unfortunately. The vocabulary is really tricky. What's magic? That's what Quinn thinks he's seeing (and says Masonry is outside of it). Brooke insists that Mormonism is heremeticism and has a definition for that (and says that it includes Masonary). What's gnosticism?(Which Bloom thinks all Americans are including US Catholics) What's mysticism? You can really go cross-eyed.
MCB wrote:Yes, I was sending up a clay pigeon in saying it was totally different, it is just that the fever to please God was especially intense in Nauvoo, because of the fevers.
This is new to me, thanks for mentioning it.
MCB wrote:Therefore, the blending of the various fibers was more pronounced. As Dan Vogel says, it was an effort to contrive a religion which would please all subscribers.
And that's a trick. Too narrow and you don't have much of a market base. Too broad and you look just like everyone else so why should I buy your soap?
MCB wrote:The patchwork needed to be rearranged.
And Bloom would say that this was Joseph Smith's minor genius.
MCB wrote:So when was speaking in tongues forbidden?
Well this is one thing that is so interesting. It never gets forbidden. It just dies out. So I wouldn't try it in Fast and Testimony Meeting these days.The last instance I found was in the late 1800's but I was only looking at women. Carol Lynn Pearson's book on early Mormon women has all known references for women cataloged. It can be hard to get a copy. Anything more pentecostal than speaking in tongues was a no-no after Joseph Smith got to OH and no one else could have a seer stone.
Too individualistic/democratic you risk having the centripital forces spin you apart.
Too authoritarian, and most people will run away.
MCB wrote:I probably would see the evolution in a consecutive reading of D & C.
This strikes me as a good idea. I've never done it that way.
MCB wrote:My concentration is on Nauvoo (of course), but I also take the broader view-- necessary.
IMHO it's real hard to know where to begin. I tend to start with the Big Bang. But that's not a successful approach. I don't recommend it.
MCB wrote:Don't you just love mixed metaphors? Your post was a consistent masterpiece.
You're too kind. I thought it was such a jumble I almost took it down.
