Kishkumen wrote:I thought it was a fantastic presentation, filled with many new discoveries that, to the discerning eye, completely transform the history of LDS temple cult.
Looking forward to his book!
hc
Kishkumen wrote:I thought it was a fantastic presentation, filled with many new discoveries that, to the discerning eye, completely transform the history of LDS temple cult.
This sounds like a big deal, actually.Kishkumen wrote:I thought it was a fantastic presentation, filled with many new discoveries that, to the discerning eye, completely transform the history of LDS temple cult.
zeezrom wrote:This sounds like a big deal, actually.Kishkumen wrote:I thought it was a fantastic presentation, filled with many new discoveries that, to the discerning eye, completely transform the history of LDS temple cult.
Hasa Diga Eebowai wrote:I don't however agree with his conclusions about the items he claims as being considered as relics within some Nephite Ark of the Covenant inside their replica of Solomon's Temple. Maybe when they find that long lost Nephite temple, but maybe if the LDS Church gets Indiana Jones on the case they might find it. It is an interesting idea, but I don't find it very convincing.
Hasa Diga Eebowai wrote:I tried to find the Lapham quote from the Don Bradley presentation and couldn't find it. It wasn't until I checked both Lapham's account that I found Bradley was slightly misquoting him,
From Don's article:
“What is that in your hand?”
From Lapham's interview in 1870:
"What have you got in your hand, there?"
While the difference in meaning isn't that big the significance when trying to compare it to other rituals is quite significant.
Hasa Diga Eebowai wrote:Since the temple ritual that Joseph Smith developed came from the symbolic language of freemasonry it would be significant to see when and how Joseph Smith was influenced by freemasonry from an early stage. I would be much more interested in a study on the influence of that aspect of Joseph Smith's upbringing and how it influenced early Mormonism and well as later Mormonism rather than an anachronistic claim that "“Nauvoo Mormonism,” “temple Mormonism,” is original and literal Mormonism".
Most of the things described seem to be a synthesis of Masonry, the Bible, Christianity and treasure seeking folk beliefs.
I don't however agree with his conclusions about the items he claims as being considered as relics within some Nephite Ark of the Covenant inside their replica of Solomon's Temple. Maybe when they find that long lost Nephite temple, but maybe if the LDS Church gets Indiana Jones on the case they might find it. It is an interesting idea, but I don't find it very convincing.
Don Bradley wrote:The Mosaic Law mandated that certain rituals be performed by the high priest, whom it was understood would be of the household of Aaron. But the Nephites didn’t have any Aaronic priests among them, nor any Levites. So, the only way they could fulfill the requirements of the Law would have been to use a substitute.
Don Bradley wrote:For the ancient Israelites this instrument was the stones of Urim and Thummim, kept in the pocket of a breastplate. The equivalent Nephite instrument, which also attaches to a breastplate, is called in the Book of Mormon "the interpreters" and in revelation to Joseph Smith "the Urim and Thummim."
Don Bradley wrote:We go from the “who” now to the “how” of Nephite temple worship. Nephi wrote that he had built a temple like that of Solomon. This statement has drawn guffaws from critics, who note the enormous scale and grandeur of Solomon’s temple. But it isn’t the scale and grandeur of Solomon’s temple that made it a model for Nephi’s. Nephi wanted his temple to be like Solomon’s, not in size, but in functionality. To perform the rituals prescribed by the Law of Moses his people would need a temple parallel to Solomon’s in rooms and relics.
Don Bradley wrote:the all-important Day of Atonement
Don Bradley wrote:But while the Nephites’ omission of the Ark of the Covenant from their temple is, as he says, understandable, it is also glaring. The Jerusalem temple was, in one sense, a house for the Ark of the Covenant.
Don Bradley wrote:The Ark, bearing as it did the stone tablets God touched with His finger on Sinai during the Exodus, provided Israel an embodiment of His presence.
Don Bradley wrote:The relevant relics associated with the Ark and the High Priest were as follows: in the Ark were the stone tablets God had touched during the Exodus, and according to the Epistle to the Hebrews, also Aaron’s rod that budded and a pot of manna. And we’ve already discussed the High Priest’s Urim and Thummim and breastplate, which attached to a garment referred to as the ephod.
Don Bradley wrote:In an article a few years in ago in The Journal of Book of Mormon Studies, Ben McGuire, building on the work of Noel Reynolds, examined the political implications of Nephi’s story of killing Laban. Nephi highlights the superior obedience that was to mark him as ruler over his brothers. He also in at least three places adopts language from the story of David killing Goliath, the incident that brought David to prominence and set him on the road to the throne and the founding of a dynasty. When, in Nephi’s narrative, we seen him vanquish the enemy who had terrified his older brothers, beheading him with his own sword, we are watching him follow precisely the footprints and sword strokes of King David.
Laban was Nephi’s Goliath. And Laban’s sword became a relic he passed on to his priest-king successors, in company with the other sacred artifacts.
Don Bradley wrote:The modeling of Nephite worship on early Israelite worship in Jerusalem has been explored by Kevin Christensen. Christensen describes key features of Jerusalem worship from the days of Lehi’s youth, before the heavy-handed Josian reform, and then observes that Nephite religion contained all of these, "with the understandable exception of the specific temple artifacts kept in the holy of holies, the ark of the covenant…and the cherubim."