Themis wrote:I used the believe in a local flood for many years, but I never thought about it much, so I would never have done all the metal gymnastics you do as a believer. You can call it textual literalness, but it does not change the fact the global nature of the story is vital. Without it the story goes from being about how mankind and all animals were saved from God's wrath to just a transportation story from the America's to the middle east with lots of magic cards to bring out to get him there. Not to mention he forgot to leave any DNA.![]()
The church's doctrine is still global because Joseph's claimed revelations attach that to it. It also makes more sense from an LDS perspective. Noah built a ship to survive the flood and just ended up on a middle eastern Mountain as the waters receded. It also fits in with the America's being a choice land waiting for God to bring his chosen groups. Then you have three groups with a transportation story to the new choice land. Joseph even borrows another Bible story of the tower of babel. An obvious fiction to any open mind. Worse if you want to believe in a local flood because then people lived all over the earth and spoke many different languages for a very long time, taking away the towers stories explanation of why humans have so many different languages. Not to mention an Adamic language.
Interesting just how America centrist these new tales Joseph is providing. Heck even those ancient prophets from Adam to Noah lived in the America's, and Joseph just happened to be right where these great events took place. HMM really?
Vital to those that think as you, maybe. You can continue to make accusations of gymnastics, but you are just finding fault with the fact that when we have to rightly divide the word of truth to come to a proper and comprehensive understanding of complexity, it demands good reasoning.
Here's an example of Joseph's claimed revelations that with further revelation was changed with better understanding.
"And also they who are the spirits of men kept in prison, whom the Son visited, and preached the gospel unto them, that they might be judged according to men in the flesh. . ." (D&C 76:73)
And this was changed to this understanding:
"And as I wondered, my eyes were opened, and my understanding quickened, and I perceived that the Lord went not in person among the wicked and the disobedient who had rejected the truth, to teach them; But behold, from among the righteous, he organized his forces and appointed messengers, clothed with power and authority, and commissioned them to go forth and carry the light of the gospel to them that were in darkness, even to all the spirits of men; and thus was the gospel preached to the dead." (D&C 138:29-30)
And so, if we had stuck with the "literal" D&C 76 version of things, we never would have moved forward to the D&C 138 understanding of things. Sorry, but you are off the mark. We have to let things go when they aren't true with precision. We have to let go of literalness when it is not one of the basic things and it becomes an obstacle to moving forward. I don't really care what you say about this, because this is just a fact and there are oodles of examples of things like this where people have to just grow up and get over it.