Just a note Ajax: they need not respond to scientists over evolutionary theory because they have never taken an institutional stand on that issue and have always maintained a neutral position on it. Its fairly peripheral to our salvation,
I would agree with you Coggins but I can find a lot of TBMs who think it is against Church doctrine to this day. If the Church were to clealry proclaim to disregard all past statements by Joseph Fielding Smith and simply say it has not been revealed yet than that would fair and doctrinal. But to me it seems they don't even want to do that for fear of alienating people including a few seminary teachers I have that still actively teach, preach, and indoctrinate the youth that evolution and the gospel are mutually exclusive and cannot coexist. Perhaps they think that by not saying anything at all they're keeping more members. This is where it becomes more about PR, pandering to older members stuck in false ideas, and politics than proclaiming the truth, and as I stated before I don't have much respect for that. When they're clearly just feeding us information at General Conference with PR, politics, what the left will think, what mainstream Christianity will think, what value is that to the common member like myself who has to sit through it? I used to go to Church to learn the truth and more about the nature of God, but instead it seems I'm getting a course on how to speak politically correct and win a popularity contest amongst members.
I just can't believe that this is how Church was in the days of Joseph Smith. I would have loved to hear him speak just once, or even just worked along side him even if only for a little bit.
How can you tell me that there is no institutional stand when as late as 2000 it was being preached by BYU religion professors as against the scriptures and probably still is? Why does the Church see no need to correct this doctrine? They correct other false doctrines being preached that need corrected?
And when the confederates saw Jackson standing fearless as a stone wall the army of Northern Virginia took courage and drove the federal army off their land.