liz3564 wrote:Chap and I started a side conversation on Scratch's thread about Tvedtnes. Since I didn't think it was fair to derail Scratch's thread any further, I thought any who would care to could continue the discussion here.
I mentioned on the other thread that DCP was disappointed in David Bokyvoy not being appointed to a Professor position at BYU in the Religion department.
There has been a lot of talk about Bradford's releasing of DCP from his MI editorial duties as part of a transition from the "Old Guard" to the "New Guard".
There has also been talk, on this board, in particular, about David Bokyvoy being a top contender as a "New Guard" LDS Apologist.
There has also been talk about contention between the two guards. That being the case, I find it a tad ironic that David Bokyvoy was the FIRST apologist asked by DCP to write an article for his new Internet magazine, "Mormon Interpreter", which, has been referred to, as a "sustaining of the Old Guard".
Comments?
The first comment that comes to mind is that, as usual, Scratch is pulling "theories" out of thin air; and as usual, his adoring fans lack the critical thinking skills to process them.
As you pointed out, DCP likes David Bokovoy, and there is no sign that he regards him as either a threat or any kind of upstart.
More to the point, the notion that Bradford is trying to create some kind of "New Guard" LDS apologetics is an original one, and I have no idea where it comes from. His published articles, along with his antics at the MI, make it clear that he wants to dispense with LDS apologetics altogether and do "Mormon Religious Studies" instead.
Bradford's "vision" is that BYU, with the MI leading the way, should become the premier institution doing Mormon Studies. He sees Mormon Studies as a genteel conversation among top-level academics who all speak the same language; and who, I suspect, have far more in common with each other than with less-educated followers of any faith tradition, anywhere. He also thinks apologetics should not be done by the MI, but by non-affiliated organisations such as FAIR. I personally suspect that he sees religious apologetics as crass, unseemly, unworthy of real scholars and a distraction to the "real" work of the MI, which he sees as garnering intellectual respectability among academic elites.
Regards,
Pahoran