Bcspace probably right about what is LDS Doctrine

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_the narrator
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Re: Bcspace probably right about what is LDS Doctrine

Post by _the narrator »

bcspace wrote:
That it still exists in current lesson manuals is very unfortunate


I don't think so. Interacial relationships are viewed much more neutrally today, but there still can often be a culture clash to take into consideration.

I dated interacially back in the 80's.


When a couple is dating and thinking of marriage I think it is appropriate to help them understand that they might face challenges when mixing cultures. However, I am totally against actually advising them against marrying--and youth should certainly not be told to avoid interracial marriages.
You're absolutely vile and obnoxious paternalistic air of intellectual superiority towards anyone who takes issue with your clear misapprehension of core LDS doctrine must give one pause. - Droopy
_bcspace
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Re: Bcspace probably right about what is LDS Doctrine

Post by _bcspace »

When a couple is dating and thinking of marriage I think it is appropriate to help them understand that they might face challenges when mixing cultures. However, I am totally against actually advising them against marrying--and youth should certainly not be told to avoid interracial marriages.


That's fine. But such counsel certainly isn't racist.
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_the narrator
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Re: Bcspace probably right about what is LDS Doctrine

Post by _the narrator »

bcspace wrote:
When a couple is dating and thinking of marriage I think it is appropriate to help them understand that they might face challenges when mixing cultures. However, I am totally against actually advising them against marrying--and youth should certainly not be told to avoid interracial marriages.


That's fine. But such counsel certainly isn't racist.


Agreed. It's quite different from Joseph Fielding Smith and McConkie's advice to keep the races separate and pure.
You're absolutely vile and obnoxious paternalistic air of intellectual superiority towards anyone who takes issue with your clear misapprehension of core LDS doctrine must give one pause. - Droopy
_jon
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Re: Bcspace probably right about what is LDS Doctrine

Post by _jon »

More LDS marital Doctrine...

'Point out that young men should not be looking for the right person but a right person..'
(Choosing an Eternal Companion: Lesson 31 Manual 3 Aaronic Priesthood)

And not to forget fiscal Doctrine...

'If your family does not have enough means to meet their everyday needs (food, clothing, shelter), you do not have to pay tithing. (False.)'
(Quiz question and answer from 'Tithing - A Spiritual Test: Lesson 20 Manual 3 Aaronic Priesthood)
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_bcspace
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Re: Bcspace probably right about what is LDS Doctrine

Post by _bcspace »

More LDS marital Doctrine...


What's wrong with either?
Machina Sublime
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_consiglieri
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Re: Bcspace probably right about what is LDS Doctrine

Post by _consiglieri »

jon wrote:Go onto LDS.org and look up Manual 3 Aaronic Presthood. It is in lesson 31. It is the Manual in use currently.



Good find, Jon!

I went and did a little research and found something of interest.

The original quote from President Kimball's 1976 talk specifically related to the ability to marry in the temple, and it was due to this that interracial marriages were discouraged.

It seems clear, then, that President Kimball meant non-black LDS marrying a black spouse (whether LDS or non-LDS).

The first sentence of the quote was removed in the current Aaronic Priesthood Manual version. Here is the quote from the 1976 speech:

We are grateful that this one survey reveals that about 90 percent of the temple marriages hold fast. Because of this, we recommend that people marry those who are of the same racial background generally, and of somewhat the same economic and social and educational background (some of those are not an absolute necessity, but preferred), and above all, the same religious background, without question. In spite of the most favorable matings, the evil one still takes a monumental toll and is the cause for many broken homes and frustrated lives.


http://speeches.BYU.edu/reader/reader.php?id=6136

I am not certain why the Correlation Committee would only make a partial quote in the current priesthood manuals.

All the Best!

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You prove yourself of the devil and anti-mormon every word you utter, because only the devil perverts facts to make their case.--ldsfaqs (6-24-13)
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Re: Bcspace probably right about what is LDS Doctrine

Post by _Runtu »

Consig,

It's depressing, but the simple answer is that the Curriculum Department reprinted the Aaronic Priesthood lessons from the 1970s verbatim, so that crap about interracial marriage was left in. Since it was a reprint, I doubt Correlation took a good look at it. I'm sure the reason it was included in the first place is that the lesson writer probably was opposed to interracial marriage.
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_bcspace
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Re: Bcspace probably right about what is LDS Doctrine

Post by _bcspace »

I'm sure the reason it was included in the first place is that the lesson writer probably was opposed to interracial marriage


Quite a stretch. If that were the case, I think the quote would be more absolute. But as anyone plainly can see, the counsel does not qualify as racism. What's far more depressing is that ostensibly intelligent people would think so.
Machina Sublime
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_Runtu
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Re: Bcspace probably right about what is LDS Doctrine

Post by _Runtu »

bcspace wrote:Quite a stretch. If that were the case, I think the quote would be more absolute. But as anyone plainly can see, the counsel does not qualify as racism. What's far more depressing is that ostensibly intelligent people would think so.


Did I mention racism? I think not. What I was commenting on is the curious editing that made the quote seem harder and harsher than the original. That, I think, is what reflects the writer/editor more than the church.
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Re: Bcspace probably right about what is LDS Doctrine

Post by _Droopy »

As is part and parcel of his style and history of intellectual engagement, Narrator has completely avoided any substantive response - indeed, any response at all - to several posts I made earlier in this thread that were fairly extensive, thoroughly civil, and philosophically serious in their challenge to his central thesis as given in his first post on this thread.

As is usual, he is content with brief, cursory, drive by posts while simply ignoring more detailed responses and critique of his own views.

I will here below re-post my earlier comments with the idea that perhaps he will condescend to an actual philosophical discussion, in greater critical depth, of the position he takes regarding the nature of doctrine within the Church.

1.

the narrator wrote:
If by the word "doctrine" we mean "official teachings of the Church," then bcspace is perhaps somewhat correct. However, that would mean that we cannot point to the scriptures to define doctrine--rather, doctrine would be the interpretations of scripture officially sanctioned by the Church.


In a sense this is true, but even the scriptures themselves are doctrinal only to the degree they are translated correctly, and then, one would be compelled to add, interpreted correctly by each individual reader. The restored Church and Kingdom are the repository of the canon - those scriptures that have been revealed thus far - and the modern Brethren are those anointed at this particular time to interpret, define, and establish doctrine for the Church.

Pointing to the scriptures alone as the final arbiter of doctrine, one should remember, was and is the problem ("Lo, here is the truth! Lo, the truth is there!") regarding the loss of priesthood authority and the fragmenting of primitive Christianity into countless sects, cults, and competing factions.

The scriptures are not the rock of the Church or of salvation, but contemporary, continuing revelation.


It seems clear to me, however, that the Church uses the word "doctrine" in a manner that means far more than simply "official teachings of the Church." I addressed this problem of the term "doctrine" in a recent issue of Element. You can read a portion of it here: "The Challenges of Mormons Defining Mormon Doctrine for Mormons; or, Is It Mormon Doctrine that Mormon Doctrine Is True?"


Of course they do. Any number of "doctrines," insights, ideas, or concepts could be true without being established as official doctrine or binding upon the members of the Church as a body.

2.

This is an excellent point that could not ever be overemphasized. If we were to lose the scriptures, but prophets were still present among us, we would still have the living oracles, and hence, we would still have priesthood authority and authoritative gospel teachings (official doctrine). If, however, we lose the prophets, the consequence us general apostasy, or a "Great Apostasy" as occurred after the passing of the Apostles.

The consequence, in other words, of the loss of Priesthood authority and living prophets, was "Christianity." Contemporary prophets, so long as they continue, can also restore any lost scripture. The scriptures, on the other hand, cannot restore lost authority or the correct interpretations of their own texts.

3.

If "doctrine" is defined as being the official teachings of the Church, then one cannot say that the LDS canon is doctrine, or what is written in the LDS canon is doctrine.



This is hardly logically obvious. All that is required here is that the LDS canon be considered itself a part of the class "official Church doctrine" and hence, subsumed within the larger doctrinal sphere comprising the entire doctrinal range of the Church' teachings.

More precisely, perhaps, that which is a part of the class of concepts known as "official Church doctrine" would be, not the scriptures per se, but anything and everything within the scriptures that is doctrine, or doctrinally sound. Anything, by definition, within the four standard works that is doctrinal, remains just as doctrinal when classed as "official Church doctrine" as when simply classed as New Testament doctrine, or Book of Mormon doctrine, or Book of Abraham doctrine, or whatever.

The crux of the matter then, is truth, not its provenance. So long as that provenance is divine in nature and has come through the channels of legitimate priesthood authority, whether it is found in the scriptures, in General Conference addresses, First Presidency messages in the Ensign, BYU devotionals, official proclamations, Church educational materials, or anywhere else, if the First Presidency and the Twelve, as a body, have taught it, support it, and it is published by the Church and used in teaching and training, it can be considered doctrine.

The final confirmation is, of course, the witness of the Holy Ghost, which allows us a pure, direct knowledge of the truth, or untruth, of any principle.

For example, the revealed canonical Word of Wisdom teaches that beer--mild drinks made with barley--is good. However, the current doctrine (teachings of the Church) teaches that all drinks containing alcohol are to be avoided.



But there is a single feature or aspect to this that applies equally to all such drinks, which you have already mentioned - alcohol. This is one of the primary purposes of modern, continuing revelation through living prophets: the continuing clarification and definition of already existing doctrines and counsel.

Alcohol is the defining characteristic the WoW seeks to address, not any particular alcoholic beverage. As culture and social context changes, Church doctrines are refined, expanded and clarified as needed. Without contemporary prophets, this process becomes one of the mere theoretical extraction of doctrine through scriptural exegesis

To say that the doctrine "resides" in the scriptures, but can only be known as they are interpreted or changed by current Church leaders, leaves discussion of doctrine being inherently in the scriptures a vacuous and hollow point.



I'm not following this. Why cannot doctrine be both inherently within the scriptures and inherently within the revealed words of living prophets, as well as inherently within each individual as he/she receives a witness of the truth of principle x, y, and z, but at different times and to different degrees as the gospel develops (line upon line...)?

I see no reason why doctrine cannot reside inherently within the scriptures, while at the same time still needing clarification and elucidation by living, authorized interpreters for the body of the Church. If the words, ideas, and teachings of the scriptures were of an overwhelmingly obvious, unambiguous, and conceptually precise kind, one might hypothetically argue that there would be no need for any further clarification by divinely authorized "revelators" authorized to make such clarifications and refinements. That, however, has clearly never been the case.

The doctrine, in other words, "resides" both in the scriptures and in the living oracles because both the scriptures and the words of the living oracles have their origin in the same source. The true, or correct understanding of the doctrine resident in the scriptures, is not resident in any particular individual, or group of individuals, and hence, the need for living prophets and contemporary "official doctrine" within the restored Kingdom.


In other words, you cannot point to the LDS canon and say that someone can just turn to them to understand the doctrine (teachings) of the Church.


Correct, as Joseph found out with the Bible in his own time.


As you have pointed out, by just going to the scriptures a myriad of different, contradicting, and voided teachings can be found. Rather for someone to find out what the Church's doctrines are, they cannot appeal to the LDS canon, but instead have to go to sanctioned interpretations by current Church leaders. Because they cannot go to scripture, but must to go to official (published) interpretations, the only source for doctrine is in the official publications. This is pretty simple logic.


But weak logic, and demonstrative of a misunderstanding of the broader spectrum of LDS doctrine itself. The four standard works are all official LDS publications, and hence, doctrinally established. The problem of interpretation resides in the individual, not in the Church (essentially, the First Presidency and Quorum of The Twelve unitedly) and hence, official interpretations and clarifications of scriptural teachings are there for the membership of the Church in a public way, as a safe doctrinal harbor for those with a greater need to be taught directly as well as for those who already understand but need, as all of us do, the witness and reassurance (as well as various clarifications and/or expansions) of Special Witnesses of Christ in our very own age.

However, each individual is quite capable, through the endowment of the Gift of the Holy Ghost, and through living righteously, of acquiring the correct interpretation of any teaching for himself through personal study, reflection, and prayer. This does not, however, happen in a vacuum. We need to be taught, and we need the teachings of the Brethren for both the generation of new ideas that will lead us to our own correct understandings of the scriptures, as well as for clear, concise, and unambiguous testimony as to what is right, what the Lord wants us to be doing, and in what manner he wants us to be doing it at a particular time.

There is public revealed teaching, for the church as a body, and private revelation and learning, for each individual within the Church. Correct doctrinal understanding is inherent in the ultimate source of truth with respect of both forms of reception of knowledge, public and private, and that is the Holy Spirit, and hence, correct "official doctrine" is, properly, inherent within the Church per se.

It is the calling and authority of the Brethren to teach revealed doctrine and principle to the people publicly and in public venues for the Church. We receive revelation for ourselves and others in our immediate environment. Much of this revelation will, of course, overlap. Individuals may receive much revelation regarding the Church, but are not authorized to teach publicly what has not been yet taught publicly by the Lord's authorized servants.
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