When I was teaching (especially Gospel Doctrine, which is a class for Mormons, while Gospel Essentials is a course on the basics for potential converts or those new to the LDS faith) some of my brighter students asked difficult questions that I didn’t know the answer to. Like when I was a missionary, I would say “I don’t know, but I’ll look it up for next time”. Then I would go home and start digging.
One book that I had that I forgot to mention before was “Mormon Doctrine” by Bruce R. McConkey, who got to be an apostle the old-fashioned way - he married the prophet David O. McKay’s daughter.
Mormon Doctrine was at that time the equivalent of the
Catechism of the Catholic Church because it was the only comprehensive compendium of LDS teachings. In the 1970s and 1980s if there was a doctrinal dispute, you would take
Mormon Doctrine off the shelf, look up the doctrine and that was the end of the debate. Of course, these days the LDS have thrown McConkey and
Mormon Doctrine under the bus because
Mormon Doctrine (even the sanitized 2nd edition that I have) contains all the racism, sexism, virulent anti-Catholicism and other unpopular stuff that the LDS have recently tried to distance themselves from.
Mormon Doctrine, with its many references to the standard works, T
he History of the Church and
the Journal of Discourses (similar to the way the CCC is chock full of references to the Bible, the Early Church Fathers, church councils and papal bulls and encyclicals throughout the centuries), was always a good place to start. Then we would follow to the source documents for the full context. I still do the same when I study the CCC.
These days, whenever I look at
Mormon Doctrine, I am truly repulsed and wonder how I could ever have believed any of that nonsense.
Anyway, that was what started my journey.
Paul (formerly LDS, now happily Catholic)