honorentheos wrote:Starting with Elder Oak's first quote, 1 Timothy 4:1
Now the Spirit speaketh expressly, that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils;
I think the point Kishkumen made about the value of the historical context applies. Consider, for example, this scripture from the New Testament:
1 John 2:18
Dear children, this is the last hour; and as you have heard that the antichrist is coming, even now many antichrists have come. This is how we know it is the last hour.
This raises quite a number of questions. Is the author here speaking to you as a 21st Century Mormon? Or to those in their own time? I suspect most Mormon's would agree there is an immediate audience intended here, but then tend to "liken the scriptures" to suggest there is applications for modern Bible readers.
Thus the historical question: Has there ever been a time when established religion did not harbor the same feelings towards the inevitable cultural evolution and change at work in any social order? And wouldn't the same scriptures quoted by Oaks have application in a multitude of settings throughout history? Could they be stripped of their Christian color and repainted with Islamic tones and be used within that culture just as legitimately? Or by GE to complain about Google?
What exactly is it that was said that isn't best seen as the eternal tug-of-war that takes place in human cultures?
Moving to a more specific point the authorship of 1 Timothy is questioned in biblical scholarship, as I understand it because 1 Timothy and Titus bear vocabulary markers of later documents that deal with church governance, and that have a different voice from 2 Timothy which is considered to have at least some material authentic to Paul if perhaps restructured from multiple sources into one epistle.
In light of the latter, you have a 21st C. person citing a pseudepigraphic text (attributed thus to give it authority the actual author did not possess?) in order to contest challengers to the establishment that was written perhaps with intent to address similar issues in the early centuries of the Christian era.
What it says to me is there is nothing new under the sun. Especially when it comes to established bodies resisting change agents.
Well done, honorentheos. One can bring countless examples to the table. Each shows that the alleged certainties upheld, the faith defended, and the claims forwarded all rely upon highly contestable or dubious views. A smattering of learning and information is used to mollify nervous members whose friends went to that Denver Snuffer fireside, and all the while the real issues are avoided. And what are the real issues?
Is the real issue the fact that religion is not fact based?
Hello duh!
That can't be the real issue. There will always be a fresh supply of decent folk who don't know enough to catch the many errors in religious claims. If acquiring a little learning should teach anyone anything, it is that the depths of our human ignorance are terrifying. But too many people lack even that perspective, so when their friendly neighbors or the 19 year old optimists come around to tell you about Jesus in America, they say, "why not?" And before they know it they are committing to hand over 10% of their income to a corporation with vast real estate holdings including vacation homes for its leaders.
No, the real questions are these: Why care? Why sacrifice? The LDS Church offers less compelling reasons all the time. Many people figure this out right after baptism. The wonderful picture the missionaries presented (including lots of attention from fresh-faced teenage kids) evaporates when the reality of a dreary ward routine sinks in. The teachings are dry and repetitive. The aesthetic is soul destroying outside of a few old-timey hymns. There are lots of pointless, time-wasting meetings. Ideally you are culturally illiterate, white, conservative, and cisgender (or at least a preponderance of the aforementioned). Otherwise, chances are you will eventually either quit or embrace the religion as a Zen exercise of some kind.
I can't shake the hugely insightful post Symmachus published in December of 2014. It was so spot on. My wife and I have said it to each other repeatedly: It is one thing for the Church not to be true; what is truly damning is that it is miserable.
"Petition wasn’t meant to start a witch hunt as I’ve said 6000 times." ~ Hanna Seariac, LDS apologist