wenglund wrote:I think you are confusing intents with unavoidable and indirect outcomes of intents. To me, the intent for both temple weddings and the scuba graduation, isn't to exclude, but rather to perform the respective ceremonies in ways and areas that have been deemed most fitting to what is being ceremonialized. What better place to graduate from scuba diving class than in the very environment where the scuba instruction is most applicable? Same goes for the temple ceremony. Sure, exclusion may unavoidably be a consequence thereof, but not the intent.
With all due respect, my dear Wade, this is an awfully dumb analogy. First of all, having a scuba graduation underwater is stupid on so many levels that I don't even know where to begin. The whole point of rites-of-passage such as graduations and weddings is that they are communal ceremonies. With the LDS temple marriage, the Church is re-defining who gets to participate in what are, by most rights, *communal* activities. Further, I think you've got your Church history a bit confused vis-a-vis "intent." The original intent underlying the temple marriage was to protect Joseph Smith's polygamous sealings, and to hide them from the prying eyes of disapproving members, including his own wife---in other words, it was meant to aid in secrecy. To claim that the exclusion is somehow the fault of outside parties is not only wrong-headed but, well, arrogant.
The same general principle applies to most every wedding. The size and location of the wedding facility may not accomodate everyone wishing to attend. For example, my nephew is getting married in a week in his fiance's parent's back yard in Washington state. Because of the small size of the yard, and the great distance from where many of my family lives, only a few are in a position to attend, and fewer still will be able to attend--not because the intent was to exclude, but because circumstance unavoidably resulted in exclusion.
I don't see anything "arrogant" about any of this (not that you do).
Thanks, -Wade Englund-
That is because it's not "arrogant"! All of these people can attend if they want to! The exclusionary rules underlying the temple ceremony are not "circumstance," Wade. They are rules codified by men. With the temple ceremony the intent is---and indeed always has been---to exclude. Originally, this was for reasons of secrecy on the part of Joseph Smith. Today, others are quite right to say that it is done partly out of arrogance, partly out of Joseph Smith's legacy of secrecy, partly out of obedience, and partly out of religious solidarity.