08-15-2005, 08:53 PM | #41 |
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hmmm....
"It is clear that Orson Pratt rejected the theory in total. Moreover, President Young could never get the entire Quorum to accept it. He tried too, but all I know is that they refused to propound it as an official church doctrine. Given Orson's acquiesce on other matters when he was the only member of the Quorum to have a contrary opinion (e.g. particularly the reorganization of the First Presidency and his back and forth acceptance and rejection of Brigham's claim that we worship the Father as an individual being for who he is as opposed to OP's contention that we worship his attributes), I strongly doubt that Elder Pratt was the only one who disagreed. Elder Pratt's disagreement with President Young over personality versus attributes almost got OP ousted from the 12 many more times than any other doctrinal matter (great discussion of the controversy is contained in the Conflict in the Quorum)."
so this quote substantiates dans claim that brigham young believed in the theory and that many of the early church leaders as well believed...am i correct or am i lacking comprehension skills? |
08-15-2005, 09:20 PM | #42 | |||||||
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Random responses ...
Quote:
Your friend is assuming too much. I was making a general comment regarding the general conclusions one would be led to. I truly wonder if "friend" really has seen all of the known quotes related to AG, and not just the ones from the Journal of Discourses. Quote:
Oh, please do not lump me into the Mark Petersen denials which were made KNOWING that BY had expounded this concept (just as Widtsoe, BRM, JFS, and others KNEW). It is not at all the same. The point about editorial errors was not that it accounted for _all_ of the 'contradictions'. Not hardly. I am sure it accounts for a few here and there. But what accounts for most of the 'contradictions' IMO, is the lack of full context from which BY made comments (not just including the context of the talk itself), intent for dual meaning by BY, BY expounding one level of understanding at one point and the next day expounding a deeper level of understanding which would appear to 'contradict', which in reality they do not as they are merely forming a paradox of truth. Quote:
True, after BY, the concept was not pushed heavily and by Joseph F. Smith ceased to be stressed, though it continued at the lecture at the veil until into the 1900s (but only by a little). Quote:
Orson is the only one who held out. The others were pretty unanimous. If your friend has something to the contrary, I do not remember seeing it. Quote:
I am sorry, but your friend overstates this a little too much. That is a whole separate discussion, and I am actually NOT trying to uphold the validity of BY's teachings, just that he truly did expound them. But to say the document "clearly" does all of the things he says it does misses the boat from the standpoint of the practical impact it had on the concept after that point. If it "clearly" did all he said it did, then it "clearly" would have cleared everything up, now wouldn't it? But it didn't. Quote:
Certainly there is confusion. But two things are 'clear'. 1. BY said he got it from Joseph. 2. BY testified in the name of the Lord that it was true. Funny how Van Hale should be mentioned. Van Hale also wrote a paper on AG in which he admitted he had no other conclusion but that BY taught and believed the concept. The Jehovah identity was very jumbled. Look at the D&C alone and you can see Joseph himself referring to God the Father as Jehovah. But this is a whole separate issue. And yes, the church authorities started censuring people for teaching AG openly shortly after the turn of the century and it was removed from the lecture at the veil. There was specific emphasis to NOT teach it after that time. Quote:
Undoubtedly. There is no arguing that point. But all I have been trying to explain is that BY did teach it and it was wideheld belief by church heirarchy and many members until it was deemphasised.
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08-15-2005, 09:22 PM | #43 |
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Correct. Many believed in the theory. However, the argument is whether that amounted to official doctrine, and how subsequent repudiation of it comes into play.
Does it matter to me on a day-to-day basis? Nope. |
08-15-2005, 09:33 PM | #44 |
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so basically....
to sum it all up the theory was....
taught by brigham and many of the first apostles believed in the theory.... it was part of our most highest form of worship until the early 1900s.... it almost got an apostle removed from his position because of lack of belief.... it was deemed taboo and caused censureship.... spencer w. kimball rejected the notion in the 70's.... |
08-15-2005, 09:34 PM | #45 |
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Was it official doctrine?
Well, would you consider the prophet, over the pulpit in general conference, caliming it to be true and saying it is true in the name of the Lord as enough to satisfy the Official Doctrine threashhold? BY did that. He saw that it was taught for over 25 years. It was as official as you can get without either an official declaration or new cannonized revelation. However, official doctrine can always be changed by the ones currently in charge. Why do we try to hide AG these days? Well, to admit to the past in its regard, we in essence claim that Brigham was a false prophet, at least on that issue.
And, to argue that BY was just confused between the identity of Elohim or Jehovah or Adam which led to his 'false' concept just wont do. There are other issues involved in his concept that would not matter if he was talking about Elohim or Jehovah or Michael as the father of our spirits. If you take a few hours to read the information I posted in links last night, it will be pretty darn clear what BY believed on this topic. The Jehovah doctrine was not really even 'officially' cleared up until Talmage exounded the concept that Jesus was Jehovah, which today, most LDS accept without question. But if you delve into it, it just isn't as neat and tidy as one would think. Jehovah is claerly a name title for the Father of Adam as well as Elohim. there is much more involved there.
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08-15-2005, 09:39 PM | #46 |
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the Jehovah doctrine is certainly confusing if
one just reads the Old Testament alone.
And there are provisions in the D&C which make it also confusing. |
08-15-2005, 09:40 PM | #47 |
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i read much of the links.....
provided....
and was wondering about who jehovah was to joseph and brigham..... so if the concept is true was kimball only disparaging a portion of the theory? and if its a true concept why would the church shy away from its teachings? and dan how are you so smart? :wink: |
08-15-2005, 10:04 PM | #48 |
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Sometimes it seems that the leadership
find doctrinal discovery too messy for the general membership, so they believe it's more important to sanitize the process.
As for me, I love reading about the discovery process, but given the spiritual witness I've received on a few things, I always fall back on those when I'm confused, which is often. AG confuses me as does the Jehovah doctrine which Talmage clarified or simplified, whichever it is. There are sections of the D&C which don't make it as clear. One section has JS praying to Jesus as God the Father. I spoke with Elder Burton who explained somebody can call upon his direct superior. Sounds good to me. |
08-15-2005, 10:17 PM | #49 |
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what....
section is that?
thanks. |
08-15-2005, 10:24 PM | #50 |
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Well, another person, friend of a friend has said that there is not one simple AG theory accepted by all who accept AG theory....for what that's worth.
I think this whole episode is indicative of the nature of revelation at the head of the church. Prayer, debate, consensus, disagreement, prayer. With AG as well as Blacks and the Priesthood. I guess other churches do the same thing, but it's in bigger groups and in more open forums. Perhaps the entire clergy of a faith will vote on whether or not to accept gay clergy. Or the cardinals get together to select a Pope. I used to be disparaging of such procedures, but I think in many ways, assuming these folks are doing it prayerfully seeking Heavenly input, our ways are similar. |
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