But given that his apparent wish is to abandon an apologetic bent in favor of "scholarly" study of the Restored Gospel,
This bespeaks a well known and deeply embedded assumption, but one that is of little concern to serious intellectuals from within the faithful apologetic tradition. We've had scholarly study of the restored gospel all along. Its been known as FARMS and NMI.
What Bradford and his followers appear to want to do is remove the apologetic aspect of that scholarly work from the NMI. This means, yes, the end of scholarly apologetics at NMI, and its replacement with a tiny in-group of religious scholars talking primarily to themselves on various scholarly subjects related to religion and the Church, but without apologetic content.
Such an institute is not problematic in and of itself. The question is why did apologetics as an intellectual pursuit have to be destroyed to make way for it.
Answer: it didn't, and therein lies the problem.