Tobin wrote:MG,
I...don't believe in the atonement.
Then you are at odds with the third article of faith.
Regards,
MG
Tobin wrote:MG,
I...don't believe in the atonement.
sock puppet wrote:What are you under compulsion as an LDS to believe?
John 6:68
Then Simon Peter answered him, Lord, to whom shall we go? thou hast the words of eternal life.
Yes, but they are guidelines as well. Joseph Smith was a primitive man and articulated his beliefs as best he could. Nothing is set in stone around such things and when we seek understanding, we can see the limitation of such things.mentalgymnast wrote:Tobin wrote:MG,
I...don't believe in the atonement.
Then you are at odds with the third article of faith.
Regards,
MG
mentalgymnast wrote:Bazooka wrote:Do you see [the essays] as stating the official position of the Church on the given subjects?
Well, first of all, we don't know who wrote the essays. It was probably a group effort with group consensus. Now was God or Jesus in that group(s)? I doubt it. He/they were probably off doing something else and letting the correlation/curriculum folks handle the project. So while bits and pieces...or large chunks...of the essays may be connected/attached directly to some established church doctrines either directly or indirectly through associated content, even though they may not be explicitly doctrinal in every instance either in scope or depth, the essays themselves most likely give a consensus opinion by a group of people put in charge of writing the essays. I don't think God sat down and wrote them, and I doubt that the Q12 sat down and wrote them even though they as single individuals (probably not as a whole group) may agree with more or less with what the essays are teaching/saying. So official position? Probably not.
There's too much space/distance between what we see in print and the man upstairs who knows it all. There is still room for further light and knowledge to come forth in regards to each subject written about in each essay.
Regards,
MG
A memo dated Sept. 9 from the church’s "Priesthood Department" to "General Authorities; Area Seventies; Stake, Mission, and District Presidents; Bishops and Branch Presidents" explains the purpose of — and audience for — the controversial articles.
"The purpose of the Gospel Topics section is to provide accurate and transparent information on church history and doctrine within the framework of faith," the memo said. "When church members have questions regarding [LDS] history and doctrine,
possibly arising when detractors spread misinformation and doubt, you may want to direct their attention to these resources."
maklelan wrote:Spektical wrote:And the distinction is a meaningless one because, as others have repeatedly pointed out, the LDS standard works are clear in their depiction of a global flood. And you have yet to point to a single "official" publication controverting that.
But the stamp of "official doctrine" is not applied unilaterally to everything in the standard works. It all depends on how the texts are interpreted, emphasized, and enforced. The "standard works" are an evolving entity, not a static list of concepts.
maklelan wrote:Spektical wrote:Who interprets them?
The accepted interpretations are most commonly the result of negotiation between leadership, the wider community, and socio-religious expediency.
mentalgymnast wrote:I've concluded that if the CofJCofLDS isn't "the truth"...then it's some flavor of agnosticism/deism/atheism for me. And there are a number of reasons for this that I'd just as well not flesh out right now...
So I go with the possibilities/probabilities/plausibilities. And for me, it's the CofJCofLDS unless I come across the proverbial "smoking gun" which honestly, I haven't yet...although there are a bunch of issues, etc., that are unresolved. At this point I'm willing to live with a certain degree/amount of ambiguity...the stakes are high.
Regards,
MG
Bazooka wrote:I was taught the accepted interpretations were the result of the President of the Church communicating with God.
Thanks for clearing that up.
maklelan wrote:Bazooka wrote:I was taught the accepted interpretations were the result of the President of the Church communicating with God.
Thanks for clearing that up.
You were taught a lot of things that were folk doctrines and ad hoc rationalizations.