majick275:
Yet you seemed to think it enough material to tell us what JS meant…
Well, that is what I understood from it based on what you had quoted. I saw nothing in there to link it to the “copyright” issue as you state. You must give me enough of the context for me to make that connection.
OK. When is a prophet a prophet? When a prophet speaks when is it revelation?
The answer to that is given bys the Lord in the following scripture:
D&C 68:
4 And whatsoever they shall speak when moved upon by the Holy Ghost shall be scripture, shall be the will of the Lord, shall be the mind of the Lord, shall be the word of the Lord, shall be the voice of the Lord, and the power of God unto salvation.
The only remaining question here is, how do we know when someone who speaks is “moved upon by the Holy Ghost”? The answer to that question was given by President J. Reuben Clark, counselor in the First Presidency, in the following quote:
"There have been rare occasions when even the President of the Church in his preaching and teaching has not been ‘moved upon by the Holy Ghost.’
"…To this point runs a simple story my father told me as a boy, I do not know on what authority, but it illustrates the point. His story was that during the excitement incident to the cming of Johnson’s Army, Brother Brigham preached to the people in a morning meeting a sermon vibrant with defiance to the approaching army, and declaring an intention to oppose and drive them back. In the afternoon meeting he arose and said that Brigham Young had been talking in the morning, but the Lord was going to talk now. He then delivered an address, the tempo of which was the opposite from the morning talk.
“I do not know if this ever happened, but I say it illustrates a principle–that even the President of the Church, himself, may not always be ‘moved upon by the Holy Ghost,’ when he addresses the people This has happened about matters of doctrine (usually of a highly speculative character) where
subsequent Presidents of the Church and the peoples themselves have felt that in declaring the doctrine, the announcer was not ‘moved upon by the Holy Ghost.’” (J. Reuben Clark Jr, “When Are the Writings or Sermons of Church Leaders Entitled to the Claim of Scripture?”)
In other words, the membership of the Church will know within themselves, if they have the Holy Ghost as they should, whether the speaker speaks by the Holy Ghost or not.
Ezra T. Benson tells us that the current prophet is more important than the standard works… How can we know what specific words from LDS prophets are intended by God to be binding doctrine?
I have already answered that in the other thread I had referred to.
Hiram Page and his peep stone that seemed quite convincing to Oliver Cowdery and others. David Whitmer, Oliver Cowdery accusing JS of polygamy and then being exed. Sidney Rigdon, William Law claiming that Joseph was wrong. There are a lot of examples.
In your original post you had stated: “The D&C itself points out Original “witnesses” and first presidency members, apostles, etc. being deceived by revelations from Satan.” What you have quoted here is not a case in point. Hiram page was not in leadership position. He was deceived by revelations from Satan. Oliver Cowdery was temporarily confused by it, because the Church had only just been organized, and members were inexperienced, and such a situation had not arisen in the Church before. Then the Lord corrected that problem by revelation to Joseph Smith, and the matter was settled. As for the rest characters that you have mentioned, their situations were entirely different. Their case was not a matter of “receiving revelation from Satan”. Those people simply fell into transgression, apostatized, or were excommunicated. Lots of people apostatized and fell away in the early Christian Church. Judas Iscariot apostatized and fell away. Ananias and Sapphira similarly transgressed and perished. Lots of people did in the early Church, some in high positions some not. This has been the case in every dispensation. In the days of Moses too Korah, Dathan, and Abiram, and 200 of the “princes” of the Israel rebelled against Moses, and perished in their transgressions. Nothing to do with “receiving revelation from Satan”. You appear to be very confused about LDS, and lash out against it aimlessly and haphazardly, without any order, clarity, or organization.
(Continued in the next post…)
amgid