Do LDS hold to "Sola Fide" or "Tradition Plus Scripture"

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amgid:
The only one authorized to bring forth any new doctrine is the President of the Church, who, when he does, will declare it as revelation from God, and it will be so accepted by the Council of the Twelve and sustained by the body of the Church. And if any man speak a doctrine which contradicts what is in the standard Church works, you may know by that same token that it is false and you are not bound to accept it as truth." (Harold B. Lee, European Area Conference of the Church, Munich, Germany, 1973)
Dear Amgid;

Is there a formal statement or language used, by which one can discern whether or not the President of the Church is declaring a (binding) revelation from God as opposed to his own (non-binding) opinion? For example, in Catholic practice the defining of dogma is fairly clear…:
We *declare, pronounce, and define * that the doctrine which holds that the most Blessed Virgin Mary, in the first instance of her conception, by a singular grace and privilege granted by Almighty God, in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, the Savior of the human race, was preserved free from all stain of original sin, is a doctrine revealed by God and therefore to be believed firmly and constantly by all the faithful. (*Italics * added.)
(Ineffabilis Deus - Apostolic Constitution of Pope Pius IX on the Immaculate Conception (December 8, 1854))
Anything similar in LDS practice?
 
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Casen:
Keep in mind that Catholic doctrine has had centuries to develop and LDS doctrine has had a comparatively short time. Early church leaders received revelation and clarification from God “line upon line” and were corrected from time to time as needed.
Casen,

‘Development of doctrine’ in the Catholic sense, though, does not involve revelation and even those who are not directed by the Holy Spirit may, in many ways, contribute to the understanding of a given doctrine which was accepted and taught by the apostles and the early Church. If you asked me if Aquinas was working under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, I’d take a quarter from my pocket, flip it, and say, “heads he was, tails he wasn’t”. Yet if you asked me, for instance, if the first Vatican Council was directed by the Holy Spirit when defining dogmatically the manner in which the Pope is infallible, I’d keep the quarter in my pocket and simply answer “yes!”

What baffles many of us - non-LDS and a few ex-LDS - is why, with an open canon, revelations that were accepted as scripture were coming fast and furious within a 13-14 year period from the founding of the LDS church and then suddenly - with a few exceptions - those revelations suddenly came to a screeching halt. With only 3 (?) revelations after 1847 (I believe - I’m writing from memory) it becomes a somewhat dubious belief that the church, always having a living prophet, seer, and revelator, 'got all but a few things ‘right’ up until that time and that, after that time, the appointment of presidents, prophets, etc., were chosen by God and yet those choices (and rebukes of those who did not do that which God commanded) were not recorded as revelations and make their way into the D&C.

And over and over and over again I read the FARMS apologists write that (I’m paraphrasing but the gist is intact) “Our doctrine comes only from the standard works. How many times must we repeat that?”

I suppose that - to put it as succinctly as possible - we who are not LDS (and I would include many - if not all - ex-LDS) tend to be dismissive of LDS doctrine because it seems as though there are no two LDS members who can agree on what constitutes doctrine in a great many matters that we (and perhaps here I speak only for Catholics) find of extreme importance: indeed, a great many doctrines that we believe as necessary for salvation.

Just one doctrine, as an example, is that of atonement. I find nowhere in the standard works where atonement even began in Gethsemane - to Catholics atonement was complete on the cross, which is stated and alluded to throughout the Book of Mormon, the D&C, Moses, etc., as shedding of blood, sacrifice, and death- not sweat “as” or “like” drops of blood. Yet the LDS doctrine of atonement puts more (if not all) emphasis of ‘blood shed’ on those drops on the Mount of Olives rather than that shed in the scourging and the nailing of His hands and His feet and that flowed from the crown of thorns and in the blood and water which issued from His side as He hung, dying, on the Cross.

What does the mormon.org website have to say about atonement?
It is impossible to put into words the full meaning of the Atonement, which is the most important event in the history of the world. Through His suffering in the Garden of Gethsemane and on the cross, the Savior atoned for our sins. This is the good news for all people!
We can’t fully understand how Jesus suffered for our sins. But we know that in the Garden of Gethsemane, the weight of our sins caused Him to feel such agony that He bled from every pore (Luke 22:39–44).
Not a lot of emphasis on the cross - and even the link to Luke 22:44, of course, says nothing about bleeding “from every pore”.

So why the emphasis on the agony in the garden in place of the agony of the cross?

…continued…
 
…continued…

That is just one example of where I find absolutely nothing in the standard works to support a LDS position. So where does the thinking LDS member appeal? To the recorded words of prophets - past and present? Out go the standard works. And in comes the diversity of beliefs of individuals who each act as their own interpreters and theologians (and, one might say, as individual prophets, seers, and revelators).

So to those LDS who say “we depend on the standard works for doctrine” we see that that is simply untrue. To those who say “we depend on the standard works for doctrine and the teaching of the living prophet” we see is untrue as well. And if we (non- and ex-LDS) bring up ‘doctrine’ which we see as evident in the standard works, exclusive of the Bible, yet taught by former prophets one will say “you don’t/can’t understand” while another will be in agreement, another will never have heard of the doctrine, and others will think it of little import.

Sorry for misspellings or if this is sloppy or a bit incoherent - I’m very sleepy. But do you understand my point about why it is so very difficult for us to understand what members of the LDS church even might believe, even ignoring why they might hold such divergent beliefs?
 
Chris Jodrey:
I have heard it said, “Whatever the prophet says is truth.” I think that that’s mostly ignorance, that they haven’t considered that prophets can make mistakes and have opinions, and certainly haven’t read much of Brigham Young and other early Church leaders. Then, some say that anything in the scriptures plus what’s said in General Conference is doctrine. That may or may not be true… Then some say “just the scriptures, everything else is conjecture.” I don’t quite agree with that, but some think it. Then some say that anything published by the Church with a “Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints” stamp on the back is scripture and doctrine.

You see, there is no official doctrine to indicate what falls under the category of what official doctrine is. That’s why there’s confusion about this and many other topics, in my opinion.
And you see, Chris, this is exactly the problem. We get told be certain LDS that they believe “such and such”, then when we tell other people that, a different LDS comes along and says “that’s never been taught. I’ve never heard that.” So how are we supposed to understand what LDS believe when LDS don’t even agree on what it is they believe?

Doesn’t it create problems/questions for you that you can never really be sure whether something your prophet/bishop/whomever is saying is true revelation?
 
And you see, Chris, this is exactly the problem. We get told be certain LDS that they believe “such and such”, then when we tell other people that, a different LDS comes along and says “that’s never been taught. I’ve never heard that.” So how are we supposed to understand what LDS believe when LDS don’t even agree on what it is they believe?
As I mentioned in my post, it requires a real comprehension of the doctrine, or as this is being further defined, of what people think is doctrine. As you come to understand the different viewpoints about certain subjects it will get less confusing. People mostly use reason to define those topics, but as we can all understand, different people’s reasoning leads to different conclusions, kind of like the scientific world. Some issues are agreed on readily by almost all, just because of the logic. Those then later get printed in text-books, which in the Church’s case might be manuals and other books, like Mormon Doctrine (poorly titled book). Therefore, true things are probably expressed there that are not in the scriptures. They (certain doctrinal issues) might not be true, and because of that they are not in the scriptures; they were reasoning of man but not revelation from God, although widely accepted; they help us understand the core doctrines and so are taught. If it turns out that something is a little off, oh well, it wasn’t a doctrine anyway, and we reform our thinking. Most of those topics are not very controversial. The most important topics get addressed by scripture. What God doesn’t explain we can speculate on, and I see no problem with it, as long as we are humble and willing to correct ourselves when we are mistaken.

Often members of the Church say that we should follow the prophet, that he will never lead us astray, that we generally shouldn’t even think twice, that when he tells us to do something we should exercise faith and do it. I think (and this of course is just my opinion) that there is an entanglement there of what I would call doctrine and counsel. Counsel is the important stuff, i.e., to pay tithing, or to always go to church, or on more apparently insignificant things. If it’s an invitation to do something, we should do it. If it’s doctrine then the attitude of the speaker is usually different. They declare, explain, expound, tell stories, etc, but do not usually exhort us to believe what they are saying. (Look out for it, you’ll see what I mean.) A perfect example is one speaker in the Sunday afternoon session of last weekend’s General Conference. He gave a recital of the apostasy and the events leading to the restoration. Did he tell us that we have to believe every detail or our faith was limited? Did he say that it would be a sin not to believe him in the history he related? Not at all. According to human knowledge he was helping us to appreciate just how great and wonderful the restoration was, so that we will have a greater appreciation for it. And good job, I liked his talk. But if years later we find out that some piece of history he mentioned wasn’t accurate, big deal. The basic doctrinal message remains intact, which is unalterable doctrine of the Church (that of the great apostasy and the subsequent restoration). Are we required to believe everything he said? I’ll bet that there are some saints that will say ‘yes’ to that but I would definitely say ‘no’. The details of his talk were not the purpose or motive of his talk, and they were not based on scripture, but on worldly historians.

So, then is this in conflict with the idea of always sustaining our leaders and humbly letting ourselves be guided by them? Not at all. But we have to disentangle not-so-important doctrine from the very important counsel they give us. If the prophet asked me to give all I had to the Church I would do it. If he said, “Mary had other sons and daughters after having Jesus,” I would think, “Wow, that’s a strong statement. This is a prophet of God who is wiser and more knowledgable than me and may be speaking divinely. He could be right. I should consider what he just said and not forget it.” But I don’t think there’s any reason that that statement would automatically become “binding.” If you want “binding” then that statement would have to become part of the standard works. So while we might refine our thinking based on what our leaders say and fully believe it, even universally in the Church, it is still not binding. That means that when some anti-Mormon comes waltzing in like he knows everything and says that Brigham Young taught that God the Father was Adam, we can calmly explain to his smug smirk that that’s just not official Church doctrine even though some at the time believed it because of what he said. No LDS members now believe it that I am aware of, and they have no obligation to.

continued…
 
Mormon doctrine is very basic and simple. I think it’s about that easy. When it starts looking really complicated I think that that’s mainly man’s reason at work. Man’s reason might be right, or it might not be. That’s why you see different opinions from LDS.
Doesn’t it create problems/questions for you that you can never really be sure whether something your prophet/bishop/whomever is saying is true revelation?
It has, actually, but I have learned that things that are not so black and white. No leader has ever obligated me to take on his point of view on some controversial doctrinal issue (controversial not by way of importance but just in the fact that everyone thinks different things about it). Try to consider it from our point of view. You know that what’s in the standard works is true, as long as you interpret them correctly, so you search for truth by studying them, Church manuals and magazines, General Conferences, and you go to classes like Sunday school and Institute and you dialogue with others, including leaders. Really, you’re exercising your powers of reasoning to decide what seems reasonable and what doesn’t. You won’t agree with everything you read or hear. It’s a life-long study, whereas in the Catholic Church there is an official doctrine on many topics and doesn’t leave as much room for speculation and opinion. Of course, I’ll bet that there are some controversial issues in Catholic doctrine as well, as I’m sure there has to be in all religions. Think about it, it isn’t so foreign. Protestant churches are the same way; they don’t even have leaders the same way that Mormons and Catholics do. Their only source of authority in most cases is their Bible. Their declaration of denomination decides more or less how they interpret the Bible, but there are still unresolved issues, and you can find one Baptist preacher that believes differently from another Baptist preacher on some points of doctrine, maybe because of different political affiliations, etc. The same thing happens inside every religion, I think. The real problem is when certain members make themselves an authority and teach false doctrine (whatever ‘false doctrine’ might be to the religious organization in question).
What baffles many of us - non-LDS and a few ex-LDS - is why, with an open canon, revelations that were accepted as scripture were coming fast and furious within a 13-14 year period from the founding of the LDS church and then suddenly - with a few exceptions - those revelations suddenly came to a screeching halt. With only 3 (?) revelations after 1847 (I believe - I’m writing from memory) it becomes a somewhat dubious belief that the church, always having a living prophet, seer, and revelator, 'got all but a few things ‘right’ up until that time and that, after that time, the appointment of presidents, prophets, etc., were chosen by God and yet those choices (and rebukes of those who did not do that which God commanded) were not recorded as revelations and make their way into the D&C.
Or it could be that we’re not ready for more. I feel that demending things of God is a bad idea. In the early Christian Church there was no more scripture for about 1500 years not because God thought, “All is done, they have enough to get by,” but because of the apostasy – people just weren’t ready. That’s not to say that we’re in a great apostasy today, but maybe our faith is lacking as a whole. Think about it. Moroni said that God is unchanging, that he is a God of miracles, and that he only ceases to do miracles among the children of men if there is no faith among them. Producing scripture is a great miracle. I have seen miracles of that kind, my patriarchal blessing is personal scripture (I’m just assuming you know what that is, as you do seem have a good background on the LDS Church; if not, you can look it up on the net). So to say that it doesn’t happen nowadays is misleading. It does, if not to the extent that it used to. By reading the records, it looks like the people of Zion in Joseph Smith’s time were simply more faithful and so the Church as a whole was blessed. Today there are faithful members, but not enough. So while miracles still happen they are reserved for a select few – those who are ready to receive them.

This is my reasoning and I think it makes sense. The point you raise is considered by most LDS, I think, not just those that eventually leave the Church or non-LDS. I have spent some time pondering it and I know others who have too. You won’t hear it discussed much because it’s a sensitive question and there’s no firm answer for it.
 
From reading some posts, I think that maybe we have to clarify the term “doctrine” because it seems to me that some are confusing the term with “theology.”

Doctrine - Any truth taught by the church as necessary for acceptance by the faithful.

Theology - Reasoning or discourse about the divinity, or the whole study of revealed truth.

Doctrine is always binding, while theological conclusions may or may not be binding, depending upon the context of the statement. From Chris J’s last post, it seems that there is some confusion as to when the LDS Church leadership utters a doctrine which must be accepted, and when the LDS Church utters a theological conclusion that is mere speculation about the divinity. Which begs the question - How can you trust that a prophet is speaking God’s word as opposed to his own opinion about what God’s word may be?
 
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Casen:
How about adding third category? Those that “believe” much of what church leaders have speculated upon (but not necessarily all of it) and yet distinguish between canonized doctrine and those things that God has chosen not to reveal but may be fun to speculate, ponder upon and discuss.

For example, I personally believe that Jesus was probably married and have a theory about it but at the same time I recognize that it is not official LDS doctrine and if God ever chooses to issue a revelation to clarify the issue I’d be willing to change my opinion on it. I suspect that many LDS fall into this category. For LDS a prophet may receive a revelation from God that is considered doctrine but a prophet may also express his personal opinion in areas that have not been revealed. But for some reason non LDS tend to have a hard time understanding the concept that seems so simple to me.
The problem with your statement is that those prophets often did not specify whether they were speculating or revealing something from God. When one reads their sermons it’s apparent that they were publicly teaching from an office of authority, which for me rules out speculation, especially if they did not preface their statements with “This is just my humble opinion as a man and not official doctrine.” A true prophet would take special care to differentiate between his own speculation and true revelation from God so as not to confuse the flock. Early LDS leaders certainly failed to due this, and as a result we have these controversial topics to discuss. If they were clearer regarding speculation vs. doctrine we wouldn’t be having this discussion. When you say that something was just their own speculation, can you really back that up, or is it that you have to find a way to dismiss something taught by one of your prophets without discrediting him?
 
Robert in SD:
From reading some posts, I think that maybe we have to clarify the term “doctrine” because it seems to me that some are confusing the term with “theology.”

Doctrine - Any truth taught by the church as necessary for acceptance by the faithful.

Theology - Reasoning or discourse about the divinity, or the whole study of revealed truth.

Doctrine is always binding, while theological conclusions may or may not be binding, depending upon the context of the statement. From Chris J’s last post, it seems that there is some confusion as to when the LDS Church leadership utters a doctrine which must be accepted, and when the LDS Church utters a theological conclusion that is mere speculation about the divinity. Which begs the question - How can you trust that a prophet is speaking God’s word as opposed to his own opinion about what God’s word may be?
Thanks for the clarification Robert. I think that’s one of the difficulties in our two religions talking - we have different understandings of the definition of doctrine.
 
Robert in SD:
Thanks amgid, but these quotes seem to beg the question; are LDS bound to believe just the written doctrines (i.e.scriptures), or is it scripture plus divine revelation?
This subject has been discussed, and adequately covered, in the following threads: “Is Mormonism Pagan,” “Can even a ‘true’ prophet have false revelations,” and “The ECFs must be crazy”. The short answer to that question is as follows: The fundamental doctrines of the Church are contained in the standard works. The leaders and teachers of the Church, at all levels, be they the humble deacon or an Apostle, are free to teach and preach in the Church as they are “moved upon by the Holy Ghost,” and LDS scripture teaches that when they speak as they are “moved upon by the Holy ghost,” their teachings are, effectively, “scripture”. This, however, does not authorize anyone, not even a General Authority, to bring in new doctrine into the Church, which cannot be substantiated by the standard works. All scripture is not “new doctrine”. 99% of scripture is not new doctrine. If the Lord wants to bring a new doctrine into the Church, which does not exist in, and cannot be substantiated by, the standard works, He will do so through the First Presidency of the Church, following a set procedure as outlined in the quote I gave from Harold B. Lee, that will not leave any doubt in the minds of Church members of the authenticity of the doctrine, and the authority through which it is revealed.
And If the latter is the case, which seems to be the implication from the quotes you cite, then how is “divine revelation” defined by LDS?..
The rest of your post is largely redundant, because it is adequately answered by the quotes I had given. If I were to answer them, I would merely have to repeat verbatim from those quotes, which would be a futile exercise. If you still don’t understand them, I suspect that is intentional, and there is not a lot that I could do to change that.
After all, LDS believe - like Catholics - that their leader is Christ’s representative here on earth. So where do you draw the doctrinal line?
Bottom line - It just seems to me that the rules for defining the dogmatic implications of ongoing revelation need some more “fleshing out” so to speak.
See above.
The only one authorized to bring forth any new doctrine is the President of the Church, who, when he does, will declare it as revelation from God, and it will be so accepted by the Council of the Twelve and sustained by the body of the Church. And if any man speak a doctrine which contradicts what is in the standard Church works, you may know by that same token that it is false and you are not bound to accept it as truth." (Harold B. Lee, European Area Conference of the Church, Munich, Germany, 1973)
Is there a formal statement or language used, by which one can discern whether or not the President of the Church is declaring a (binding) revelation from God as opposed to his own (non-binding) opinion? For example, in Catholic practice the defining of dogma is fairly clear…:

The “formal procedure” by which such a revelation will be given was adequately described in the quote I had given, which you had quoted. If that is not clear to you, then I suspect nothing else I could say would be.
We declare, pronounce, and define that the doctrine which holds that the most Blessed Virgin Mary, in the first instance of her conception, by a singular grace and privilege granted by Almighty God, in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, the Savior of the human race, was preserved free from all stain of original sin, is a doctrine revealed by God and therefore to be believed firmly and constantly by all the faithful. (Italics added.)
Anything similar in LDS practice?
Yes, LDS authorities in the past have made formal statements on doctrine of such description as you propose; but they do not make a habit of it. The LDS proclamation on the family is a case in point.

amgid
 
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ben_dy:
What baffles many of us - non-LDS and a few ex-LDS - is why, with an open canon, revelations that were accepted as scripture were coming fast and furious within a 13-14 year period from the founding of the LDS church and then suddenly - with a few exceptions - those revelations suddenly came to a screeching halt. With only 3 (?) revelations after 1847 …
There are two answers to that. Firstly, in the early days, the Church had only just been organized. Those revelations were needed to organize the Church properly, and set it on a firm foundation both doctrinally and structurally, with the restoration of the priesthood and the various offices of it, and with the establishment of the Church on the foundation of prophets and Apostles. Once the structure and organization was in place, there was les need for such revelations over time. Even in the early days, if you examine the chronology published in the D&C, you will find that the greatest numbers of revelations were received during the first couple of years of the organization of the Church; and as time went by they decreased in frequency quite steeply. Secondly, I happen to know for a fact, that many “written revelations,” of the same kind that are published in the D&C, have been received by the First Presidency over the years since that time, which are preserved in the historical department or in the archives of the First Presidency, which have not yet been published or canonized, because it is not the will of the Lord that they should be at this time. A handful of them have indeed been published in various books and publications, and my also be found on the Internet; but there are a lot more that have not been; and I am sure that one day they will be both published and canonized for the benefit of the Church. But it is not the will of the Lord that they should be published at this time.
And over and over and over again I read the FARMS apologists write that (I’m paraphrasing but the gist is intact) “Our doctrine comes only from the standard works. How many times must we repeat that?” I suppose that - to put it as succinctly as possible - we who are not LDS (and I would include many - if not all - ex-LDS) tend to be dismissive of LDS doctrine because it seems as though there are no two LDS members who can agree on what constitutes doctrine in a great many matters that we (and perhaps here I speak only for Catholics) find of extreme importance: indeed, a great many doctrines that we believe as necessary for salvation.
The answer to that is simple. If you are in doubt about any aspect of LDS doctrine, look it up in LDS scripture! What could be simpler than that? Learn a lesson from Moses:

(Continued in the next post…)

amgid
 
(Continued from the previous post…)

Deuteronomy 30:

10 If thou shalt hearken unto the voice of the Lord thy God, to keep his commandments and his statutes which are written in this book of the law, {i.e. the five books of Moses, or the Pentateuch, which is all the “scripture” that the Israelites had at that time} and if thou turn unto the Lord thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul.

11 For this commandment which I command thee this day {i.e. the Pentateuch}, it is not hidden from thee, neither is it far off.

12 It is not in heaven, that thou shouldest say, Who shall go up for us to heaven, and bring it unto us, that we may hear it, and do it?

13 Neither is it beyond the sea, that thou shouldest say, Who shall go over the sea for us, and bring it unto us, that we may hear it, and do it?

14 But the word is very nigh unto thee, in thy mouth, and in thy heart, that thou mayest do it.
Moses here is very emphatic. He is not commanding the Jews to create a “catechism,” and then hearken to the catechism. He is commanding them to hearken directly to the word of God itself, as preserved in its purity, in its original form as penned by the prophet; and in order that they may not misunderstand, he emphasizes it by saying: “But the word is very nigh unto thee, in thy mouth, and in thy heart, that thou mayest do it.” That is what the Lord wants us to do with modern LDS scripture. He wants us to read the scriptures themselves, and learn to understand them, extract our doctrine directly from them, and then follow them.

But if you are inquiring about something about which God has not spoken, then look not! What makes you think that God has an obligation to reveal to us everything that we may want to know about? Moses has another important counsel to give to us in the same book. He says:

Deuteronomy:

29 The secret things belong unto the Lord our God: but those things which are revealed belong unto us and to our children for ever, that we may do all the words of this law.
In other words, his advice to us is, don’t try to fathom by human speculation what God has chosen to not to reveal at the present time. That is a futile exercise, and will never lead anyone to a greater knowledge of divine truth, and is most likely to lead us astray.
Just one doctrine, as an example, is that of atonement. I find nowhere in the standard works where atonement even began in Gethsemane -
I have already discussed that in the thread called “Why the Cross? Let’s talk”. I refer you to that for my views on that.
to Catholics atonement was complete on the cross, which is stated and alluded to throughout the Book of Mormon, the D&C, Moses, etc., as shedding of blood, sacrifice, and death- not sweat “as” or “like” drops of blood.
As I have shown in the above thread, there are sufficient indications in LDS scripture and in the Bible that the atonement was not entirely accomplished on the cross.

(Continued in the next post…)

amgid
 
(Continued from the previous post…)
Yet the LDS doctrine of atonement puts more (if not all) emphasis of ‘blood shed’ on those drops on the Mount of Olives rather than that shed in the scourging and the nailing of His hands and His feet and that flowed from the crown of thorns and in the blood and water which issued from His side as He hung, dying, on the Cross.
Yes, you are right, and that is a mistake. What took place on the cross is just as significant, if not more so, in the atonement process, than what happened in the garden of Gethsemane. It is true that the scriptures teach that Jesus suffered intensely in Gethsemane; but that does not give us the logical justification to conclude that what He experienced on the cross was any less painful to Him than what He experienced in Gethsemane, or that the Atonement was primarily performed in Gethsemane rather than on the cross.
What does the mormon.org website have to say about atonement?
You tell me! Didn’t you look? Here is the page on the Atonement.
Not a lot of emphasis on the cross - and even the link to Luke 22:44, of course, says nothing about bleeding “from every pore”.
LDS scripture provides that added insight, as I have shown in another thread.
So why the emphasis on the agony in the garden in place of the agony of the cross?
See above.
That is just one example of where I find absolutely nothing in the standard works to support a LDS position. So where does the thinking LDS member appeal?
See above.
To the recorded words of prophets - past and present? Out go the standard works. And in comes the diversity of beliefs of individuals who each act as their own interpreters and theologians (and, one might say, as individual prophets, seers, and revelators).
You are talking silly now. See above.
So to those LDS who say “we depend on the standard works for doctrine” we see that that is simply untrue.
Not so! See above.
To those who say “we depend on the standard works for doctrine and the teaching of the living prophet” we see is untrue as well. And if we (non- and ex-LDS) bring up ‘doctrine’ which we see as evident in the standard works, exclusive of the Bible, yet taught by former prophets one will say “you don’t/can’t understand” while another will be in agreement, another will never have heard of the doctrine, and others will think it of little import.
You are getting ahead of yourself here. Be specific to get specific answers.
Sorry for misspellings or if this is sloppy or a bit incoherent - I’m very sleepy. But do you understand my point about why it is so very difficult for us to understand what members of the LDS church even might believe, even ignoring why they might hold such divergent beliefs?
Members of the Church believe, or should believe, that which is taught in the standard works, and in the teachings of the leadership of the Church insofar as it is in conformity with the standard works. This places the onus on Church members to familiarize themselves with the standard works, and obtain the Holy Spirit, so that they can detect error in doctrine regardless of where it may come form. If the Lord wants to reveal a new doctrine to the Church which does not exist in the standard works, it will be done through the appropriate channels, following a set procedure so that there will be no misunderstanding in the minds of Church members that God has spoken His will to his servants the prophets.

By the way, the latest version of the computerized scriptures of the Church, called “The Scriptures: CD-ROM edition 1.1” has been published by the Church. It is sold at a subsidized price. It costs peanuts, and it is a great recourse for studying the scriptures. I recommend it.

amgid
 
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amgid:
Secondly, I happen to know for a fact, that many “written revelations,” of the same kind that are published in the D&C, have been received by the First Presidency over the years since that time, which are preserved in the historical department or in the archives of the First Presidency, which have not yet been published or canonized, because it is not the will of the Lord that they should be at this time. A handful of them have indeed been published in various books and publications, and my also be found on the Internet; but there are a lot more that have not been; and I am sure that one day they will be both published and canonized for the benefit of the Church. But it is not the will of the Lord that they should be published at this time.
So then the question becomes why? Why would God give a revelation to the leader of a church regarding that church and then not have it be revealed?
 
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amgid:
If the Lord wants to bring a new doctrine into the Church, which does not exist in, and cannot be substantiated by, the standard works, He will do so through the First Presidency of the Church, following a set procedure as outlined in the quote I gave from Harold B. Lee, that will not leave any doubt in the minds of Church members of the authenticity of the doctrine, and the authority through which it is revealed.
So, with your decription, and this quote…
The only one authorized to bring forth any new doctrine is the President of the Church, who, when he does, will declare it as revelation from God, and it will be so accepted by the Council of the Twelve and sustained by the body of the Church. And if any man speak a doctrine which contradicts what is in the standard Church works, you may know by that same token that it is false and you are not bound to accept it as truth." (Harold B. Lee, European Area Conference of the Church, Munich, Germany, 1973)
When was the last time “new doctrine” was proclaimed?
 
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amgid:
Moses here is very emphatic. He is not commanding the Jews to create a “catechism,” and then hearken to the catechism. He is commanding them to hearken directly to the word of God itself, as preserved in its purity, in its original form as penned by the prophet; and in order that they may not misunderstand,
This seems like a bit of an attack on Catholics for creating a book that describes what the Catholic Church believes. The Catechism in NO WAY replaces the importance of reading the Bible! The Bible is foremost, especially since it is the word of God, the Catechism is not. The Catechism references the Bible repeatedly so that those reading can see from what Scripture we get certain beliefs.

Maybe many of the problems that arise between LDS and non-LDS could be solved if there was a book that described LDS doctrine. Then there wouldn’t be all this confusion about what is and what isn’t doctrine.
 
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amgid:
Moses here is very emphatic. He is not commanding the Jews to create a “catechism,” and then hearken to the catechism. He is commanding them to hearken directly to the word of God itself, as preserved in its purity, in its original form as penned by the prophet; and in order that they may not misunderstand, he emphasizes it by saying: “But the word is very nigh unto thee, in thy mouth, and in thy heart, that thou mayest do it.” That is what the Lord wants us to do with modern LDS scripture. He wants us to read the scriptures themselves, and learn to understand them, extract our doctrine directly from them, and then follow them.
This is a classic Sola Scriptura argument, an idea that hasn’t proven itself effective in Protestantism. By relying on private interpretation of Scripture Protestants disagree with each other about everything. To quote Cardinal Newman:
*
It is in point to notice also the structure and style of Scripture, a structure so unsystematic and various, and a style so figurative and indirect, that no one would presume at first sight to say what is in it and what is not. It cannot, as it were, be mapped, or its contents catalogued*

Scripture absolutely needs interpretation and commentary to be meaningful (that is what a catechism is). Fortunately, the Catholic Church was gifted by God with an infallible teaching authority. This doesn’t seem be something Mormons are claiming to possess, at least from the arguments in this thread.
 
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arieh0310:
Scripture absolutely needs interpretation and commentary to be meaningful (that is what a catechism is). Fortunately, the Catholic Church was gifted by God with an infallible teaching authority. This doesn’t seem be something Mormons are claiming to possess, at least from the arguments in this thread.
I find this answer strange; when did the Catholic Church receive the revelation from God that it had recieved an infallible teachnig authority, or was it simply assumed?

Actually if readers of this thread studied Section 1 of the doctrine and Covenants of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints they would find that God gave to this church via a living prophet an explicit and INFALLIBLE TEACHING AUTHORITY which has been held by each succeeding and living prophet. Those Mormons who are offended by what is taught by the presently constitued General Authorities of the above mentioned church are not in good standing or in a state of grace; even if they hold a temple recommend.

In my opinion the argument rests between C of Jesus Christ of LDS and Roman Catholicism, the Protestant melange is not a foundation of rock but of rubble.

Nevertheless, we should love one another because God is Love.

Asa
 
I find this answer strange; when did the Catholic Church receive the revelation from God that it had recieved an infallible teachnig authority, or was it simply assumed?

AT PENTACOST / BY CHRIST
catholic-rcia.com/pages/Holy_Spirit.html

Actually if readers of this thread studied Section 1 of the doctrine and Covenants of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints they would find that God gave to this church via a living prophet an explicit and INFALLIBLE TEACHING AUTHORITY which has been held by each succeeding and living prophet.

“God gave us His Son to be the fullfilment of all things” We have been given His Holy Spirit to guide the Church, to guide us all. It has not failed the Church yet, not one time. Truly amazing."

Those Mormons who are offended by what is taught by the presently constitued General Authorities of the above mentioned church are not in good standing or in a state of grace; even if they hold a temple recommend.

“If we as Catholics were given a Mass recommend we would have to refuse it out right because not one of us is deemed worthy to attend, even the Pope.” Only because of Jesus’ Mercy do we attend."

In my opinion the argument rests between C of Jesus Christ of LDS and Roman Catholicism, the Protestant melange is not a foundation of rock but of rubble.

We have no argument to be the true Church, we are not built on the fall of any other Church, we are in Church because we are all fallen and in need of our Savior and God. It is that simple.

The Protestants are are brothers and sisters in Christ, they who profess Christ are also saved by Him. They beleive in the Most Holy Trinity as all Christians have beleived, it is our Hope and our desire to be with it and in it with Jesus forever.
 
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