Gunnar wrote:I still maintain that no precept or teaching is more deservedly suspect or more likely to be false than one that can only be supported by an appeal to divine authority--no matter who or what claims such authority!
Yours is an unreasonable position. The appeal to Divine authority is infallible. To claim that validation only occurs upon some sort of temporal exercise is backwards. The appeal is the end-game. Any LDS will tell you that the counsel is to study it out in your mind first...then appeal to Divinity. The studying out in the mind is not what validates the cause, it is the appeal, and only the appeal. any confirmation that comes from the Divine will have a Divine purpose.
- consider the following:
"Many are called, but few are chosen". (Matthew 22:1-14)this proverb is a testimony of how infallible the Divine inspiration is, and how fallible the temporal application is. What you are suggesting contradicts the fundamental nature of faith and denies an understanding of what is being taught and being learned. During the April 2012 General Conference, Elder Cook gave the following :
"The essential doctrine of agency requires that a testimony of the restored gospel be based on faith rather than just external or scientific proof."Now, this is in no way a call for "blind" faith - for the LDS have countless counsels against such a thing. But do not kid yourself, it is by Faith, by Divine confirmation, that our knowledge is attained (
see also all of Hebrews chapter 11). I think you may be near the right idea but your emphasis is way off the mark.
"Behold, there are many called, but few are chosen. And why are they not chosen? Because their hearts are set so much upon the things of this world, and aspire to the honors of men, that they do not learn this one lesson—" (D&C 121:34-35)If you desire "confirmation" of this from beyond the Divine then surely you will always be disappointed. The true bottom line is that only through Divine appeal can anything ever be truly supported and confirmed, otherwise it is without faith, without hope, and without cause.