DarkHelmet wrote:The "not doctrine" defense is a losing argument. Nobody cares if the church or their apologists classify something as doctrine or not. Was it taught? Yes, but.... NO BUTS. If it was taught, that's all that really matters. .
And further try making that statement to NON LDS with a straight face. Sort of like this:
Non Member Newperson: So you believe Brigham Young was a prophet of God correct?
Apologist: Yes indeed.
Newperson: That God spoke to him, gave him direction, commandments and all that, like Moses?
Apologist: Yes, of course.
Newsperson: Well what about all those things he said about the blacks?
Apologist: Not doctrine just his opinion.
Newsperson: Huh? He said an awful lot about this over many years and some of it even sounded pretty much like he thought God was telling him this stuff.
Apologist: No just his opinion.
Newsperson: Really? So the man who speaks for God can give his opinion over and over and even though it sounds like he thinks God is telling him this stuff it is just his opinion? What else do these guys get wrong? Seems like doctrine to me.
I mean really a nonmember will not understand this nuanced argument at all. You cannot claim that God is directing his Church and the back peddle away from so much of what is was said over and over. I am not taking about an aberrations or a statement here or there. I am talkiing about things said many times that the apologist wants to back away from.
It really makes the LDS leaders look like bumblers.
On the other hand accepting much of what they said as doctrine causes its own problems. Maybe this is a no win deal and arguing that often the prophets and apostles really did not know what they were talking about is the lesser evil.