I always like it when another man refers to me as “my dear," especially on the intertubes. Makes me think my sizzling male sexuality can even penetrate cycberspace.
Once you get your head out of the cesspool that sits, placid and stagnant, in the center of the Trailerpark, you should consider taking yourself down to one of the other rooms and mixing it up there with the various denizens.
Your calling Barth and the Niebhurs’ major idea "obscure" says more about your intellectual foundations than I ever could.
You will notice that I did't call their
idea obscure. (although for most LDS (and people in general) it most certainly is) I said that you were using semantic quibbles originating in "obscure intellectual antecedents that are not themselves relevant to the definition I'm using," which is precisely the case. Barth and Neibhur's wrestling with the issue, in a mainline Protestant context in another generation, has little relevance to contemporary LDS "Neo-Orthodoxy." Midgley's understanding of the general leanings of the mindset are correct. Barth's much more narrow designation as "neo-orthodox" because of his rejection of fundamentalist literalism and his problems with Hegelian idealism does not appear to me to have much to do with the perspectives of someone like Joanna Brooks or other liberal/leftist Mormons seeking a diffusion of contemporary secular notions into Church teaching and culture. Indeed, it appears that Barth, within the social and theological context of his time, was doing much the opposite of what people like Brooks are attempting to do in a contemporary context.
You and Lou having used the term “neo-orthodox” hardly makes it the accepted term in LDS discourse.
Which again, is irrelevant, unless you are attempting to funnel the discussion into your own narrow canyon where you think you can control the terms of the debate. Not so easy.
Kendall White having already used the term in his published work Mormon Neo-Orthodoxy: a Crisis Theology, Signature Books, 1987, with a different meaning. I’d say a monograph versus you and Lou’s use of it in a couple of obscure places means that White’s use of the term is the accepted one.
My only interest here is discussing my own definition and its relationship to contemporary trends in LDS Church/secular snycretism, not White's views, which do not appear to be relevant to my own. Indeed, for White, Neo-Orthodoxy appears to be precisely the opposite of the understanding I have attached to it - an attempt to recapture the "traditional" teachings of the Book of Mormon he claims certain LDS "theologians" modified in an attempt at compromise with the secular liberal world - exactly what people like Brooks and others of similar views are doing.
For White, Neo-Orthodoxy is, as Midgley points out, "politically conservative, authoritarian, anti-intellectual, and out of harmony with the latest fashions found in the secular culture."
The manner in which I am using the term (and White
does not own this term) is the "latest fashions found in the secular culture."
Precisely.
Despite your spirited defense of you and Lou’s ill chosen term, are you really saying that Joanna’s position has already become orthodox and that you and Lou are now heterodox?
Joanna Brooks and the sub-cultural element of elite LDS intellectuals that is the subject of this thread are the one's who come to be known (and dubbed themselves) "New Order," "Reform," and "Neo-Orthodox" as contrasted with the established teachings of the Church as understood to be revealed through living prophets and the scriptures. Neo-Orthodoxy, by definition, is a new orthodoxy existing alongside and competing with the older "orthodoxy" for legitimacy as "Mormonism."
If not, why grace Joanna’s minority position with the label “orthodox” when you admit that currently it is not and are working to make sure it never becomes so?
But it wants very much to become so, and semantic quibbling to avoid the larger issues makes little difference as to its intent and purpose, which is to insert itself into the larger LDS culture and tradition as a coextensive
orthodoxy of resistance to a number of traditional teachings, particularly on social and political issues.
“Trying to corral” you “into a semantic box canyon?” Pres. Hinckley tried so hard to defeat Mormon paranoia. And here you are returning to it, his remains hardly cold in his grave. Not to mention it’s rather unbecoming.
Please stop egging on a personal dust-up and engage in serious, critical argumentation or leave the thread.
I was going to suggest “Mormonism with a human face” but that’s already been taken too. The term you need is “the secular accommodation heresy.” You could even call it “the Mormon secular accommodation heresy.” But I’ll confess I lose track of when it’s OK to say “Mormon.”
The "Mormon secular accommodation heresy?" Why the massively difficult and unwieldy construction when Neo-Orthodoxy will do just fine as a descriptive term?
I'll even just go with the old
Cultural Mormon as a stop-gap (i.e., secularist liberal Mormon).
You can lead a horse to water . . .
Its also very difficult to lead a snark to a serious discussion.