AFAIK, the author of the article, Paul Flesher, is not a member of the Church.
The part of this article that I enjoyed reading was the part where he talked about continuing revelation and it's role.
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In 2002, the BYU student body elected Robert Foster as its first black student association president.
What changed to bring about such a radical shift?
Nothing short of a divine revelation. In June of 1978, LDS President Spencer Kimball had a revelation that reversed a revelation by Brigham Young in 1848. The earlier revelation held that Black men of African descent could be admitted to the church should be not admitted to the Mormon priesthood, a position into which nearly all Mormon men enter during their teenage years.
The prophecies and their accompanying controversies are prime examples of how revelation operates in a social situation, both for those who believe and those who do not.
First, for those who believe, divine instructions delivered by prophecy must be obeyed. They cannot go against revelation, even when the beliefs of the surrounding human society change. So when the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s dramatically altered the position of Blacks in American society as a whole, it did not affect the standing of Brigham Youngâ??s prophetic revelation.
Second, prophetic revelation is not necessarily permanent, but lasts only until another revelation concerning the same matter. The biblical prophet Jonah provides a good example, for God sent him to Nineveh to prophesy the cityâ??s destruction. When the Ninevites repented, God sent Jonah with a new revelation saying the city would be spared. President Kimballâ??s revelation functioned similarly; it revealed Godâ??s new will.
Third, prophetic revelation comes not in calm times, but at periods of social conflict and unrest. The prophet Micaiah gave a revelation to the Kings of Judah and Israel at a time of war (1 Kings 22), for example, telling them not to fight or they would be defeated. They fought, and lost their lives.
It seems to me that many Christians are under the belief that no revelation since Christ can override any earlier revelation given since Christ, and I can understand why they come from that position if they believe that the only scripture possible today is the Bible, but Paul, in his article, while not agreeing with the belief of the Church when it comes to modern day revelation, says that there is precedence where God has a prophet give a revelation and then later, He overrides that prophecy with a later prophecy. He uses the example of Jonah and the city of Ninevah. I realize that this revelation has been beaten to death, but at least here, I see a non-Mormon agreeing that the first prophecy, the unconditional destruction of Ninevah and I realize that he didn't use the word "unconditional" in his article, was replaced with the prophecy that the city would be spared.
His other two points are very valid also.
He also said something else that kind of surprised me.
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He said in so many words that we shouldn't go around judging the actions of people who lived in the past with the standards that we have today.


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