... The Book of Mormon is ... a matter of faith, but it's there.
Yet his beloved old geezer, Hink says otherwise.
Perhaps Holland is a top change agent in this new silent reformation?
... The Book of Mormon is ... a matter of faith, but it's there.
... The Book of Mormon is ... a matter of faith, but it's there. It's readable. It sits on the table, and it won't go away. ... For me it is ... another testament of the divinity of the Lord Jesus Christ and the single most [important] piece of evidence, the declaration that Joseph Smith was a prophet. ...
I've thought about it a lot, read it often. ... I wrote a book about the Book of Mormon, partly just because I wanted my own conviction, my testimony, to be in print, even if only for my children's sake. I dismiss out of hand the early criticism that somehow this was a book that Joseph Smith wrote. The only thing more miraculous than an angel providing him with those plates and him translating them by divine inspiration would be that he sat down and wrote it with a ballpoint pen and a spiral notebook. There is no way, in my mind, with my understanding of his circumstances, his education, ... [he] could have written that book. My fourth great-grandfather -- this goes back to my mother's pioneer side of the family -- said when he heard of the Book of Mormon in England, he walked away from the service saying no good man would have written that, and no bad man could have written it. And for me, that's still the position.
So I disregard the idea that Joseph Smith could have written it. I certainly disregard that somebody more articulate or more experienced in ecclesiastical matters could have written it, like [Smith's close friend and adviser] Sidney Rigdon. Rigdon doesn't even come to the church until the Book of Mormon is out and in circulation for eight or nine months. ...
Now, in terms of more modern theories, there are those who say it's more mythical literature and spiritual, and not literal. That doesn't work for me. I don't understand that, and I can't go very far with that, because Joseph Smith said there were plates, and he said there was an angel. And if there weren't plates and there wasn't an angel, I have a bigger problem than whether the Book of Mormon is rich literature. ... I have to go with what the prophet said about the book, about its origins, about the literalness of the plates, the literalness of the vision -- and then the product speaks for itself.
I don't think we're through examining the depth, the richness, the profundity, the complexity, all of the literary and historical and religious issues that go into that book. I think we're still young at doing that. But the origins for me are the origins that the prophet Joseph said: a set of plates, given by an angel, translated by the gift and power of God. ...
Yong Xi wrote:Why can't Holland just testify that as a special witness for Jesus Christ, he has seen the savior, in essence confirming his standing as an apostle in the church Joseph Smith restored.
Joseph was not afraid to declare his intimate knowledge of God and Jesus. Why can't Holland go there?
moksha wrote:Yong Xi wrote:Why can't Holland just testify that as a special witness for Jesus Christ, he has seen the savior, in essence confirming his standing as an apostle in the church Joseph Smith restored.
Joseph was not afraid to declare his intimate knowledge of God and Jesus. Why can't Holland go there?
I for one appreciate it when they don't just make stuff up.
Not the 'in this case' he didn't hear a voice. I think they avoid sharing too much to avoid a cult of personality. We are promised that the same things are open to us so why rely on them?
Blixa wrote:That's an extremely provocative position, harmony. I mean that more in the sense of "thought-provoking" than attempt at being coy ; ).
The strucuture of authority in Mormonism, or rather the history of its reformulations, is interesting to me. The position you outline: every member can recieve personal revelation and thus spiritually is the equal of church leaders, speaks to what is at least a populist, if not radically democratic, thread in the Smith's thinking. And I don't know that any other LDS president or prophet after him entirely endorsed that position and its possibiities (and I think that Joseph Smith himself didn't at times either).
As an institution, the church really took the form we now know it in under BY---and his rule was authoritarian (whether you want to explain at born of practical necessity in "the wilderness," personal nature, or doctrinal understanding). The massively hierarchical institutional structure of the church (both on earth and apparently extending to the hereafter) displays the contradictions inherent in "Mormon authority:" every man (emphasis on man) has his own bit of the pie, but as much as he rules over that, he too is ruled over by somebody else (who is ruled over by...).
And yet still the idea of personal revelation survives---usually accomodated to the institution (god/the spirit gives witness to "the truth" but only on small personal issues (lost car keys) or to endorse the truth of the GAs), yet sometimes not, as in harmony's postion or Juanita Brooks's ("Its as much my church as it is J. Reuben Clark's).