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dianaiad
Guest
You have Popes who, you claim, are being guided by the Holy Spirit and who, when they are acting in their role as Pope, are infallible. The only difference is the name, and frankly, a dog by any other name still barks and wags its tail.…and yet the Catholic church allowed clergy to marry until 1139, at the Second Lateran Council, and in the Americas no black held the priesthood until Father Tolton in 1886, and he had to be ordained in Rome (the Father’s Healy were mixed race, and ‘passed’ as Irish when they were ordained in 1854 and 1964, respectively). Now the Catholics had been in the Americas for…oh…close to three hundred years by that time.
A prophet, to us, is someone who receives revelation and guidance for the world from God. A man whose proclamations to the world are considered infallible because God ensures it definitely fits that category, at least to me.
Would you like me to return the favor? Trust me on this one. You don’t. Do I deny that some of our leaders have said some nasty things about blacks? Nope. I will note, however, that none of them supported slavery or the buying and selling of humans; JS ran for president on an abolitionist ticket.The Mormons ordained a black man, Elijah Abel, to the priesthood in 1836, and Walker Lewis was ordained in 1843. No black man was ordained again until 1978, a time lag of, what… 134 years. Less than half the time it took you guys to do the same thing.
What I do have a problem with is your insistence that everything any of our leaders have ever said HAS to be taken as ‘the word of God’ when WE don’t. Our leaders have not been perfect. Yours haven’t.
Come to think of it, the bible has made it pretty clear that none of the prophets described therein were perfect. It makes quite a production of letting us know that they had flaws, come to think of it; if more than a verse or two is devoted to the teachings of a prophet in the Old or New testament, his humanity…his flaws…are also mentioned. Some of those flaws were pretty major, too. One would think the bible writers thought it was important for us to remember, and understand, that prophets were fallible human beings.
Texanknight, where in the above could you POSSIBLY get the idea that I ‘admit’ any such thing?One difference…a rather big one, at least to me, is the reception of the resumption/beginning of black men to the priesthood: with us, it was instant and greeted with joy. We already have at least two black men who are in the line to be in the Quorum of the Twelve, which means that we could quite easily have a black man as President of the church within the next twenty to thirty years, and it won’t even cause a ripple.
(edited to fix my goofs with the quotes)