Yong Xi wrote:I don't think the posting of Arrington's testimony is a horrible act, just bad form. The MO with apologists seem to be that anything goes, as long as the faithful approve and defend.
And by "bad form" you mean
enormously insensitive, disrespectful, and
ugly - even if Arrington himself explicitly professed his devout faith as a scholar and historian of Mormonism.
Nearly
all of Arrington's living LDS professional associates have contributed to MST. But that's not the real problem - is it?
The real problem lies in whether a person can profess to be a person of faith while at the same time, produce and sustain scholastic endeavors in an ever-increasing secular world.
The fact is, Arrington was a
believer, and to a certain extent, engaged in activities Scratch and others would not hesitate to label apologetic.
As his daughter Susan (herself a believer) noted (paraphrased by Blair Hodges):
Maybe you never met him but are a fan of his books. He wrote, co-authored or contributed to 36 books and 22 monographs. Brigham Young: American Moses, or The Mormon Experience written with his friend Davis Bitton. Or his grand-slam book published in 1958, Great Basin Kingdom, it remains in print 52 years after it first appeared. [Leonard Arrington] was dynamic, thoughtful, prayerful, and surely one of the best listeners ever born. He was indeed something of a father confessor to hundreds who came to him to speak about things which they had spoken to no other. He was tolerant, non-judgmental, and very sympathetic soul. This tabernacle probably would not hold the number of closet doubters who came to him seeking wisdom and found it.
She continued:
Another entry is more personal, private and heart-wrenching, a summary of his feelings at the time of his release:
“Our great experiment in church-sponsored history has proven to be, if not a failure, at least not an unqualified success. One aspect that will be personally galling to me upon my release as church historian will be the gibes of my non-Mormon and anti-Mormon friends: ‘I told you so!’ they will say. Some scholars, Mormon and non-Mormons alike, have contended that skeptical critical methods of historical research and writing are incompatible with the maintenance of a firm testimony of the gospel. I have felt confident that they were wrong. And I have said so publicly many times in professional papers, talks, books, and in private conversations.”
Now, compare Leonard Arrington's statement, which is a direct quote from his personal diary, with that of the mission of MST:
This website gives LDS scholars the opportunity to express their views and feelings about the Gospel of Jesus Christ and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
There are some who may feel that people of education and learning can’t be religious. It is hoped that these testimonies will help dispel that myth, educate, and give insights into the thoughts and feelings of LDS scholars.Is Peterson engaging in parallelomania in a desperate attempt to generate more testimonies on the ever-star-crossed endeavor we call MST, or is Peterson accurately summarizing (with ample resources) certain beliefs held by a man who loved his family and the gospel?