The Mormon doctrine and scriptures are extremely racist. Since there has been no repudiation of this racist doctrine, the canon of Mormonism remains racist. This is the fact that I was referring to. There can be no reasonable denial that Mormon doctrine was and still is racist (even though the racism isn’t emphasized today).
]]>You seem to see Mormonism as what Mormons believe. I agree that this is becoming less and less racist. I’m not talking about what Mormons believe, however. I’m talking about what their leaders teach publically when taken as a historical whole.
Mormonism has taught since the beginning that scriptures are not inerrant.
While Mormonism has taught that the Bible has flaws, it has traditionally not recognized any errancy in the Book of Mormon:
Some Mormons may believe that the Book of Mormon can have errors, but that’s not what we hear from LDS church leaders. I think you’ll be hard pressed to find a single quote from a church leader expressing skepticism about the Book of Mormon’s inerrancy. By considering the Book of Mormon inerrant, the LDS church tacitly endorses its racist doctrines.
]]>“Should the Lord Almighty send an angel to re-write the Bible, it would in many places be very different from what it now is. And I will even venture to say that if the Book of Mormon were now to be re-written, in many instances it would materially differ from the present translation. According as people are willing to receive the things of God, so the heavens send forth their blessings. If the people are stiff-necked, the Lord can tell them but little.†(Brigham Young, Journal of Discourses 9: 311)
. . . even when some members hold on to dogmatism.
]]>This is Mormonism in your view. This is not a shared view as you know. Your view is in direct contradiction to much of the rhetoric about an eternal gospel that comes from some church authorities and is believed by many (most?) faithful Mormons. Who is right about what Mormonism is? By what authority?
I’m impressed that you found that Brigham Young quote. Taken in context, Brigham Young was talking about adding truth to the truth that was already present in the Book of Mormon. He goes on to say that Moses couldn’t give the Jews the Christian gospel because they weren’t ready for that truth. He didn’t seem to mean that what the Book of Mormon teaches would be directly contradicted by later revelation, just added to. Given Brigham Young’s public record on race, I expect this is also true of its racist doctrines.
]]>That said, I agree that all of this reflects my interpretation of Mormonism, but I am neither alone nor uninformed regarding the Mormon tradition. Also, my interpretation does not reject the idea of eternal gospel truths: faith, hope and charity embodied in a participatory Christ (even if replaced with other words) are essential to survival, and as such are rightly the basis of doctrine.
]]>Recall that the church was solidly against interracial marriage, even after the civil rights movement and the Supreme Court’s 1967 Loving decision that legalized interracial marriage nationwide. It’s no surprise that the LDS Church is against gay marriage too.
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