I'm pretty sure this nugget was the inspiration for my 1st semester Book of Mormon teacher who said the same, if the prophet orders you to kill someone, then do it and you'll be blessed for it. He was a big jovial guy, so he had a way of saying it that made it sound "humorous yet true". He also qualified by saying it was almost certainly not going to happen. At the time, it sounded totally normal. Only two of his stories from the class stuck with me, so there must have been something off.IHQ wrote:I’m reminded of the explanation from Ezra Taft Benson “My boy, you always keep your eye on the President of the Church, and if he ever tells you to do anything, and it is wrong, and you do it, the Lord will bless you for it.” He appears to be suggesting that faith is in play when serving a false God - in this case an errant Prophet.
I can't remember if this had been brought up yet on this thread. But these "conflicts" are often metaethical -- not about what is right, but what is the criteria that makes it right. The Euthyphro dilemma asks if it's good because God said or if it's inherently good. If something is inherently good, then what does that even mean? And if God said, isn't that arbitrary?
Nephi killing Laban, which was probably the context for my teacher but I honestly can't remember at this point, actually contradicts my teacher. Nephi stumbled upon the apparent truth of act utilitarianism: "it's better that one man die than a whole nation suffer". And it's possible Nephi was correct. If so: if act utilitarianism is right, and if for whatever reason preserving the plates would lead to countless lives saved down the road, then his hand would have been forced independent of what God had to say about it. "The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few" even justifies good innocent people dying for the good of society in general. The switch operator should have marched back to his house and grabbed his kid off the couch and put him on the track if for some inexplicable reason, that was the only way to save the train full of people.
The most basic reading of Abraham puts codified law authored by God against God's arbitrary commands. DCT resolves the conflict. DCT is a very straight line doctrine, once you see the conflict and how it must be true, then there's a fantastic blueprint for every anxious cult leader out there to follow.