B
ben_dy
Guest
OK - deep breath…
Since it first found it’s way into the standard works of the LDS church, the “Book of Abraham” has been a great stumbling block for bringing the Mormon church into a more ‘mainstream’ form of Christianity.
There are other stumbling blocks, of course, but it seems to me, having read the standard works, the JoD, and various other LDS publication, that the Book of Abraham - particularly since the late 1960’s and 1970’s - has certainly been ‘dropped’ as a regular topic of education and discourse and is, in short, an embarrassment that cannot be explained except by saying that - in this case, at least - Jos. Smith, Jun. was ‘mistaken’.
And items from the JoD could just be eliminated. When Brigham Young speaks:
So - wouldn’t the wisest course of having to defend doctrine which has either proved to be the work of imagination (such as the Book of Abraham) or have proved to be ‘non-inspired’ revelation is to simply do away with those stumbling blocks?
There is such great appeal in much LDS doctrine - giving spirits already born a tabernacle, that after death men will be gods themselves with many wives and children and have worlds of their own, the emphasis on family and morals and good works being necessary to enjoy that greatest celestial kingdom, the pacifist idea that murder is THE blasphemy against the Holy Ghost, getting re-baptized as many times as you feel the need, the emphasis on charity towards the poor, the wisdom (no pun intended) of eating and drinking that which does less harm to the body (only eating meat in winter or in time of famine, for instance, instead of a double Whopper or a couple of Big Macs daily)… the list of extremely positive and appealing doctrines is endless! And the very WORST you can do in an afterlife if you prove to be a ‘bad’ Mormon in this life is to be a serving angel - better a waiter or waitress than burning in a lake of fire.
What do you think? LDS doctrine has undergone some quick changes in the past and THRIVED. Just start by eliminating the Book of Abraham and doctrines supported by it, declare it to be neither a true translation or a true revelation, and you’ve done away with a great number of doctrines which aid those who call the LDS a ‘cult’ (in the pejorative sense of the word).
OK, so I realize that no one here is likely a member of the First Presidency (maybe one of the Quorum of the Twelve?) BUT to you LDS men and women out there - wouldn’t these first few steps stop some of the questions that might dissuade some from becoming members of the LDS church? And aren’t the majority of the doctrines drawn from or fortified by the Book of Abraham no longer doctrine?
Eagerly awaiting a response (and still wondering if my Book of Abraham has a typo when it speaks of the celestial bodies of ‘Kolob’ as well as ‘Kokob’?).
(Pardon if grammar and spelling are incorrect - power is out and laptop battery is running low: thank goodness landlines are up!)
Ben
Since it first found it’s way into the standard works of the LDS church, the “Book of Abraham” has been a great stumbling block for bringing the Mormon church into a more ‘mainstream’ form of Christianity.
There are other stumbling blocks, of course, but it seems to me, having read the standard works, the JoD, and various other LDS publication, that the Book of Abraham - particularly since the late 1960’s and 1970’s - has certainly been ‘dropped’ as a regular topic of education and discourse and is, in short, an embarrassment that cannot be explained except by saying that - in this case, at least - Jos. Smith, Jun. was ‘mistaken’.
And items from the JoD could just be eliminated. When Brigham Young speaks:
Brigham Young said:“Now if any of you will deny the plurality of wives, and continue to do so, I promise that you will be damned; and I will go still further and say, take this revelation, or any other revelation that the Lord has given, and deny it in your feelings, and I promise that you will be damned.”
- it could simply be dropped from subsequent editions.
So - wouldn’t the wisest course of having to defend doctrine which has either proved to be the work of imagination (such as the Book of Abraham) or have proved to be ‘non-inspired’ revelation is to simply do away with those stumbling blocks?
There is such great appeal in much LDS doctrine - giving spirits already born a tabernacle, that after death men will be gods themselves with many wives and children and have worlds of their own, the emphasis on family and morals and good works being necessary to enjoy that greatest celestial kingdom, the pacifist idea that murder is THE blasphemy against the Holy Ghost, getting re-baptized as many times as you feel the need, the emphasis on charity towards the poor, the wisdom (no pun intended) of eating and drinking that which does less harm to the body (only eating meat in winter or in time of famine, for instance, instead of a double Whopper or a couple of Big Macs daily)… the list of extremely positive and appealing doctrines is endless! And the very WORST you can do in an afterlife if you prove to be a ‘bad’ Mormon in this life is to be a serving angel - better a waiter or waitress than burning in a lake of fire.
What do you think? LDS doctrine has undergone some quick changes in the past and THRIVED. Just start by eliminating the Book of Abraham and doctrines supported by it, declare it to be neither a true translation or a true revelation, and you’ve done away with a great number of doctrines which aid those who call the LDS a ‘cult’ (in the pejorative sense of the word).
OK, so I realize that no one here is likely a member of the First Presidency (maybe one of the Quorum of the Twelve?) BUT to you LDS men and women out there - wouldn’t these first few steps stop some of the questions that might dissuade some from becoming members of the LDS church? And aren’t the majority of the doctrines drawn from or fortified by the Book of Abraham no longer doctrine?
Eagerly awaiting a response (and still wondering if my Book of Abraham has a typo when it speaks of the celestial bodies of ‘Kolob’ as well as ‘Kokob’?).
(Pardon if grammar and spelling are incorrect - power is out and laptop battery is running low: thank goodness landlines are up!)
Ben