Dr. Bradford wrote:I’ve also discovered that my love affair with God is best expressed in terms of a range of things that I try my best to do – worship him with full intent (with all that this entails in terms of fasting, prayer, singing hymns, and so forth), partake of the Lord’s Supper (in an attitude of repentance and thanksgiving, while promising to always remember him and abide by his commandments), and participate in prescribed priesthood ordinances aimed at blessing others (while also being the recipient of blessings by this same means) and by this and other means try my level best to deal properly with them and do right by them (with all that it entails) – more so than by focusing on my beliefs about God or other related matters or on what I say or write about him.
What this, tellingly, seems to indicate, is that, for Bradford, God is a rather nebulous entity - perhaps in a much more abstract sense than for the majority of faithful, believing LDS - then the very concrete (yet perfect and infinite) being defined and clarified in the scriptures and modern revelation, as the Church understands such.
Bradford participates in worship and priesthood activities, but in the name of a God that he doesn't appear to understand concretely or have grasped in a coherent, conceptually organized manner. Why else would it not matter to Bradford what God was and
was actually like ("what I say and write about him) relative to various religious activities and practices associated with God?
I find that my perspective on this differs from others, including, it seems, some fellow Saints.
It "seems?" Yes, given the very clear and divinely revealed fundamental knowledge (with emphasis on this dispensation, as that term is understood in LDS thought) regarding God's basic nature, character, and attributes, as revealed by living prophets in our day (concepts which, one would think, Bradford would be well acquainted with, given his long association with the church as a member), Bradford's misty, indistinct conceptualization of God is rather baffling, especially given the characterization of this as a "testimony."
It has been my experience that many Latter-day Saints view their faith almost exclusively from the vantage point of what they believe, rather than in reference to the many things the Savior asks them to do.
This is incoherent. What the Savior asks them to do is an integral aspect of what they believe about him, just as God's ontological features are key in understanding what he asks of us and why. What is Bradford trying to say here?
This may account, at least in part, for why some find a need to elaborate on, if not speculate about, a whole range of church teachings or beliefs (what are often referred to as “doctrines”), thereby giving the impression that the gospel of Jesus Christ is complex and that to be a Latter-day Saint means devoting a great deal of time and effort trying to figure out what all these beliefs mean, how they hang together, how they can best be used to explain things, and so forth. I once understood my faith this way. But not any more.
This is fascinating and telling in its contemporary (precisely post baby boom) psychology and attitudinal position, for both a LDS and a scholar - supposedly an "intellectual." The entire historic LDS focus on teh gaining if knowledge, education, learning by "study and also by faith," and seeking deep knowledge and wisdom, is here ejected from Mormonism as beneath elite, cloistered academic contempt. It appears that, for Bradford, nothing that is not "scholarly," in a professional, academic sense (as he and his cohorts understand this) is worthy of consideration as reliable or worthwhile knowledge. Apologetics, for Bradford, apparently falls outside the boundaries of legitimate intellectual activity. Period. This is, as well, a traditional conceit, smugly reiterated time and again, by the traditional secularized apostate intellectuals who have become the church's most vigorous and serious opponents.
Bradford, astoundingly, has here deracinated the gospel of any philosophical depth, meaning, or intellectual complexity - denuding it (very much as Sister Brooks does, in another way) of the vast, panoramic philosophical penetration of the "terrible questions" the gospel itself teaches the gospel exists to answer and explore. Bradford appears here to want a kind of LDS version of an intellectually unengaged, philosophically and theologically neutered mainstream Protestant "social gospel" that is, laudably, concerned with doing good, Christian things for each other, but unconcerned about the larger metaphysical/cosmological truths the gospel exists to focus our minds and hearts upon (exaltation, and our place in the universe, in other words).
I suspect that what Bradford is really trying to get at here is a kind of LDS version of the "overlapping magisterium" of the late Stephan J. Gould. The idea here, and I think this is what we may be seeing in the purging of Danial, Midgely et al from the NMI, is the relegating of the gospel and church to the safe and unthreatening realm of ethics and morality, while leaving description and discourse about "reality" (everything else, including the fundamental nature of the universe and humans themselves) in strictly secular theoretic and philosophical hands.
This is an old, old project, and dates, in one form or another, since the 18th century. Its presence among LDS intellectuals who consider themselves "faithful" or "believing" LDS is no puzzle (the parable of the sower subsumes all of this within its conceptual precincts very well), but it is a challenge to the Church and the long and wearying war to compartmentalize the gospel and spiritual concerns from intellectual.
To see this modernist conceit alive and well among the management of what was once FARMS, and connected, apparantly, to attitudes being cultivated within BYU, is, indeed, alarming.
There is no reason - none - why two new institutions could not have been created here, one dedicated to scholarly apologetics, and another dedicated to more generalized religious scholarship with relevance to the Church if and when it arises. The hurried and ham fisted purging of NMI to make room for Bradford's intellectual allies bespeaks another mentality at work.
(Note: I have returned to this forum for one reason, and one reason only, and that is to deal with this issue and provide some counterpoint and alternative perspective in what now is a full fledged echo chamber. lI will not be engaging anyone on any other subject, or entertaining any ad hominem cut down contests that will arise due to my very presence here).