S
SteveVH
Guest
Okay, I get it. (Iām a little slow sometimes.)Sorry, the first part was a response to you. When I mention Donatist, that part onward I was addressing him![]()
Okay, I get it. (Iām a little slow sometimes.)Sorry, the first part was a response to you. When I mention Donatist, that part onward I was addressing him![]()
Which breakaway? I was a member of the Restoration Church of Jesus Christ of LDS for twenty years (minus a short hiatus with the Remnant Church). And yes, I am Anglican (Episcopalian; like Robin Williams says, āCatholic Lite ā all the ritual and half the guilt!āWhat else do you see as the essential draw of restorationism? What else do you find are responses to restorationists that at least get them to think, if not meet some success in getting through to them the problems with their approach? I have a real interest in this, since my wife and her family are restorationists (of a conservative breakaway church from the RLDSāI presume one of thos āMissouri Mormonā groups youāre talking about). Iād love to talk with you more about your experiences and what you think is the best way to engage people in a discussion that could lead to a more full realization of Christ and his Church. (I realize you arenāt Catholicā¦but it sounds like youāre Anglican, presumably of a brand that is pretty āsmall cā catholic in nature, given your comments?)
Thank you ā as a former Mormon historian and now Episcopalian, that was a very interesting read!www.calledtocommunion.com has an article in its archives that I have greatly enjoyed and benefitted.
You guessed it! They used to be RLDS, but went with the Restoration Branches after the split in the '80s, and most of their branch also didnāt go with the JCRB (Joint Council of Restoration Branches), that semi-split that happened like 5-7 years ago or something (I wish I had paid more attention to that; we were in CO at the time, but that all went down a couple years into our marriage).Which breakaway? I was a member of the Restoration Church of Jesus Christ of LDS for twenty years (minus a short hiatus with the Remnant Church). And yes, I am Anglican (Episcopalian; like Robin Williams says, āCatholic Lite ā all the ritual and half the guilt!ā. Is her family in the Restoration Branches?
I have volumes of notes on all this and have been searching for the best, most charitable, but also effective way to engage in real discussion. Iām tired of dodging the main issues with little chats about individual doctrines, though, when those are really secondary to the main claims of a church.For me, the key was realizing that there was no āgreat apostasy.ā If there was no apostasy then there was no need for a restoration. Another thing that really got my attention was the account in John 6 of the real presence in the eucharist (reinforced by 1 Corinthians and other passages). That such a fundamental doctrine could be āmissedā by every single Mormon group really shook me. The recent work on Book of Mormon DNA has always been in the back of my mind as well ā if there was no Near Eastern migration to prehistoric America, then Mormonism collapses.
Donatist,Bingo! Thatās largely why I left Mormonism. I grew increasingly uncomfortable with Mormonismās doubletake on the sacraments of the Church. While Mormons believe that baptism is efficacious, that confirmation really does confer the Holy Spirit, and that ordination actually does bestow a divine power that otherwise isnāt there (all well and good), Mormons then turn right around and insist that the eucharist is a purely symbolic āmemorial supperā. (Which is really ironic since the Book of Mormon itself speaks of āthe body and blood of Christā in very literal terms, and the only time that Mormons kneel ā ever ā in public worship is when the eucharist is confected, if I can use those un-Mormon terms).
How can they claim to be āoriginal Christianityā if they got that part so fundamentally wrong?
From my ex-Mormon, devilās advocate p.o.v., that interpretation would rule out all revelation after Jesus ā which would rule out every word of the New Testament (except quotations from Jesus).There will be no further Revelation.
Graceland history professor Bill Russell, who is a good friend of mine, refers to the Restoration Branches as āSouthern Baptists with two extra books of scripture to interpret strictly.āāHigh Churchā Anglican? Diet Catholic, but with all that liturgical umami?
Are you in MO, then, if you donāt mind my asking? We are, now (Independenceāthe āCenter Placeā). Most people are familiar with Utah LDS/Mormons, and not so much with the other sectsāand then only the CoC/RLDS if that. Most of the other sects seem to be centered in MO like the CoCāis it more or less all of these that you refer to as the āMissouri Mormons?ā
Anyway, in my experience, the Restoration Branches (and, I think, the Remnant Church) are much more similar to traditional/mainline/conservative Protestants in most of their beliefs.
Can you share these reasonsā¦or how did you get to this conclusion there was no great apostasy?For me, the key was realizing that there was no āgreat apostasy.ā If there was no apostasy then there was no need for a restoration.
.
Thanks for the opportunity.Can you share these reasonsā¦or how did you get to this conclusion there was no great apostasy?
Thanks for the opportunity.
You are welcome and thank your for sharingā¦
What struck me there was how millions of Coptic Christians had managed to maintain their faith despite a millennium and a half of brutal repression. How could I possibly say that these people were not Christians, while I, living comfortably in the American Midwest, claimed that my church with a world-wide membership under 200 people were the āonly true Christiansā on earth?
I think you misunderstand me. This gets back to what we mean by ārevelation.ā One of the greatest barriers to communication between Mormons and Catholics has been that when we say that word, we mean different things. Catholics recognize several senses of the word, and Mormons add senses to it and then canāt seem to focus on any one sense, but consider them all at once.From my ex-Mormon, devilās advocate p.o.v., that interpretation would rule out all revelation after Jesus ā which would rule out every word of the New Testament (except quotations from Jesus)ā¦
Iāll have to research this. Iām not familiar with it. What Iām used to seeing is that historically, there have been many abuses, even with explicit consent of local Church authorities, but no official Magisterial endorsementāeven a rejection of the action then or later. Such as when the then-pope excommunicated the 4th Crusaders who sacked Constantinople, or how the popes tried to rein in the Spanish Inquisition and insisted that the Church had no authority over non-Catholics. There are plenty of statements throughout Church history that there can be no forced conversion, for instance.But clearly, nobody can credibly maintain that the declaration on religious liberty at the Second Vatican Council was a ādevelopmentā of an unchanging truth that was already āimplicitā in Unam Sanctam (where civil authorities were called upon to exterminate non-Catholics, and where the Eastern Orthodox were declared to be non-Christian).
But how do you know that? This is why you canāt have contradiction. You have to have a standard against which to compare or else one personās judgment of what ābrings the church closer to the revelation of God in Christā is quite subjective, and youāre ultimately back to the Protestant position of āyour personal interpretation winsā (a.k.a., making yourself God).There is nothing wrong with changing oneās teaching as long as the changes bring the church closer to the revelation of God in Christ. And that, I think, is what ārevelationā means for Christians today ā the deeper and more correct understanding of whatās already been ārevealedā but the understanding of which has been obscured by our cultural blinders. As an Episcopalian I would of course gladly add that the ordination of women and Gay people is just such a deeper appreciation of revealed truth, in this case that in Christ there is no male or female.
LOL, I might take that quote!Graceland history professor Bill Russell, who is a good friend of mine, refers to the Restoration Branches as āSouthern Baptists with two extra books of scripture to interpret strictly.ā![]()
I only came to love the liturgy after I studied how deeply rooted in Scripture it is, and how powerful a fulfillment of Salvation History it is, how wonderful a continuity with all believers of all timesā¦And yeah, my parish (All Saintsā in Milwaukee) is very high-church. I love it⦠my wife, who was raised Methodist, canāt stand it.She loves the people and the theology, but the bells-and-smells worship sets off her ADD.
Iāve been to the Auditorium for a couple Messiah performances, until that was taken away by the KC Symphony. Wandered the MC Escher halls that made me feel like I was lost in some sort of Gnostic, Masonic labyrinth. Havenāt been in the temple or Temple Lot church, but Iāve been to many of the historic Independence sites like the jail.Cool to learn youāre in Independence ā I miss Independence terribly. I havenāt returned there since I became Episcopalian but I know I will return within the next few years. Have you toured the local sites (C of C temple, Liberty Jail, Temple Lot church)? A book Iād recommend: Steven Shields, āDivergent Paths of the Restoration.ā Thumbnail sketches of hundreds of Restoration movement break-offs. Here in Wisconsin of course we have a small group of faithful Strangites. I left the Restoration Church around 2002 for a couple of years and joined the Remnant, after Marcus Juby (founder of the Restoration Church) quit his own church (!) and joined the Utah Mormons. The Remnant seems to be all about class; if youāre not wealthy, youāre not welcome.
Sorry, I missed this before. Thanks for the compliment! I have to say, Iāve been on these forums for a few years (on and off), but havenāt racked up nearly as many posts as youāyou seem quite active! And thanks again for the CalledToCommunion siteālots of good stuff on there, more than I have time for. But thatās usually the case. Iāve got quite a lot of sources, just need to find time for them and organize them so I know where to go to for what, and what good sources on particular topics to pass on to people.Arandur, your posts are so āmeatyā. What is your background if I may interjectā¦just brieflyā¦I am sorry if I missed it .