maklelan wrote: Ray A wrote:You'd obviously be aware of President Hinckley's statements regarding "as man is...". "I don't know that we teach that....". GBH "doesn't know"? Yet he was taught this all his life?
"I don't know that we teach that" means, "I wouldn't say that we teach that." He's trying to steer away from speculation that will obviously only cause more problems. Some people think he should have been more concerned about the maniacally cynical hermeneutics of people who for some reason dedicate a large portion of their lives to whining about other people's belief systems. Not to say you're one of those people, but you're appealing to their litany.
A critical look isn't the same as "whining". I haven't appealed to any litany. I saw your thread, and though I don't usually post in the CK, I read it a couple of times and decided it was worth some comment.
maklelan wrote: I would say the ebb and flow of doctrinal emphasis and correction, which is based on the needs of the members, the trends of society, and the anti-Mormon flavors of the month. The doctrine hasn't changed, he's just trying to direct emphasis away from it in a time when it's being speculated on out of control. Obviously a national interview with Larry King is not the kind of context where he can trust his words will be understood fully and not be twisted by people who want him to screw up. The fact that people are actually insisting he was trying to deny knowledge of the doctrine is a clear manifestation of that proclivity.
I don't know about anti-Mormon trends, but when he gave that interview I told an elderly missionary couple what he said, and they didn't believe me. I had to show them the actual interview. The passing of time diminishes initial disbelief that he would even say that. How this fits "the needs of members" isn't clear to me.
maklelan wrote: Watching the media digest stories and spit them back out onto the national stage in the manner they see fit has shown me over and over again that they're not the best vehicle for that kind communication. Hopefully you understand what I mean.
I don't see the big deal in admitting what was taught in the Church since the King Follett sermon. Was God once a man? Which Mormon doesn't know the answer to that? Yet curiously you won't find this teaching on LDS.org. GBH was clear in his answer that "I don't know that we teach that", and "we don't know much about it". It connects to this discussion because we're discussing the nature of God, and evolving understandings about the nature of God.
maklelan wrote: I think that's a reduction of the facts. What about practices, policies, and emphases? Do they not exist within the church, or do they just get silently grouped in with principles that have a more testimony-relevant impact?
And when it actually becomes reasonable to do that in general conference we'll see, but right now it would only be to satisfy the demands of critics who, for the most part, aren't going to change their minds as a result. I don't know if you're included in that, but you can easily see that that motivation is not really that pressing.
I think both these concepts are under revision, the "God was once a man" idea, and plural marriage. I think there's a great deal of upper-echelon uncertainty about both. I don't have the interview at hand now, but a Church spokeswoman said a few years ago (I think about three) that polygamy was now outdated and irrelevant, and discarded just like some Old Testament practices were (I was posting on FAIR at the time I pasted this interview, and Charity's reaction was "she should be fired!" None of the LDS posters could believe what they were reading). It fit quite neatly with GBH's "it's behind us". I don't think many of you members understand what those simple three words really mean. Again, we are discussing concepts relevant to the nature of God, and polygamy is, obviously, connected with an anthropomorphic God. If within two centuries Mormon leaders can become unsure about the nature of God and hesitant to publicly state where they stand, I don't see why any early Israelite theologies cannot be questioned, nor why they should be used to boost a contemporary Mormon belief when the president of the Church himself was saying "I don't know that we teach that". What does establishing ancient anthropomorphic theologies have to do with contemporary Mormonism? Joseph Smith's idea of an anthropomorphic God came late, in the King Follett sermon.
If men do not comprehend the character of God, they do not comprehend themselves. I want to go back to the beginning, and so lift your minds into more lofty spheres and a more exalted understanding than what the human mind generally aspires to.
I want to ask this congregation, every man, woman and child, to answer the question in their own hearts, what kind of a being God is? Ask yourselves; turn your thoughts into your hearts, and say if any of you have seen, heard, or communed with Him? This is a question that may occupy your attention for a long time. I again repeat the question—What kind of a being is God? Does any man or woman know? Have any of you seen Him, heard Him, or communed with Him? Here is the question that will, peradventure, from this time henceforth occupy your attention. The scriptures inform us that "This is life eternal that they might know thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent."
Up to this time they did not have this understanding. Do you know that Joseph got this by revelation? Or did he get this idea from contemporary sources, and early
Christian theologies, such as from some of the early church fathers?
I also refer you to Steven Epperson's
Mormons and Jews: Early Mormon Theologies of Israel.
Joseph Smith's interest in God's Israel was not exhausted with publication of the Book of Mormon. In the fourteen years until his death, he returned repeatedly to questions of Israel's covenant and election, its gathering and restoration, the reconciliation of its estranged families, and the place of its "adopted" sons and daughters in the Lord's scheme of salvation.
Epperson quoting Brodie:
In response to explosive church growth and an agenda of this worldly kingdom building, "Joseph," Fawn Brodie writes, "began to make learning a personal ideal … [H]idden under the guise of mysticism in Joseph was an insatiable curiosity and hunger for knowledge."1 This hunger was shared by many Mormons similarly deprived of the rudiments of education.2
The influence of Joshua Sexias' ideas on Joseph Smith:
Smith took to Seixas immediately. Seixas's "instruction pleased me much," he wrote of their first day in class. On 30 January Joseph observed, "He is a man of excellent understanding, and has a knowledge of many languages which were spoken by the ancients, and he is an honorable man, so far as I can judge yet."34 Joseph in company with Rigdon, Cowdery, and others often visited Seixas in the latter's private rooms in the evening to converse on the subject of the school, their want of books, particular questions about Hebrew, and religious subjects. Smith remarked that Seixas "conversed freely," that he was "an interesting man," cordial, intelligent, and pleasant.35 Smith lent his own horses and sleigh so that his instructor could visit his wife and children in nearby Hudson during the cold winter months.
We know that many of Smith's ideas didn't come out of the blue, "by revelation".
I also refer you to
Joseph Smith and Kabbalah: The Occult Connection.
The influence of Alexander Neibaur:
Joseph Smith and Alexander Neibaur were frequent associates. Neibaur had been engaged by Joseph a few days after his arrival in Nauvoo in April 1841. During the last months of the prophet's life, both his and Neibaur's diaries indicate that Neibaur read with and tutored Smith in Hebrew and German.129 Given this friendly relationship, the interests of the prophet, and the background of Neibaur--and perhaps even the books in Neibaur's library--it seems inconceivable that discussions of Kabbalah did not take place. Kabbalah was the mystical tradition of Judaism, the tradition which claimed to be custodian of the secrets God revealed to Adam. These secrets were occultly conveyed by the oral tradition of Kabbalah throughout the ages--so it was claimed--until finally finding written expression in the Zohar and the commentaries of the medieval Kabbalists, books Neibaur possessed. Kabbalah was the custodian of an occult re-reading of Genesis and the traditions of Enoch, it contained the secrets of Moses. And it was a subject that Joseph Smith had probably already crossed in different versions several times in his life. Can anyone familiar with the history and personality of Joseph Smith--the prophet who restored the secret knowledge and rituals conveyed to Adam, translated the works of Abraham, Enoch, and Moses, and retranslated Genesis--question that he would have been interested in the original version of this Jewish occult tradition? And here, in Neibaur, was a man who could share a version of that knowledge with him.
On Sunday afternoon, 7 April 1844, Joseph Smith stood before a crowd estimated at 10,000 and delivered his greatest sermon, the King Follett Discourse.130 Dissension, rumor, accusation, and conspiracy all abounded in Nauvoo on that pleasant spring day, and Joseph was at the center. This would be Joseph's last conference, ten weeks later he lay murdered at Carthage Jail. In this atmosphere of tension, many in the congregation probably expected a message of conciliation, a retrenchment. Instead, the prophet stunned listeners with his most audacious public discourse--a declaration replete with doctrinal innovations and strange concepts that many of the Saints had never before heard. As Fawn Brodie noted, "For the first time he proclaimed in a unified discourse the themes he had been inculcating in fragments and frequently in secret to his most favored saints: the glory of knowledge, the multiplicity of gods, the eternal progression of the human soul."131
Van Hale, in his analysis of the discourse's doctrinal impact, notes four declarations made by Joseph Smith which have had an extraordinary and lasting impact on Mormon doctrine: men can become gods; there exist many Gods; the gods exist one above another innumerably; and God was once as man now is.132 Interestingly, these were all concepts that could, by various exegetical approaches, be found in the Hermetic-Kabbalistic tradition. But even more astoundingly, it appears Joseph actually turned to the Zohar for help in supporting his introduction of these radical doctrinal assertions. (emphasis added)
Remember Smith's saying that he liked to "dig up new things for my hearers", and at the time of the KFS his status as a prophet was under question by many. I suppose you can call this "revelation", but it could also be nothing extraordinary beyond "digging into ancient theologies". It's very debatable whether he was "inspired by God" in any of this, or, if you look at the connections, whether it was really all that "mysterious".
maklelan wrote: That has absolutely nothing to do with secular biblical scholarship, but I'd like to point out that you seem to give everything the benefit of the doubt except for Mormonism, toward which you maintain a marked cynicism.
I've been studying Mormonism for 34 years, and have been both critical and apologetic. My studies haven't ceased, although they are no where as intense as they once were. I'm not participating in this thread to "prove" anything (and I may well get bored with it and stop replying without notice), only to offer critical perspectives to your assumptions. There's no need to imagine the worst motives on my part. Cynical? Yes I am cynical to much, but it would be much easier to be cynical by just doing a drive by post and mentioning what an idiot you are, but I'm instead actually trying to provide some substance to your thread, which looked like coming to a halt anyway.
maklelan wrote: They must be evaluated on their individual merit. It's utterly ludicrous to accept one assertion as true simply because an unrelated assertion from the same source turned out to be true. Keep in mind those people who deduced that spherical earth also deduced that the stars dictated the course of human events, and their deduction of the path of the planets was completely wrong.
Einstein wasn't always right, either.
And you answer your own comment below:
maklelan wrote: It usually is thought of that way by people who think the history of human intelligence diachronically charts a perfectly smooth and exponential rate of growth which will perpetually pinnacle with each coming day. It's the proclivity of some of those who worship at the altar of popular science to see the human mind as in a constant state of linear progress. I happen to think that's a rather simplistic worldview, and I happen to know the historical data show a different story, and what we often presume to be primitive can sometimes be shown to just be a little over our heads.
maklelan wrote:Which Jewish concept? The modern one which has been developed through millennia of polemic with Christianity? The Rabbinic perspective, which is at the beginning of that conflict? The Qumranic perspective? The perspective of the author of Yardeni's stele? Shall we speculate on the Jewish perception of the Messiah that provided fertile soil for Christianity to take hold? What about Isaiah? To which concept do you refer?
All.
maklelan wrote: First, I don't view this only from Mormon belief. Second, I am a "real scholar." Third, if we have to look beyond belief, why do you continue to try to bring our discussion back to who's beliefs are actually true?
Probably because of the very first line of your OP:
I'm hoping to use this thread to offer regular updates on some conclusions from secular biblical scholarship that support a Latter-day Saint perspective,
maklelan wrote:And is that fact supposed to imply (1) that his results show he did it right, and (2) since my results are different, I'm doing it wrong?
That's how I interpret your statement, but if you meant it another way, please explain.
I was getting at whether or not you're open enough to question your own interpretations, and not just approach this from a point of view that "supports a Latter-day Saint perspective".