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amgid:
Erring in doctrine is not grounds for disciplinary action in the Church. Persistently teaching a doctrine that challenges the fundamental position of the Church, after repeated warnings, is grounds for disciplinary action in the Church.
That’s as I understand it and understand, too, that McConkie expressed true humility in accepting his discipline and in no way ever placed himself in the position (quite the contrary, as a matter of fact!) of meriting any disciplinary action.
What I
don’t know - and you may and might be able to point me in the direction of the information - is how McConkie’s
Mormon Doctrines came to be reprinted (presumably NOT in the same 1958-59 text!) in (the dates that I know of) 1966 (the printing which I own, purchased from eBay) and 1993 (the printing date given on an edition available from
amazon.com. It was my impression that the books that were sit warehoused in 1959 were destroyed and that it was agreed amongst all concerned that the book would never be printed again, even with the errors corrected. And yet it’s still available (in one form or another).
amgid:
The Lectures on Faith is also published by Deseret Book. It is not something that the LDS Church tries to hide.
Oh, I didn’t mean to really imply that they were - I didn’t buy the ‘published’ version but rather copy and pasted the lectures and ‘self-published’ it!
As I think I noted in another post, I am quite upset with myself for having missed, by less than a day, a copy of Pratt’s “The Seer” that was up for auction on
deseret.com - it sold for $15 and I would surely have paid $20!
amgid:
The LDS Church does not attempt to “suppress” any known historical documents. The LDS Church historical department has the biggest archive of historical data relating to the Church, and it is very cooperative with scholars and historians who approach it for information to do research on Church history. Is the RCC equally forthcoming with historical data from its archives as the LDS Church is?
Now I would, from what I have read, take great issue with those first couple of statements - it has, as I understand it, long been known that some documents have been repressed (including, at times, the Book of Commandments and even the diaries of some pioneers forbidden to their ancestors). It is also my understanding the the documents in the presidents vault are very much ‘off limits’. Now I will grant you that the information I have read concerning the suppression of documents comes primarily from LDS/BYU scholars, some of whom have spoken out publicly on the issue and some whom have chosen to remain anonymous - but even past church historians have clearly stated that some documents are strictly off limits.
As to the historical documents in the Vatican “Secret Archives” I know of none that are not - in one form or the other - open to all qualified scholars. I use the terms “one form” and “qualified” because the Vatican Archives contain, for instance, minute pieces of manuscripts that might contain 3rd century epistles in horrible condition and while someone like, hmm, Bruce Metzger (or document forensic specialists) might have access, you don’t just walk in off the street with a Vatican library card and check out that item: you will likely even be asked to pay for the very finest photograph of such a document. So, yes, I not only think that the Vatican is ‘equally forthcoming’ with documents of historical value, I think that it is far
more forthcoming than the LDS church is with documents that are, for the majority, less than two-hundred years old.
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