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Church Catalog releases John Taylor's 1886 Revelation


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Posted
36 minutes ago, bluebell said:

Me too.  And anytime we speak of the Savior we are engaging in "testimony strengthening dialogue". That happens here a lot, and it seems like a perfect place for it to be happening.  :) 

My point was simply to educate a naive and apparently surprised  board newcomer to the fact that not every participant here is a faithful member of the church who seeks to inspire faith and strengthen testimonies — nothing more, nothing less.
 

Posted
1 hour ago, teddyaware said:

My point was simply to educate a naive and apparently surprised  board newcomer to the fact that not every participant here is a faithful member of the church who seeks to inspire faith and strengthen testimonies — nothing more, nothing less.
 

stelf is not a newcomer, he’s been a member of the board longer than you have (2010).  Nor is he naive and I would be surprised if he was all that surprised.  

 He has probably lost some posts when threads were culled in the past, but his earliest post currently available is from 2012. 
 

 

Posted
On 6/26/2025 at 2:00 AM, ZealouslyStriving said:

One man's "hair-brained" weird "scheme" (ie... actually fight to win a war) is another man's common sense.

I thought Elder Benson's statements to be reasonably level-headed and wise. For the LBJ administration to use citizen soldiers to "maintain" a "no-win war" was deeply cynical. Our boys are NOT cannon-fodder.

Elder Benson served wonderfully and graciously as secretary of agriculture in the Eisenhower administration even while he was in the Quorum of the Twelve.

Posted

I'd say this board has weakened my belief in some things, but also exposed me to arguments that I had not considered in others. I've benefited a lot from being able to learn from people like Robert F. Smith, Stanford Carmack, Benjamin McGuire, and Kevin Christensen in something close to real time. 

Posted
2 hours ago, longview said:

I thought Elder Benson's statements to be reasonably level-headed and wise. For the LBJ administration to use citizen soldiers to "maintain" a "no-win war" was deeply cynical. Our boys are NOT cannon-fodder.

Elder Benson served wonderfully and graciously as secretary of agriculture in the Eisenhower administration even while he was in the Quorum of the Twelve.

That was my point. 🫶🏻

Posted
7 hours ago, Calm said:

stelf is not a newcomer, he’s been a member of the board longer than you have (2010).  Nor is he naive and I would be surprised if he was all that surprised.  

 He has probably lost some posts when threads were culled in the past, but his earliest post currently available is from 2012. 
 

 

I knew it, I remember stelf from way back when. Maybe he remembers me too? Hey stelf. :)

Posted
On 6/27/2025 at 5:39 PM, Calm said:

(by calling Elder Talmage, Widtsoe, and one other whose name I always forget as apostles as well as directing leaders to seek counsel from a BYU professor of science as well as other scholars).  

Joseph B. Merrill? 

I've changed my mind on a few things but frankly it's for the good, as I can move at more ease through the world. I was a missionary when we went to an exhibit of artifacts from King Tutankhamen's tomb on a P-day, and there was a sign with the ages of the Pyramids, and I had a shocker as I realized that my rough timeline of world history that I put together as a curious and zealous youth would mean they were standing during Noah's Flood. Well obviously this couldn't be so, and I went round and around in circles, and now I generally don't find anything to bother me. I suppose it helps that I'm not the type to experience moral indignation all that often so as a rule I'm less alienated. I tend to be pretty suspicious of "righteous indignation" actually. 

I've shed some Primary-era theological understandings and picked up others, all of which I am confident are quite compatible with Latter-day Saint thought and doctrine, such as it is. It works. 

Posted
On 6/25/2025 at 10:07 PM, bluebell said:

President Kimball seemed to by the type of leader that allowed people to work in their stewardship without a lot of oversight, even when he personally didn't agree with their message.  Which is probably ironic given the nature of the topic and some of the charges leveled in the thread about prophets and apostles trying to keep everyone on a short leash.  :D 

(Here's the quote that supports your assertion about his feelings on this talk--“Spencer [Kimball] felt concern about the talk, wanting to protect the Church against being misunderstood as espousing ultraconservative politics or an unthinking ‘follow the leader’ mentality.” He probably had some of the same concerns with the talk that you have)

Yes that is a fair summary. But I wonder what damage or misunderstanding may have been avoided had President Kimball said something, The Benson talk is often used to drive home a point that Prophets and Apostles better be followed and one chooses not to follow them at their own peril. Same for McConkie and his book Mormon Doctrine. President McKay did not like the book but let it remain (after revisions) and for decades members viewed it as a fifth standard work.  

Posted
On 6/24/2025 at 9:15 PM, OGHoosier said:

This is a fantastic point that I think has been sublimated by the ways we talk about the prophets and apostles, and have since the 1950s. The presiding high priest (the title given to the President of the Church in D&C 107:65-66) is to the church as the bishop is to the ward, and is no more or less human, but it seems like the expectations for the two offices are very different. 

 Matthew Bowman wrote a fantastic piece for Wayfare on the conjunction of the roles of prophet and priest and the consequences of our weighting the "prophet" side over the "priest" side: https://www.wayfaremagazine.org/p/the-prophet-and-the-priest?utm_source=publication-search

But isn't this due to the leadership and what they teach?  

Posted
On 6/26/2025 at 12:56 AM, teddyaware said:

You must be new to this discussion board. There are a fair number of participants here who are bitter former believers who’ve left the church but find themselves unable to make a clean break by walking away and kindly leaving their former spiritual home and family alone. Paradoxically, these same former believers often find that they need to come here to nourish their unbelief by engaging in a steady diet of attacks on the restored gospel, attacks which amount to a twisted inversion of the process by which true believers nourish and strengthen their faith in the restored gospel by bearing faithful witness to its truthfulness. As a consequence, this is not exactly the best place to engage in testimony strengthening dialogue. But on the positive side, it’s at least a place where one can experience firsthand the principle of opposition in all things in action.

 

What a horrible view you have of your fellow humans beings. So self assured, self righteous and smug.

Posted
On 6/27/2025 at 12:24 PM, teddyaware said:

My point was simply to educate a naive and apparently surprised  board newcomer to the fact that not every participant here is a faithful member of the church who seeks to inspire faith and strengthen testimonies — nothing more, nothing less.
 

Nothing more or nothing less?  Try reading what you wrote. You essentially disparaged and trashed former believers like me and portrayed us in a very ugly way. Your testimony really must be shakey for you to view those who no longer accept the claims of Mormonism in such a vile way.

Posted
On 6/27/2025 at 3:54 PM, OGHoosier said:

I'd say this board has weakened my belief in some things, but also exposed me to arguments that I had not considered in others. I've benefited a lot from being able to learn from people like Robert F. Smith, Stanford Carmack, Benjamin McGuire, and Kevin Christensen in something close to real time. 

All of those you list have challenged my belief, or lack thereof. You as well. I appreciate your posts.

Posted (edited)
On 6/25/2025 at 6:18 PM, bluebell said:

Besides all that, you seem to feel comfortable telling the GA leadership that their revelations are fake.  It would be weird to hold it against them for doing the same thing.

The fact they vote as to whether or not a revelation will be followed tells us all they don’t even take themselves seriously. If they really think that is the way to go then what do we need them for? After all they are on record being wrong a number of times so yea they are kinda useless. Not to mention other times they have lied to the membership. Who knows what to trust with these guys. 

Edited by Notatbm
Posted
4 hours ago, Notatbm said:

The fact they vote as to whether or not a revelation will be followed tells us all they don’t even take themselves seriously. If they really think that is the way to go then what do we need them for? After all they are on record being wrong a number of times so yea they are kinda useless. Not to mention other times they have lied to the membership. Who knows what to trust with these guys. 

Are you talking about common consent?  You're posting style--which seems to be to throw every negative thing you can think of that might be kind of relevant into a reply hoping some will stick--can be hard follow sometimes.

Posted
7 hours ago, Teancum said:

Yes that is a fair summary. But I wonder what damage or misunderstanding may have been avoided had President Kimball said something, The Benson talk is often used to drive home a point that Prophets and Apostles better be followed and one chooses not to follow them at their own peril. Same for McConkie and his book Mormon Doctrine. President McKay did not like the book but let it remain (after revisions) and for decades members viewed it as a fifth standard work.  

Sometimes I wish they would more forcefully voice their feelings about this kind of stuff too.

Posted (edited)
52 minutes ago, bluebell said:

Are you talking about common consent?

 

 You're posting style--which seems to be to throw every negative thing you can think of that might be kind of relevant into a reply hoping some will stick--can be hard follow sometimes.

Common consent- yes. Just because the leaders don’t have the membership give their gratuitous vote in the affirmative, doesn’t mean Jesus didn’t tell the prophet to do it. 
 

why post the positive echo chamber stuff? Makes for boring convo if everyone agrees. Makes discussion pointless. Go look at the lds or latterdaysaints sub reddits. They only allow pretty much echo chamber stuff and they are dead convos. At least here you can post negative or contrary info. I know I’m not real fond of the church leadership at most times, but I’m not a real fan of gas lighting, lying, favoritism and mental gymnastics. I do try to post the truth though. Lots of people to include my own TBM family hate any truth that doesn’t support the party line. They are more in line with Boyd k packers concept of not sharing negative info if it isn’t faith promoting- even if it is true. 

Edited by Notatbm
Posted
23 minutes ago, bluebell said:

No one who was interested in an echo chamber would be happy for long posting on this board.  That's one of the reasons I like it.  Echo chambers are dangerous.  No one should always be in the company of those who agree with them regardless of what they say.

But that's a different subject than what I alluded to.  Criticisms have their place, but hopefully they are based in evidence and reason, well thought out and are also relevant to the topic.  Hyperbole (the church always, the church never, the church only cares about this evil or bad thing so we can dismiss it without even using our brains to figure out why) isn't helpful or interesting.  It's just our biases puking out onto the board.  We all have biases, but they don't point out truth; they mostly get in the way of recognizing it.

I'm glad you're here and your perspective could be beneficial.  But if you only ever having negative things to say, then that perspective becomes easy to dismiss.  The same would go for someone who only ever had positive things to say about every topic concerning the church.  Both of those angles feel contrived after a while.

Thanks for the input. While I will continue to respond to your comments at times please feel free to not read mine or respond to them if they don’t meet your standards.

Posted
4 hours ago, Notatbm said:

Thanks for the input. While I will continue to respond to your comments at times please feel free to not read mine or respond to them if they don’t meet your standards.

You’re very welcome. :D 

Posted
On 6/15/2025 at 3:24 PM, ZealouslyStriving said:

I find the spin that the revelation was referring to eternal marriage in general, and not to plural marriage... Interesting.

LDS Fair is posting this spin all  over social media.

It's so demonstrably incorrect.  @Calm I'm a little surprised they'd take that approach.  I believe you work with them correct?

I've always found their work better than that.  Reading the text of the revelation there is absolutely no way it refers to eternal marriage alone. Basic reading comprehension.  LDS Fair should update those misleading posts.

 

Posted
On 7/4/2025 at 2:55 PM, JLHPROF said:

LDS Fair is posting this spin all  over social media.

It's so demonstrably incorrect.  @Calm I'm a little surprised they'd take that approach.  I believe you work with them correct?

I've always found their work better than that.  Reading the text of the revelation there is absolutely no way it refers to eternal marriage alone. Basic reading comprehension.  LDS Fair should update those misleading posts.

 

It is a ridiculous take but it is pretty pervasive. We do the same thing with the first half of Section 132 which also doesn’t really work.

Posted
On 6/27/2025 at 2:29 PM, longview said:

I thought Elder Benson's statements to be reasonably level-headed and wise. For the LBJ administration to use citizen soldiers to "maintain" a "no-win war" was deeply cynical. Our boys are NOT cannon-fodder.

Elder Benson served wonderfully and graciously as secretary of agriculture in the Eisenhower administration even while he was in the Quorum of the Twelve.

It was an insane scheme because Chiang Kai-Shek wasn’t interested in serving as proxy soldiers in Vietnam. The actual offer was to cut off all aid to Vietnam from China by attacking China. This would have widened the conflict and Chiang Kai-Shek was delusional thinking there was a lot of support in China for his return. Virtually everyone in China hated him. The people in general didn’t side with the communists for ideological reasons. They did so because the old Chinese government and the local warlords operating within it were brutally oppressive to the point that Mao was (rightly) considered an improvement. 

It most likely would have gotten Taiwan’s military wiped out, China very involved in Vietnam, and the spectre of nuclear conflict would have been a real possibility. That is not level-headed. That is escalating the situation to no advantage. The situation didn’t need a genocidal warlord. They arguably already had enough of those.

Posted
17 hours ago, The Nehor said:

It was an insane scheme because Chiang Kai-Shek wasn’t interested in serving as proxy soldiers in Vietnam.

I have no idea of what you are talking about. How about some background information and sourcing?

Posted
18 hours ago, The Nehor said:

It was an insane scheme because Chiang Kai-Shek wasn’t interested in serving as proxy soldiers in Vietnam. The actual offer was to cut off all aid to Vietnam from China by attacking China. This would have widened the conflict and Chiang Kai-Shek was delusional thinking there was a lot of support in China for his return. Virtually everyone in China hated him. The people in general didn’t side with the communists for ideological reasons. They did so because the old Chinese government and the local warlords operating within it were brutally oppressive to the point that Mao was (rightly) considered an improvement. 

It most likely would have gotten Taiwan’s military wiped out, China very involved in Vietnam, and the spectre of nuclear conflict would have been a real possibility. That is not level-headed. That is escalating the situation to no advantage. The situation didn’t need a genocidal warlord. They arguably already had enough of those.

You do realize the video says none of that, correct? Was ETB talking in code?

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