Sethbag wrote:Yeah, it's pretty funny. Well, so it goes. Just as tribal loyalty seems to be important to Mormons, there must be something like "anti-tribal loyalty", or "tribal anti-loyalty" that is the corollary impulse amongst apostates.
Human nature, of course.
I don't think I'd describe it as "tribal loyalty," though. I won't comment further on the apostate side of things, but perhaps you'll see what I mean from my remarks below:
Sethbag wrote:Speaking of tribal loyalty, I can totally believe that J. F. McConkie knows your testimony, and that that's good enough for him. Every fast Sunday a handful of people in the ward will stand up and publicly express their loyalty to the tribe, and everyone expects and welcomes that expression. It's all about everyone knowing that you are a believer, that you "know" that the church is true, stand by Joseph Smith, etc. People seldom really want to delve into specifics.
I don't believe that "loyalty to the tribe" is an adequate or accurate way of characterizing a conviction that the claims of the Church are true and that Joseph Smith was a prophet. Socially, I could take Church activity or leave it. But I do accept certain propositions as conforming to reality.
Sethbag wrote:Can you imagine the squirming, and the awkwardness, if you stood up and bore your testimony about the lessons of the Flood, even though you knew the flood hadn't really happened on a global scale like the church teaches, but was either metaphor or just a local flood? Can you imagine the squirming and awkwardness if you bore your testimony of the lessons you learned from the metaphor of the Fall, even though you knew it hadn't literally happened in the way the church teaches?
I can and do bear my testimony of lessons to be learned from Flood and Fall. I would never, of course, bear testimony to my particular constructs of how they occurred, because those constructs are purely the result of my serious engagement with the relevant texts, and I don't regard them as revelation. In fact, I hold them fairly tentatively. But I think they put me well within the Mormon ballpark. From my point of view, you grossly overestimate the distance between me and a Bruce McConkie on such things.
Sethbag wrote:I have been in quite a few Sunday School and Priesthood quorum meetings where someone took the discussion off the beaten path. Every single time something like evolution, conflicts between LDS doctrines about the Fall and the scientific record, and so forth have ever come up in any meeting I've attended over the years, it has been shut down by the teacher or someone else in the class, as soon as it becomes clear that material will be discussed which disagrees or challenges the Church's public teachings on the subjects.
My goal, when teaching such things, is to stay pretty close to the text. I am, however, as willing to engage in speculation as anybody in the Church is, and I do it a lot. I simply want to make sure that it's clearly distinguishable from what I would teach in Gospel Doctrine class or preach in sacrament meeting. I don't devote such opportunities to limited geographical models, either.
Sethbag wrote:As long as one is known to have a testimony, as long as their loyalty to the tribe can be counted on, people simply don't want to know what else you may or may not believe.
That hasn't been my experience at all. People always want to know what I believe. And, in many settings, I'm happy to oblige. If asked, I would explain my speculations in Gospel Doctrine class, too. I've done so. No problem.
Sethbag wrote:Instead it's ignored - people pretend there's unity of belief with their fellow members, so long as the Prime Directive, tribal loyalty, can be counted on.
But there is considerable unity of belief, and I don't think that "tribal loyalty" comes anywhere near to describing it. In fact, calling it "tribal loyalty" seems to me a very fundamental category error, rather like calling poetry "purple," or describing generosity as "angular."
Sethbag wrote:If we could manage to sit down in a group with me, you, and Elder WhatsHisName the literalist, and hash out exactly what it is we believe about things like evolution, death before Adam, the global Flood, and so forth, I would bet good money that things would get awfully uncomfortable, at the very least Elder WhatsHisBucket would feel threatened, or scared, or challenged in some way.
But restricting it merely to a list of things where we view things differently would be an artificial and even question-begging approach.
If you were to ask me about my belief in real golden plates, genuine Nephites, the real restoration of priesthood authority, the physical resurrection of Christ, God's role in the creation of the universe, the appearance of the Father and the Son to Joseph Smith, the visit of Elijah to the Kirtland Temple, the reality of Moroni, the restoration of vicarious work for the dead, the doctrine of theosis or exaltation, the prophetic leadership of the Church, and etc., Elder WhatsHisName the Literalist would feel, and rightly so, that I was a genuine brother in the faith.
Thanks, again, for the civility. It's a refreshing change of pace.