RockSlider wrote:So is Ehat still an active (orthodox?) Mormon?
Yes. At least he was at the time I visited with him.
RockSlider wrote:So is Ehat still an active (orthodox?) Mormon?
grindael wrote:I think Joseph, with the Council of Fifty, was endeavoring to separate the Priesthood from earthly Kingship. David was king over Israel, but Samuel the Prophet would have held the sealing keys. Therefore Samuel could lead the church without the sealing keys because he was of the right lineage. They were also teaching the right to the Priesthood by literal descent. There was much going on in this period. This is why Young later preached that he had a right to the priesthood by literal descent.
Joseph taught about calling and election early in Nauvoo. It was something that would be given as a gift from God. What Joseph did, was invent the "sealing power" that made him God on earth. (He got the idea from an English convert Ann Booth, who had a vision of people being baptized in the spirit world. Joseph then claimed that they must be baptized here, and "sealed"). This got all of it rolling.
grindael wrote:I probably did not explain myself very well. Joseph encapsulated all of it. Prophet, Priest and King. Lawgiver. My comment about separation is exactly as you say, Kish, a separation of the political kingdom of God from the Priesthood, not that the Priesthood would not rule over it, but that one didn't necessarily have to have the Priesthood to be part of it. Therefore, Samuel could be appointed successor to Joseph, with the promise that he had the right to it by BLOOD. He didn't need to have the fullness of the Priesthood beforehand. David was king and did not have the fullness of the priesthood, and he was king before he transgressed, so he was raised to the leadership of all Israel without the fullness of the priesthood. The same could be applied to Samuel H. Smith. See Joseph's teachings on this from April 1844 in the Council of Fifty Minutes.
orangganjil wrote:Excellent thread, Reverand. With all of that going on, isn't it interesting that the actual work of Jesus (Gethsemane, cross, etc.) made available to all believers (multiple times in the New Testament people are referred to as being sons and daughters of God, inheriting all that Jesus provided - are we to believe that they also received their "second anointing" as well?) as symbolized by the veil being torn from the temple at Jesus' death (this makes sense if you study the Day of Atonement ritual, to which the author of Hebrews refers when discussing this topic), is being relegated to some theological backwater incapable of saving and exalting?
Maksutov wrote:The Council of 50 would have included some sympathetic non-members who could not have held the priesthood. Such individuals were likely intended to interface with gentiles when the need to send in a surrogate was there. Kind of like how Jewish Hyman Roth used Sicilian Johnny Ola in The Godfather.
Madison54 wrote:They were stolen by a member of a Mormon Bishopric.
"In doing research in LDS Church history, Andrew F. Ehat, . . . obtained permission to examine the restricted Nauvoo diaries of William Clayton and make notes. He gave a copy of his notes to BYU religion instructor Lyndon Cook, who kept them in his campus office. The notes were taken without permission and photocopied by . . . a member of a bishopric which uses Cook's office." (Seventh East Press, January 18, 1982)
http://www.utlm.org/newsletters/no48.htm
Kishkumen wrote:Madison54 wrote:They were stolen by a member of a Mormon Bishopric.
"In doing research in LDS Church history, Andrew F. Ehat, . . . obtained permission to examine the restricted Nauvoo diaries of William Clayton and make notes. He gave a copy of his notes to BYU religion instructor Lyndon Cook, who kept them in his campus office. The notes were taken without permission and photocopied by . . . a member of a bishopric which uses Cook's office." (Seventh East Press, January 18, 1982)
http://www.utlm.org/newsletters/no48.htm
Doesn't surprise me. There is a huge demand for restricted Mormon documents. One of my friends had a photocopy of the Clayton diaries in the early '90s.
Madison54 wrote:Yeah, well Ehat was the leak and the entire episode was a huge embarrassment for him. Many have believed this led to the church archives being closed (or at least contributed to it). The leaders of the church were not happy with him.
He actually dropped out of school for a semester trying to track down all of the copies and eventually sued the Tanners (who printed their copy and it's still available on their website). Ehat won the first trial, but lost on appeal. The court eventually ruled that he did not own the copyright. I can't remember if the court stated that no one owned the copyright or if William Clayton did. Either way, Ehat lost. Much of what was leaked was quite damaging to the church (mainly the truth about Joseph Smith and polygamy).
Here's a thread with a bit more about it:
viewtopic.php?f=1&t=12944&view=previous