Jason Bourne wrote:Droopy and BC, if the scriptures are not the final arbitrare of LDS doctrine then were Joseph Fielding Smith, Harold B. lee and BH Roberts incorrect when they said that that if someone taught something that disagreed with the standard works it could be set aside? I can't dig these up at the moment but would be happy to later. But I imagine you are familiar with the statements.
I don't see these statements as logically relevant to the core question Eric has brought up here, which is where official, established core doctrine inherently resides.
Anyone who teaches something in contradiction to anything taught in the Song of Songs can be set aside as spurious? Any and every New Testament or Old Testament verse? I really don't think this is what any of these GAs had in mind.
What they had in mind was that anything taught that is out of harmony with revealed truth as contained in the scriptures can be set aside, but this, by itself, is unexceptional within a Church context.
Since anything that comes through the power of the Holy Ghost is scripture, and the contemporary special witnesses of Christ and the living prophet in our day are authorized and tasked with receiving revelation for the Church, then anything taught that is in contradiction with any of the inspired teachings of the Brethren, regardless of the venue or site of origin or the teachings, may be set aside.
The scriptures are just once instance - but not the only - of a venue within which true, or doctrinally correct teachings reside, but hardly exclusive, in an LDS context.