Albion wrote:"Trite and peculiar beliefs." My, my, Tobin, who knew that you did irony so well? Coming from someone steeped in the commonly held weirdness of Mormon theology that is rich indeed. Is that typical humor on Kolob?
If you actually have a response that is valid, you would not resort to derision so quickly, FYI.
On the one hand you complain that evangelical Christians do not know or discuss the so-called deep things of Mormonism and then you derisively dismiss their theology in a way that makes you guilty of the same charge. Do you even know what the words evangel or evangelical mean? Of course, if you mean "revealed" as formulated by Joseph Smith I would agree totally that Christians have nothing to do with his god or his "gospel". At last we can agree on that so perhaps there is progress after all.
While I do not share Tobin's opinions, I am not that fond of Evangelical scholarship, truth told. There are a few Evangelical scholars I resepct, but in general I think the movement is slowly dying from intellectual stangation. What passes for scholarship in most Christian (Evangelical) bookstores I frequent
There really is only one "scriptural experience" that matters to Christians and that is in knowing and experiencing the sufficiency of Christ by grace through faith but I suppose that is far too superficial for those locked into the deep things of Mormonism.
No, it is just not necessarily historically correct. Christianity has had a varied past, but what passes for Evangelical Christianity today is not very recognizable when compared to much Christian history prior to Martin Luther. In many ways Martin Luther was as revolutionary as Joseph Smith, but without the claims to divine revelation. Joseph Smith's either brilliant chicanery or divine revelation allowed a break with the past where Martin Luther was stuck with his, unable to reconcile many issues. As it is, however, most Evangelicals exist in as tense a relationship with historical Christianity as they do with Mormons. Former Evangelical scholar, Francis Beckwith, the former President of the Evangelical Theological Society, eventually converted to Roman Catholocism.
While I am willing to admit that most Christians know little of Mormon theology (why should they since to most Mormonism doesn't even enter their consciousness let alone their everyday world) my experience is that most Mormons I have met and interacted with know little of their own theology and history either. Given that, they have very little understanding of Christian theology either. But then, too, I will readily admit that they have little need to know given their place in the regimented "trite and peculiar" world of the Mormon religious system.
Your scholars would disagree.