Aristotle Smith wrote:Somehow, that just doesn't cut it. Suppose as a Bishop you were interviewing a young man for a temple recommend. You asked him, "Have you stopped fornicating with your girlfriend?" If his answer is, "To a very large degree, I did", is that good enough for the average LDS Bishop? If yes, and a recommend is regularly issued under these circumstances, I will drop this. However, we all know this doesn't fly. He may have cut back on the fornicating from twice a day to once a week. That is stopping fornicating, to a very large degree. Is "almost" now a good enough answer on temple recommend interviews for things like Word of Wisdom observance, chastity, tithe paying, etc.?
Sorry. I don't see those as even
remotely comparable situations.
In any event, after Wilford Woodruff's Manifesto, the number of new plural marriages plummeted, and they were performed, when they were performed, in Mexico, on ships off shore, on Catalina Island, and the like. It's pretty clear to me that President Woodruff was acting to meet the demands of the U.S. federal government, and that marriages outside of the United States were viewed by many as still okay.
I'm not surprised that The Principle, for which people had suffered and gone to jail for nearly half a century, was not easily relinquished. Two, and ultimately three, members of the Twelve were excommunicated over it.
Aristotle Smith wrote:The only time it even mentions polygamy is to say three things: 1) Polygamy "should not be the focus of the lesson," 2) It was practiced at one time, and 3) Mormons certainly are no longer polygamists!
The problem is this leaves Section 132 incomprehensible. While I agree that one need not rehearse the entirety of "In Sacred Loneliness" to provide context, you need some to understand what it is saying. None is ever provided.
I've always discussed plural marriage in such lessons, and see no conflict whatever between doing so and, at the same time, not making polygamy "the focus of the lesson."
Aristotle Smith wrote:If the argument is that the real point that should be taught is the importance of current monogamous temple unions, why bother with section 132 at all? It's because the lesson wants the importance of current monogamous temple unions to have a scriptural foundation, so they reach for 132. Except, that was not the context in which section 132 was given, that wasn't even on the radar at that point in time.
I don't agree with you at all on that.
Aristotle Smith wrote:Daniel Peterson wrote:I agree, though, that avoiding plural marriage may well have been a mistake. That's why I welcome the recent Bringhurst/Foster book on the subject, and Spencer Fluhman's fine recent article on Helen Mar Kimball.
Weren't you just saying that no one reads these things?
No. I said that relatively few do. That's a fundamentally different thing.
Aristotle Smith wrote:If no one reads it, and it's not the kind of thing that you think should be taught in "Level A" church history, how does this help anything?
Some do read it, and it trickles down. I would like more to read it. I'm doing what I can to increase the readership of such materials -- including, but not limited to, puffing them here and over at MDDB.