T
TexanKnight
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some really good points made…Perhaps some will be interested in a blog post on the new essay:
Why No Apology For the Priesthood Ban?
kinda proves the lds church does not really have true prophets.
some really good points made…Perhaps some will be interested in a blog post on the new essay:
Why No Apology For the Priesthood Ban?
Yes, they have been unsurprisingly silent on the polygamy thread as well.I see threads like and imagine mormons sitting there…hoping that if they do not respond, the thread will die and prospective mormons will never see it.
The whole Swedish incident happened because an area authority in Sweden was trying to prove wrong what people told him. He has been a Mormon all his life and didn’t even know about Joseph Smith’s polygamy.A side note. Some of the Mormons where I work don’t even know about all this stuff. They are really unaware of such teachings.
Because Mormons are taught that such topics are not faith promoting and researching them can expose them to the influences of Satan.A side note. Some of the Mormons where I work don’t even know about all this stuff. They are really unaware of such teachings.
Too true.Because Mormons are taught that such topics are not faith promoting and researching them can expose them to the influences of Satan.
Ah yes. I read this article before.The whole Swedish incident happened because an area authority in Sweden was trying to prove wrong what people told him. He has been a Mormon all his life and didn’t even know about Joseph Smith’s polygamy.
Some Mormons Search the Web and Find Doubt
In the small but cohesive Mormon community where he grew up, Hans Mattsson was a solid believer and a pillar of the church. He followed his father and grandfather into church leadership and finally became an “area authority” overseeing the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints throughout Europe.
When fellow believers in Sweden first began coming to him with information from the Internet that contradicted the church’s history and teachings, he dismissed it as “anti-Mormon propaganda,” the whisperings of Lucifer. He asked his superiors for help in responding to the members’ doubts, and when they seemed to only sidestep the questions, Mr. Mattsson began his own investigation.
But when he discovered credible evidence that the church’s founder, Joseph Smith, was a polygamist and that the Book of Mormon and other scriptures were rife with historical anomalies, Mr. Mattsson said he felt that the foundation on which he had built his life began to crumble.
Around the world and in the United States, where the faith was founded, the Mormon Church is grappling with a wave of doubt and disillusionment among members who encountered information on the Internet that sabotaged what they were taught about their faith, according to interviews with dozens of Mormons and those who study the church.
“I felt like I had an earthquake under my feet,” said Mr. Mattsson, now an emeritus area authority. “Everything I’d been taught, everything I’d been proud to preach about and witness about just crumbled under my feet. It was such a terrible psychological and nearly physical disturbance.”
Mr. Mattsson’s decision to go public with his disaffection, in a church whose top leaders commonly deliberate in private, is a sign that the church faces serious challenges not just from outside but also from skeptics inside.
nytimes.com/2013/07/21/us/some-mormons-search-the-web-and-find-doubt.html?pagewanted%3Dall&_r=0
Fascinating article. Read it all.
Its true to say that most LDS don’t really understand the Black issue. The new website referenced on this thread actually does a lot to give answers to the LDS and others.
Quoting past statements from some LDS leaders which have been disavowed as current LDS doctrine isn’t fair. There are many past statements that certainly are ugly and racist, but were made during times when slavery, racism, segregation, and discrimination were accepted norms of American society and are fairly thought of in that context.
I disagree. Since they were “prophets” they should not have been a part of the ugly society…they spoke for God. They cannot have it both ways
The ultimate source of doctrine for LDS are their scriptures unless a revelation is received by the Church President. The LDS ban on blacks receiving the priesthood and temples ordinances was clearly in conflict with their canon. These wasn’t so clear before the changes in 1978 for reasons that take a long time to explain.
Wrong. God is not a God of confusion. To have continuous changes in doctrine and teachings as things earlier prophets have said are disproven only shows to a greater extent that they are false prophets.
LDS President Hinckley apologized to Rev. Cecil Murray, retired pastor the First AME Church of Los Angeles for the church’s past actions regarding racism and slavery. I believe that its fair to say that this apology applies to anyone else who was offended.
So God apologized through the mouth of His prophets for the racist comments God made through the mouths of His prophets? Odd…very odd…
If the ultimate source of doctrine for LDS is the scriptures, then what is the point in having “living prophets and apostles”? I think that’s the actual issue of this thread. Are the living prophets and apostles unnecessary, and not giving us anything that is doctrinal unless a revelation is received by the Church President?Its true to say that most LDS don’t really understand the Black issue. The new website referenced on this thread actually does a lot to give answers to the LDS and others.
Quoting past statements from some LDS leaders which have been disavowed as current LDS doctrine isn’t fair. There are many past statements that certainly are ugly and racist, but were made during times when slavery, racism, segregation, and discrimination were accepted norms of American society and are fairly thought of in that context.
The ultimate source of doctrine for LDS are their scriptures unless a revelation is received by the Church President. The LDS ban on blacks receiving the priesthood and temples ordinances was clearly in conflict with their canon. These wasn’t so clear before the changes in 1978 for reasons that take a long time to explain.
LDS President Hinckley apologized to Rev. Cecil Murray, retired pastor the First AME Church of Los Angeles for the church’s past actions regarding racism and slavery. I believe that its fair to say that this apology applies to anyone else who was offended.
I don’t believe there was any conflict with LDS scriptures concerning the ban. If there is is as you claim it makes the prophets even worse than useless, it leaves them teaching and acting contrary to God’s word, for years they led members astray.The ultimate source of doctrine for LDS are their scriptures unless a revelation is received by the Church President. The LDS ban on blacks receiving the priesthood and temples ordinances was clearly in conflict with their canon. These wasn’t so clear before the changes in 1978 for reasons that take a long time to explain.
Not all that impressed by an arcane apology offered to one man in private, in front of a small specially invited group, is still only a private apology. LDS leaders lack what ever is needed to man up and admit they were wrong and apologize.LDS President Hinckley apologized to Rev. Cecil Murray, retired pastor the First AME Church of Los Angeles for the church’s past actions regarding racism and slavery. I believe that its fair to say that this apology applies to anyone else who was offended.
The LDS church can’t be totally open and honest about its past, because it would essentially be admitting that past prophets and apostles were, in fact, not inspired or in direct communication with God. The best defense Apostle Bruce R. McConkie could come up with regarding blacks and the priesthood was this…
"There are statements in our literature by the early Brethren that we have interpreted to mean that the Negroes would not receive the priesthood in mortality. I have said the same things, and people write me letters and say, “You said such and such, and how is it now that we do such and such?” All I can say is that it is time disbelieving people repented and got in line and believed in a living, modern prophet. Forget everything that I have said, or what President Brigham Young or President George Q. Cannon or whoever has said in days past that is contrary to the present revelation…
So an “Apostle” of the Lord’s best defense was…“well, just ignore what I said.” If they can’t even defend their own documented doctrinal positions, how can any other member do any better?
I can sympathize with your sentiments. However, as one who was “born under the covenant”, it was all too easy in Mormon society to ignore the dirty bits. So, we might know about the dirty bits but put no effort into understanding them, kind of like grade school rumors - don’t put as much emphasis on finding out the whole truth. Also, as noted before elsewhere, there is not a strong emphasis on scholarship (what-have-you), so it’s easy/expected to float along blissfully accepting.Several of the ex-LDS folks I know left precisely because of what the Mormon church started to teach them, past a certain point in their membership; the “meat” beyond the “milk”, as they put it.
These ex-LDS found that “meat” to be very foul-tasting, indeed. I have a difficult time believing that experienced LDS members don’t know exactly what their church taught in the past, and still teaches to this day. (Black people are accepted by the LDS church by necessity of the modern age, not by choice.)
Interesting perspective, thank you.I can sympathize with your sentiments. However, as one who was “born under the covenant”, it was all too easy in Mormon society to ignore the dirty bits. So, we might know about the dirty bits but put no effort into understanding them, kind of like grade school rumors - don’t put as much emphasis on finding out the whole truth. Also, as noted before elsewhere, there is not a strong emphasis on scholarship (what-have-you), so it’s easy/expected to float along blissfully accepting.
I would expect converts to be more aware and interested in learning it all, but lifers, not so much.
Pres. McKay was the one that declared a few years before his death that there is no such doctrine prohibiting blacks from having the priesthood. He said this privately before this in the 1950's, though. It did not make since to make a big deal about the matter unless the prohibition was going to be changed. And given the racism of the times he did not feel that he could make the change at the time. Most LDS don't know this and still think the change in doctrine came in 1978 from Pres. Kimball. This was only actually a change in policy.
The difficulty in making the change came from: 1) Brigham Young's statements at the time made it sound as if a revelation had been received, 2) the incorrect interpretation of the Book of Abraham by most members, and 3) the overall status of race relations in the country.
Regarding the conflict with the LDS Canon, Judah of the twelve tribes married a Canaanite and also had two sons through trickery with his daughter-in-law who was also a Canaanite. As such, Christ and the twelve apostles at the time of Christ all were descended from Canaanites that would have been banned from the priesthood. The LDS claim their priesthood was restored from these Apostles. I.e. the ban would not have been possible. In LDS scriptures Joseph Smith is stated to be a descendent of Ephraim the son of Joseph who was sold into slavery in Egypt. Joseph married an Egyptian. I.e. Joseph Smith would ultimately be descended from a black person. I.e. God would not have given him the priesthood if he was banned from having it.
The idea that persons of black skin were cursed to a life of servitude came from the Babylonian Talmud and was nearly universally accepted as biblical fact by most Christians before about 1900.
The LDS God did not say racist things. What the LDS God said on the matter was already written down in the LDS scriptures. LDS leaders express their own personal opinions at times which are mistaken for doctrine. However, in this case LDS leaders were saying that there was a doctrine on this matter when there was no such doctrine relying on BY's statements.
As far as Prophets or Apostles being racist or making mistakes. The LDS church makes no claim of infallibility of it's leaders, unless a revelation from their prophet is claimed on the matter. In fact, how does one read the bible and come away with such an idea that prophets never make mistakes? Jonah, the prophet had to be forced to go and preach at Niniva and was mad when the people repented and God did not destroy them (racism). Moses struck the rock instead of using his voice as he was commanded. Nathan or Samuel (I forget) had to go back and tell King David that he would not be allowed to build the temple in Jerusalem contrary to what he said the day before. The prophet Samuel did nothing when his sons ruled with corruption. Peter denied Christ three times. Etc.... We need to be careful in applying our own standard to prophets that do not correlate with biblical standards.
No one comes to the table with clean hands in relation to the past treatment of persons of African descent, Catholics included.