Rebecca and Glenda,
When I ask myself what D&C 121 says, I do not begin with the assumption that Joseph Smith is the author of it. This is something I am seeking to determine as I weigh all these issues.
Here is a passage from Glenda:
Add this: ANY man or woman who thinks he or she is writing actual Scripture
is all about power, the power of God to influence others. It is THAT obvious. Everyone knows the power that is in Scripture. It has lead and feed people for two thousand years and J. Smith was no blind to this power. If he could make folks believe that what he was writing WAS SCRIPTURE, then his power would only be as limited as those believer’s natural abilities. He’d have absolute power over them and that is EXACTLY what he got. It is ALL ABOUT POWER and CONTROL.
To be consistent Glenda must believe that Peter, James, John, Paul, … who think they were "writing
actual Scripture" are “all about power.”
There are not a great deal if any Catholic leaders who ever claimed to believe they could receive revelation/inspiration I agree if they claimed to receive it and didn’t that would be a problem, but history is clear they didn’t receive it.
To properly evaluate Joseph Smith, the POSSIBILITY that he received revelation/inspiration must be entertained. Glenda’s comment clearly evidences that she doesn’t hold that as a possibility. Any post Biblical author of scripture is “ALL ABOUT POWER” and is not receiving revelation/inspiration from God.
I cannot follow him in this preconception and I do not believe I should. I have long found it reasonable even more likely that the successor of Peter and the Apostles could, like the apostles could, receive inspiration/revelation. The Catholic “successors” never could (no writing of scripture, no supernatural public revelation from God, …). To their credit (I think by in large they were good men), they never lied and claimed they could; but something ended and the church was no longer lead by Apostles/Prophets (those who speak for God through inspiration/revelation).
Claiming Joseph Smith was a prophet was the hardest thing for me to do as I left the Catholic Church. In retrospect, I do not know why, but perhaps you have offered a window into my unchecked assumptions from long ago.
In any case, Glenda’s comment above evidences to me that she does not even recognize that her comment condemns Peter, James, John, Paul, … just as surely as it condemns Joseph Smith. This IMO is due deep-seated and likely unconscious assumptions. Assumptions that I had to leave behind if I was going to give the CoJCoLDS a fair reading.
glendab:
But denial is also a powerful tool and if a person doesn’t want to see the evil that is contained in all of this, then they will keep themselves blind to it. A person standing in a darkened room who suddenly sees the outside and the light pouring in to the darkened room they dwell in, is suddenly blinded by the light and blames the light for simply shinning and sees the loss of what little vision they have in a darkened room as a negative. That is the natural outcome of dwelling in darkness.
As you can accuse me of “denial,” I can accuse you of “deep-seated and unconscious assumptions.” Unlike your titling my position as “denial,” I have pointed to how your position underlines things you claim to believe. I think the evidence for your “deep-seated and likely unconscious assumptions” is stronger than the evidence for my “denial.”
I started outside the room that was the CoJCoLDS. My intellectual conclusion was and remains that Joseph Smith’s involvement in the institution of polygamy is poorly explained by appealing to power or sexual motives. Admittedly the “power” component here is IMO a poor explanation due largely to the distribution of power that Joseph Smith did and celebrated (as I mentioned before, he does not consolidate power in himself in contrast to other leaders including IMO the Pope). Beyond this, my intellectual conclusion was and remains that Joseph Smith as the naturalistic source of the BOM is essentially impossible. This firm conviction does not need to support the above info on the polygamy issue, but it is required to support another problematic issue discussed on this board, but not in this thread. And set beside the weighing of these issues intellectually, I also seek spiritual confirmation as I believe we all should.
Charity, TOm