T
TOmNossor
Guest
“Supernatural Public Revelation” is my term to allow for what IMO is obvious within the trajectory of Catholic development. As Newman points out the Maxim of St. Vincent De Lerins is not sufficient to chart the march of Christian development. Sometimes views held by few emerge as dominant. The discussions and results of General Councils appear to those outside of Catholicism as connected little to God’s guidance. (I would go so far as to say that from my study of the data available the things that happen in councils appear less divinely sanctioned than the LDS extension of the priesthood that critics almost universally claim was done in response to societal pressure. I think the evidence for divine interaction in the LDS priesthood decision is stronger than for General Councils). All that being said, where I Catholic I would believe that General Councils were guided by a form of “natural public revelation.” To me there is no other Catholic choice because the data demands that if they are 100% God’s will, they must have been guided by God because the best read of pre-council Tradition would not always get you the council conclusion.I know of no other kind of public revelation than “supernatural.” … I was referring to how God revealed things to the Old Testament prophets and the early New Testament Church. My point was that God chooses when and whom to reveal to …
So “supernatural public revelation” as compared to “natural public revelation” is my attempt to create a space in which I could be a Catholic and understand history as a Catholic.
This is not what I claim actually. I claim that when the fullness of God’s authority leads God’s church then supernatural public revelation is available.But it was never a constant flow throughout salvation history within the Jewish religion or the early Christian Church, therefore I do not accept that new revelation must be a requirement for genuine authority.
I would not agree that Paul did not consider himself a member of the 12, at least ultimately. Paul is quite interesting. At times humbly declaring that he was less than the 12. At other times suggesting that the more senior Apostles had no authority over him.You don’t really think Paul was a member of the 12 do you? He didn’t even consider himself a member of the 12, but an apostle nonetheless. How could he be an apostle but not a member of the 12? I know this is an impossibility to LDS, but that’s not a Catholic problem.
Section 102 was not delivered solely to Joseph Smith. Same concerning Section 134.I am totally aware of this claim, but until you can show me a recorded LDS public revelation given to someone other than the sitting prophet that the church put forth to its members as scripture, I cannot accept your comparison to how things worked in the early church. No, in the early church God used different people for different purposes. All the revelation clearly did not come from the one leader, but from numerous people chosen by God. The Church ultimately canonized the revelation as scripture. That is a huge difference with how the LDS Church works today.
Most obvious however is Section 135 which is written by Elder John Taylor (long before he became prophet).
Brigham Young received Section 136 before he was the President of the Church.
I personally have studied OD1 only a little, but OD2 was a joint revelation to all the highest leaders of the church. It was not written solely (I do not think even mostly, but in truth I do not know much nor think much is knowable about this) by Pres Kimball, and was delivered by President Tanner.
The thing about Joe-blow Mormon scholar down the street is that faithful LDS scholars (who you and I also call apologists) have by my observations dealt with the data offered by those who write foundationally critical things about the church. Patrick Madrid, Jimmy Akin, Robert Sungenis, (perhaps most importantly in this context Butler, Dahlgren, and Hess) are either ignorant of the data or intentionally leave it out of their apologetic presentations. The LDS apologist IMO is on the leading edge of these discussions as they relate to the truth claims of the CoJCoLDS. The type of dialogue that occurred in England among Newman, Pusey, and Darby was this leading edge stuff; but Catholic apologist by my observation have retreated to platitudes about Clement to the Corinthians. Father Francis Sullivan may be most similar to Richard Bushman in his semi-matter-of-fact way he presents issues, but I had read and discussed all of Bushman’s issues before Bushman wrote them. I do not see such discussions within Catholic apologetic circles.Because the Catholic Church is so large, I am also aware that within you can probably find somewhere whatever support you want for whatever conclusion you want. I’m more interested in what the Magisterium of the Church has to say, not an individual priest scholar. That’s like me quoting something from Joe-blow Mormon scholar down the street in oder to disprove a teaching of John Paul the Great.
Charity, TOm