bcspace wrote:Thanks, bcspace. Could you clarify that with a citation, something like an official statement from the church?
Yes. A summary of what's been taught can be found here:
Not every statement made by a Church leader, past or present, necessarily constitutes doctrine. A single statement made by a single leader on a single occasion often represents a personal, though well-considered, opinion, but is not meant to be officially binding for the whole Church.
With divine inspiration, the First Presidency (the prophet and his two counselors) and the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles (the second-highest governing body of the Church) counsel together to establish doctrine that is consistently proclaimed in official Church publications. This doctrine resides in the four “standard works” of scripture (the Holy Bible, the Book of Mormon, the Doctrine and Covenants and the Pearl of Great Price), official declarations and proclamations, and the Articles of Faith. Isolated statements are often taken out of context, leaving their original meaning distorted.
Approaching Mormon Doctrine
Thank you. Believe me, I am not trying to be obstinate, but I have a couple of remarks. The Newsroom sounds official. And I really do look for a source that is reliable now and over time. But I see that the newsroom is "the official resource for news media, opinion leaders, and the public." I know next to nothing about the Newsroom. The article you linked to is identified as "commentary." I would hope for the people who present something as official doctrine, to be accountable. I should think they would append their names to their statements of official doctrine. I'm not saying I reject the Newsroom as an official source. I need to know more about it. I'd like to know who it was that decided to call the Newsroom, "official source". I'd like to know who write the "Commentary," and if they did so on their own initiative, and if they did so as a result of pondering and studying, or of praying and receiving inspiration, or of being assigned by someone who really is an "Authority". Is any of this information available?
bcspace wrote:I am also wondering what you mean by published by the church.
When the publisher is "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints". Not Bookcraft. Not BYU. Not the Deseret News. Etc.
I totally accept that as your standard. No problem. It is a reasonable standard. But is that what the Church says? I mean, is that the official position, or is it one of a number of positions that individual Mormons can choose from?
bcspace wrote:So, for example, BRM's "Mormon Doctrine" is not official doctrine because it is not published by the Church. But specific quotes from BRM's "Mormon Doctrine" found in works published by the Church would indeed be doctrine.
I totally accept your judgement on this as your way of looking at it. I have no question or criticism of your taking this position. I do find it odd that Prophets and Apostles are in a position to present doctrines of the church that are not official. If I belonged to a church with Prophets, I would want every pronouncement they make on doctrinal matters to be "official". If they do not know something, and have not received revelation, their ayes can be ayes, but their nays should be nays, as in "Nay, I know that not." Speculation from Prophets has led to many splits in the Mormon Church.
bcspace wrote:Do you believe the Ensign contains only official doctrine, or does it also contain personal opinions?
Being published by the Church, they are doctrinal works. Caveats would be, of latest date, specific statements of nondoctrinicity, or contextual such as a statements of "My opinion" or I believe", etc. So yes, they can also contain opinion.
I sincerely appreciate your boldness. Time and again I have been told by the most fervent of Mormons that the contents of the Ensign are "just that man's opinions. It's not church doctrine unless..." followed by some condition like voting or canonization. Thank you for your gutsy answer.
bcspace wrote:I don't have an Ensign example of nondoctrinicity off the top of my head, but a similar example would be the Bible Dictionary which, though published by the Church, contains a statement in it's introduction that it is not to be used for doctrine:
Well, dang it then, that undoes your statement above that if the Church publishes it, it is doctrine. Sometimes it isn't. And sometimes something is a doctrine that is never published as such. I've just been put back into the Frustration Zone. While I appreciate your explanations, I am pretty much in the same place as before. Different Church members have different ways to identify "official doctrine." Their methods have exceptions - some things that fit their definition are
not doctrines; some things that do not fit their definitions
are doctrines. Ultimately, there
seems to be no unarguably official statement on what official doctrines are. But thanks, bcspace, I will keep my eyes open, and I will see how well your definition ("published by the Church") works for the things I will be reading.