mikwut wrote:
Hi BCspace,
The problem I have with your reconciliation attempt with Mormon belief frameworks and evolution is that it creates just as difficult of problems even if one concedes to you that you have provided a successful reconciliation, (which I don't).
For example, if you are successful, what need is there for a restored church with a revelatory leader to remain vague on the subject? Why would your leaders not sustain your construction outright and plain? For example the Catholic church with at least closely analogous leaders did just that.
BCspace replied: I'm not sure I understand the question. What do you my by "if you are successful"?
I simply meant if I conceded that your scriptural and doctrinal reconciliation is consistent at least in principle with the words from Mormon scripture, if your right about that you have created two (worse probably) problems. One, why don't the leaders of your church simply concede that? The Catholic church has.
Quote mikwut:
Second. If one understands how Genesis is understood as myth and understood in the time that it was authored (for example see, Nahum M. Sarna's Understanding Genesis - it's free on Kindle) its construction was purposeful in contrast to other myths. It historical can make sense. You have to accept that kind of history if your reading Mormon scripture in a symbolic manner. It would have been properly understood at that time. For example - see St. Augustine's On the Literal Meaning of Genesis and how he makes this point.
BSspace asked in response: Can you be more plain? I highly doubt I'll be reading these works any time soon.
There is a historical place and time for the Genesis type of writing. The biblical man didn't construct his worldview or base his views of the universe and its laws on empirical data. He hadn't even discovered the scientific method of inquiry, critical observation or analytical experimentation yet. Biblical man's thinking was imaginative, and his expressions of thought were concrete, pictorial, emotional, and poetic. So it is simply futile to make attempts to reconcile the biblical accounts of creation with the findings of modern science from a Christian pov. That approach to Genesis would ignore the actual intention, meaning and purpose of the Genesis narrative that reflect the time and place of its writing and would destroy its relevancy. So when Christians defend scripture and evolution like you are doing they have consistent historical reasons for doing so.
The Doctrine and Covenants comes from a certain historical place and time - a culture that did understand empirical observation and experimentation and was not steeped in the poetic framework that biblical man was in constructing its worldviews. It was post-enlightenment historically. So if you attempt to reconcile evolution with Mormonism you face the following dilemma. One, you are not doing so in a literal (six thousand years etc..) fashion. But the metaphorical doesn't fit culturally in the time and place of Joseph Smith and/or us today as it did for the ancients. So you would be defending some sort of scriptural writing that endures through all cultures and times and remains the same type of writing. But the Bible itself doesn't remain static like that, nor does the Book of Mormon - so why would 19th century scripture of the doctrine and covenants attempt to convey through scripture outside of its time and place?
I don't see how my hypothesis conflicts with either a mythical or a literal (because we don't know the details) reading of Genesis 1 except for the fact that I don't accept a global Flood (and therefore I don't accept the baptism of the earth doctrine as it stands).
You aren't necessarily conflicting with Genesis with your evolution ideas because you got your basic strategy for that from Christianity proper (or at least from Mormons who did), but you have forgotten while borrowing from Christianity to understand exactly what that entails, what 'myth' means. It doesn't mean your imagination can elastically go anywhere it wants. It means you are bound and have to understand the myth from the time and place from where it sprang.
For example, there are literal facets of Genesis. For example when you separate the Genesis creation myth from the other creation myth examples such as the Enuma Elish, Genesis is definitely saying some concrete things, i.e. that there was a beginning. That is an understanding of fact from the Genesis narrative whether it is understood literally or figuratively. It is one of the things that is so special and unique about the Genesis creation account. Other myths of the time have creation coming from forming chaos into order, from things coming from other things, but Genesis was different. It was subversive from those myths, it was contra, "In the Beginning" was a powerful way to start a creation myth. New ground is broken if you will. The Jews in the Torah took this same principled understanding of creation from Genesis and they incorporated it into their understanding of 'Law', coming from a divine authoritative source in a beginning.
I hope that clears up some of your confusions. You basically don't understand ancient scripture so you don't understand how your attempts at reconciliation will either conflict with evolution or they will conflict with scripture. There is no way out of this. You ignore the one when you claim a victory for the other.
regards, mikwut
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All communication relies, to a noticeable extent on evoking knowledge that we cannot tell, all our knowledge of mental processes, like feelings or conscious intellectual activities, is based on a knowledge which we cannot tell.
-Michael Polanyi
"Why are you afraid, have you still no faith?" Mark 4:40