M
mormon_fool
Guest
My brain is sore from the mental gymnastics here.
I think emphasis can be objectified. For example how often concepts are cited in public discourse or curricula is one indicator of emphasis. I had a category in my DSI analysis that attempted to objectify emphasis by the frequency someone would encounter a source or concept.You take emphasis(subjective) and what was quoted in public discourse over what was canonized
They don’t overcome canonized scripture, but they do influence the assumptions one brings to the text. Stuff about God having a physical body and the Holy Ghost being a personage was already out in the open by 1841 (ish). There was window between when those remarks were made and the 1876 edition where those remarks were (then) 3rd tier (general conference doctrine). My remarks in my earlier post are applicable to when 130 and LoF were in the canon. Section 130 was emphasized more as a quick Gospelink survey showed me. If one reads LoF 5 in with a assumptions supplied by 130, the LOF can be awkwardly reconciled. Bruce R. McConkie and Robert Millett do just that. The LoF’s lack of mentioning a physical body for the Father doesn’t mean there isn’t one. To argue that no mention equals no physical body is an argument from silence.The “two personage” problem goes away if one defines personage in such a way to match the context, ie. personage means a corporeal (not merely spiritual) personage. Hence the LoF isn’t necessarily “false doctrine” in this interpretation, but “incomplete” and awkward because it doesn’t use a later, standardized definition.in this case but you have spent so much time telling me how those are 5th and 6th tier sources and how that doesn’t overcome canonized scripture.
The only reason I appealed to lower tier doctrine was to show how it affected how seemingly conflicting canon was interpretted and harmonized. I am not trying to elevate the lower tiers to binding status. Obviously there is an intricate interplay between the different tiers of doctine. I judge the reliability of lower tiers by how well they can be derived or harmonized with higher tiers. At the same time I realize that the lower tiers affect the way I read the texts in the higher tiers. I scrutinize this backwards flow much more critically when I represent LDS doctrine.
I don’t dispute this.The D&C owes it very name (as opposed to the book of commandments) to the LoF:
later
fool