Sunday, 25 November 2018

The Unexamined Faith. Chapter One.

I am gradually trying to put together a book that is (i) a critique of the foundational claims of Mormonism, and (ii) an attempt to make a case for "Apatheism"--the position that one should not actually care whether God exists or not.
I am far from done. With time constraints, I am likely a year or two away from completion. Some of my blog entries are drafts of chapters, or parts of  chapters.
What follows is a relatively complete draft of the first chapter. I hope it catches your interest enough to look out for the book should it ever come to fruition.




Introduction

Let’s be upfront.

In the coming pages, I aim to convince you, gentle reader, primarily of three things.

My broadest target is faith itself. As controversial as it might appear at first blush, I intend to argue that faith is a misguided and even potentially harmful notion. The subject of faith will be broached throughout the essay, but is concentrated primarily in the latter portions. Some of the discussion will center on the LDS conceptions of faith, and much of it will be a wider critique of faith that is more generally applicable.

Second, I hope to convince you that the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (nicknamed both the Mormon Church and the LDS Church—I will use variations of all three names interchangeably), is not quite as it claims to be; that is, that the foundational claims upon which the Church is built cannot be substantiated in any meaningful way.

The third aim of the project is to suggest that while religion might appear attractive in its packaging, when unpacked, it doesn’t quite do what it says on the box. There are things that good and honest people cherish in their religion (salvation, a proper moral code, knowledge of the way things “really” are, purpose, etc.), but I will contend that there is less value in the religious life than is generally accepted.

In many ways these objectives are intertwined. Faith is a foundation for believing in Mormonism. The critical reasoning that leads some out of Mormonism can also lead people to reject religion and faith in general. An evaluation of the role of religion in one’s life would likely follow from, or lead to, a faith crisis. So although the discussion of Mormonism is concentrated nearer the front, and considerations of faith are centered in the latter pages, there will be extensive cross pollination throughout.

To meet the objectives of critiquing faith, the LDS Church, and the religious life, the book will roughly be divided into two parts, the first of which will segue into the second because of the shared subject matter of faith.

The first part will be a critique of the foundational claims of the LDS Church, focusing on Joseph’s Smith’s First Vision, his claims to be able to translate ancient documents, and the Book of Mormon.

The second part will be the presentation of a case for Apatheism. The term is intended to be a play on words, a combination of theism and apathy, but is also intended to represent legitimate intellectually satisfying position regarding the questions of religion.

There are certain things that attract people to the religious life, things that those involved in religion will identify as the reasons that keep them committed to a life of faith.

First, there are the answers to the big questions like the ultimate nature of reality, the true nature of self, the purpose of life, and the question of life after death.

Second, there is a sense of place. By “place” I mean a number of things. Religion tells us that we are not insignificant in a potentially infinite and random universe. It tells us where we are on our eternal journey. It offers a home and extended family in congregations. It provides milestones by which we check off our progress through life’s journey. Under this heading of “place” I will also include a relationship with the divine, although it could fit equally well in the category of “answers to the big questions.”

Third, there is source of knowing that is not applicable to the non-religious. Faith offers an assurance that the things we believe are accurate.

Fourth, there is a moral code. We need to know God’s will in order to know the good. We are told, ad nauseam, that commandments are required in order for us to be virtuous, and it is commonly held that in the absence of a threat of punishment, anything goes (e.g. Alma 42: 17-21).

And fifth, perhaps most importantly, there is the question of the need for salvation. The world in which we live seems corrupt, and we are all sinners who are unworthy to be rewarded with an eternity in the presence of God in heaven, and risk an eternity of separation from God (or worse, of being set on fire by our heavenly father, with never even a possibility of that fire being extinguished—but this does not apply to LDS theology). 

I will try to make the case that the above reasons, upon close inspection, actually ought to hold no purchase over us. I will argue that the answers provided by religion are not worth believing, that the sense of place provided by religion is really illusory, that faith is misguided and does more harm in the world than good, that the moral code as provided by religion does more harm than good, and consequently, even if God exists, it just doesn’t matter. Apatheism answers the question of the existence of God with a shrug of the shoulders. Does God exist…? It just doesn’t matter.


Chapter one
If we have not the truth…

Latter-Day Saints and a Tradition of Intellectual Openness

To make a case for the need for a critical analysis of the foundational claims of the LDS Church it is not necessary to rely on lines of reasoning proposed by critics of the Church. It is easy enough to examine the writings and teachings of some of the Church’s own leaders and thinkers to find a justification, and perhaps even an imperative, for raising questions regarding the validity of the claims of the Church.

Even though we can find said justifications in the words of the Church leaders, we can also find instances of leaders and thinkers pointing us in the direction of quelling any investigation into the claims of the Church. These types of statements typically, though not always, tend to be from the more recent history of the Church.

Let’s begin by trying to make a case for an objective evaluation of the claims of Mormonism by considering the sentiments of some the founders and leaders of the faith.

First, here are some appeals to intellectual openness from the prophet Joseph Smith, the founder of the movement.

"I want the liberty of believing as I please, it feels good not to be trammeled. It don't prove that a man is not a good man, because he errs in doctrine."[1]

What an inspiring thought. It is okay to possibly be wrong.

In the finalized retelling of his “First Vision,”[2] Joseph Smith reported that because his account was also a critique of all existing churches, defenders of those Churches were hostile to his sharing of his experience. Smith’s purported reaction to their defensiveness was to ask "[w]hy persecute me for telling the truth? ...Who am I that I can withstand God? ...I knew (the truth), and I knew God knew it, and I could not deny it; at least I knew that by so doing I would offend God, and come under condemnation."[3]

Joseph Smith, quite contrary to opinion of some current Latter-Day Saints, implied (at least in the above passages) that conformity within a church is not a requirement, that having different opinions was acceptable, and that disagreeing with accepted views was noble.

Had he not held such a perspective, he would not have felt the freedom to raise questions about the extant churches of his day, questions that led to the foundation of the LDS movements. An attitude of questioning ones religious tradition was an absolutely necessary condition for the birth of the LDS faith.

On another occasion Smith wrote
We have heard men who hold the priesthood remark that they would do anything they were told to do by those who preside over them—even if they knew it was wrong. But such obedience as this is worse than folly to us. It is slavery in the extreme. The man who would thus willingly degrade himself should not claim a rank among intelligent beings until he turns from his folly.
A man of God would despise this idea. Others, in the extreme exercise of their almighty authority have taught that such obedience was necessary, and that no matter what the Saints were told to do by their presidents, they should do it without any questions.
When Elders of Israel[4] will so far indulge in these extreme notions of obedience as to teach them to the people, it is generally because they have it in their hearts to do wrong themselves.[5]

The second President of the Church, Brigham Young, likewise welcomed an attitude of questioning:

“Take up the Bible,” he said, “compare the religion of the Latter-day Saints with it, and see if it will stand the test.”[6]

Another time, President Young exclaimed “I will tell you who the real fanatics are: they are they who adopt false principles and ideas as facts, and try to establish a superstructure upon a false foundation...If our religion is of this character we want to know it; we would like to find a philosopher who can prove it to us.”[7][8]

John Taylor, the third President of the Church agreed that “…a full, free talk is frequently of great use; we want nothing secret nor underhanded, and I for one want no association with things that cannot be talked about and will not bear investigation.”[9]

Early Church leaders recognized that they were making some rather unique and bold claims. They suggested that any challenge to these bold claims could only strengthen their claims, not weaken them. Consider the words of a member of the original LDS council of the 12 Apostles, Orson Pratt:
Convince us of our errors of Doctrine, if we have any, by reason, by logical arguments, or by the Word of God and we will ever be grateful for the information and you will ever have the pleasing reflections that you have been instruments in the hands of God of redeeming your fellow beings.[10][11]

                        A similar opinion was voiced many years later by Hugh B. Brown in a speech to BYU in 1958, shortly before becoming a member of the council of the 12 Apostles (he was later to be a member of the 1st Presidency as well):

“Only error fears freedom of expression… Neither fear of consequence nor any kind of coercion should ever be used to secure uniformity of thought in the Church”[12]

And in the same address:

“…we should also be unafraid to dissent - if we are informed. Thoughts and expressions compete in the marketplace of thought, and in that competition truth emerges triumphant.”

“…and in that competition truth emerges triumphant.” This is a noble thought. It reaches far back in our intellectual history. We find it in the dialogues of Socrates, and the writings of Plato and Aristotle. We find it in the great modern thinkers like Kant, Hegel, and Marx. David Hume allegedly[13] captures the notion wonderfully concisely when he is quoted as saying “Truth springs from argument amongst friends.” In more recent years we see it reflected in our understanding of how science progresses in such opposing views of science as Kuhn,[14] and Popper.[15]

This approach to analysis is known as Dialectic (or the Dialectic Method). Its great strength lies in that, unlike quarrelling, or even debating, there is no goal to win an argument or to gain a consensus. I want to emphasize this point. In a dialectic exchange, nobody is trying to win. Nobody ought to claim “I won that argument.” Instead, the goal is to examine a proposition/question/problem from multiple perspectives so as to triangulate in on truth and eliminate falsehoods. If there is a winner in a dialectic exchange, it is simply the truth. The truth is what matters. “Truth,” as Hume might say, “emerges triumphant.”

The Apostle James E. Talmage, considered one of the great, if not the greatest, theologians of the LDS tradition suggested that
[t]he man who cannot listen to an argument which opposes his views either has a weak position or is a weak defender of it. No opinion that cannot stand discussion or criticism is worth holding. And it has been wisely said that the man who knows only half of any question is worse off than the man who knows nothing of it. He is not only one-sided but his partisanship soon turns him into an intolerant and a fanatic. In general it is true that nothing which cannot stand up under discussion or criticism is worth defending.[16]

Another Apostle, John A. Widtsoe, made a similar comment: “To Latter-day Saints there can be no objection to the careful and critical study of the scriptures, ancient or modern, provided only that it be an honest study - a search for truth."[17]

J. Reuben Clark, another of the 12 Apostles, stated the position in the form of a challenge: “If we have the truth, it cannot be harmed by investigation. If we have not the truth, it ought to be harmed.[18][19] (italics added).

Recent President of the Church Gordon B. Hinckley has, at least on occasion, agreed. In an interview with the Associated Press at Christmas 2005, President Hinckley expressed the view that “…we have nothing to hide. Our history is an open book. They [critics] may find what they are looking for, but the fact is the history of the Church is clear and open and leads to faith and strength and virtues.”[20]

I hope that I am beginning to establish that there has been a longstanding tradition of questioning in the Church. Many of the fathers of the Church recognized that truth can spring from something like a dialectic process, and that the truth is what matters—not the appearance of truth, not defending a belief at all costs, but discovering the truth.

Surely that is why many of us gravitated to the Church—it is the desire, above all, to believe things that are true. And, as President Clark and Elder Talmage observe, if it is not true, it is, perhaps, not worth believing.

It is my opinion that that tradition of questioning is indispensable and ought to be encouraged. President Joseph F. Smith held this position. He testified before Congress that Latter-Day Saints
are given the largest possible latitude of their convictions, and if a man rejects a message that I may give to him but is still moral and believes in the main principles of the gospel and desires to continue in his membership in the Church, he is permitted to remain…Members of the Mormon Church are not all united on every principle. Every man is entitled to his own opinion and his own views and his own conceptions of right and wrong so long as they do not come in conflict with the standard principles of the Church... But so long as a man believes in God and has a little faith in the Church organization, we nurture and aid that person to continue faithfully as a member of the Church though he may not believe all that is revealed.”[21]

Although there has been this wonderful tradition of intellectual openness, there has, sadly, been a competing tide that has been around for an equally long time, but in more recent times seems to be edging out the competing view.

            For example, Elder Ezra Taft Benson, in 1976 (only a few years before becoming the President of the Church) equated historical accuracy with "slander and defamation,” and told LDS academics that “If you feel you must write for the scholarly journals, you always defend the faith.” Do not “humanize the prophets of God.” In a serious blow to intellectual openness he ordered that Church educators were not allowed to buy materials from “known apostates, or other liberal sources.”[22]

Elder Dallin H. Oaks, current member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles approvingly alludes to LDS intellectual Hugh Nibley’s quoting of early Christian Father St. Augustine, suggesting that there is a very ancient tradition of covering up any information that could be perceived as damaging to the Church. Augustine says that “[i]t is permitted for the purpose of building up religion in things pertaining to piety, when necessary, to conceal whatever appears to need concealing.[23]

            So is Elder Oaks suggesting that it is not necessary to tell the whole truth regarding the Church? Actually, yes, he is. Consider a hypothetical situation—let’s say that you have a criticism of a Church leader. Not an “I don’t like this guy” type of criticism, but a substantive criticism—what do you do? According to Elder Oaks, we are obligated to remain silent. Oaks[24] quotes Elder George F. Richards, former president of the Council of the Twelve: “when we say anything bad about the leaders of the Church, whether true or false, we tend to impair their influence and their usefulness and are thus working against the Lord and his cause,” and Elder Oaks emphasizes that “it does not matter that the criticism is true.”

            Oaks[25] even goes so far as to explicitly state that information, even if true, if it is contrary to the aims of the Church ought to be withheld:
My duty as a member of the Council of the Twelve is to protect what is most unique about the LDS church, namely the authority of priesthood, testimony regarding the restoration of the gospel, and the divine mission of the Savior. Everything may be sacrificed in order to maintain the integrity of those essential facts. Thus, if Mormon Enigma reveals information that is detrimental to the reputation of Joseph Smith, then it is necessary to try to limit its influence and that of its authors."

            Note that Elder Oaks does not say that “if lies are spread about the prophet,” or “if the prophet Joseph is slandered,” but says that the problem would arise if someone “reveals” information about the prophet. Elder Oaks wants to limit access to information about Joseph Smith, including true information, if it might be faith demoting.

Elder Boyd K. Packer[26] is equally explicit. In his (now infamous (at least in ex-believer circles)) talk to the Church Educational System[27], Packer suggests that “[i]n the Church we are not neutral. We are one-sided.” So the objective of CES instructors is not an objective history because for one thing “[i]n an effort to be objective, impartial, and scholarly a writer or a teacher may unwittingly be giving equal time to the adversary.” Instead of historical facts, the aim in teaching the history of the LDS faith “should be that they [students] will see the hand of the Lord in every hour and every moment of the Church from its beginning till now.

            So the goal of teaching or studying LDS history is not to learn history, per se, but to be convinced of the divinity of the Church. To achieve this goal, instructors must keep in mind that, according to Elder Packer “[s]ome things that are true are not very useful,” and that “[y]ou do not do well to see that it is disseminated” because uninspiring truth about the history of the Church is like a disease: “Do not spread disease germs!"

            D. Michael Quinn is a historian who has studied LDS history and taught at LDS Church owned Brigham Young University (BYU). Although excommunicated for publishing material that, although true, does not dovetail with the preferred narrative of Church history, Quinn is, at the time of the writing, still a sincere believer in the LDS faith.

Quinn tells his story of the hiring process at BYU during which he had a face to face meeting with Elder Packer. When Elder Packer discovered that the position Dr. Quinn was being considered for was that of historian, he said (this is Quinn’s paraphrasing of Elder Packer’s remarks): "I have a hard time with historians, because historians idolize the truth." Quinn continues:
I almost sunk into my chair. I mean, that statement just bowled me over. Then he went on to say, quoting him as accurately as I can ...: "The truth is not uplifting. The truth destroys. And historians should tell only that part of the truth that is uplifting, and if it's religious history, that's faith-promoting." And he said, "Historians don't like doing that, and that's why I have a hard time with historians." And the conversation just went from there. He occasionally would give me the opportunity to respond to what he was saying, and I would talk about putting things in context, and that one could deal with a controversy or a sensitive area, or even a negative experience in the past, but put it into context. I said that it's a question of do you talk about this in a sentence, a paragraph, a page, or do you just have a footnote reference to it? And I said, "That's a decision that each individual historian will make, but," I said, "I cannot agree with the idea that I should conceal this evidence." And he just shook his head, and he said, "You're wrong,"[28]

            In his 1993 address to the All Church Coordinating Council, Elder Packer[29] even condemns “so called” intellectuals and scholars as one of the three[30] great dangers to the Church because they cause members to get “caught up and led away.”

            In other words, according to these modern day apostles, criticism of the Church, its history, and its leaders, even true and legitimate criticism, ought not happen, and when it happens, ought to be suppressed.

            Even though we have above seen appeals to intellectual openness from Joseph Smith, Chapter 27 of the Church lesson manual, Teachings of the Presidents of the Church: Joseph Smith, mines two quotes that have him claiming that those who leave the Church are under the influence of Satan.
[N]otwithstanding all the professed determination to live godly, apostates after turning from the faith of Christ, unless they have speedily repented, have sooner or later fallen into the snares of the wicked one
            and
When you joined this Church you enlisted to serve God. When you did that you left the neutral ground, and you never can get back on to it. Should you forsake the Master you enlisted to serve, it will be by the instigation of the evil one, and you will follow his dictation and be his servant.

On a personal note, as of writing the first draft of this, two of my children still occasionally attend the LDS church. I do not appreciate lesson manuals that will tell my children that their father is ensnared by, dictated to by, and is a servant of, Satan.

And Brigham Young, whom we have quoted approvingly above on the subject of intellectual honesty, gives a wonderfully contrary cautionary example about thinking too much. This, by the way, is in the same sermon in which he famously (infamously?) discusses the doctrine of Blood Atonement:[31]
Watch yourselves and think. As I observed, on the evening of the 14th at the social Hall, ‘think brethren, think,’ but do not think so far that you cannot think back again… In the eastern country there was a man who used to go crazy, at times, and then come to his senses again. One of his neighbors asked him what made him go crazy; he replied, ‘I get to thinking, and thinking, until finally I think so far that I am not always able to think back again.’ Can you think too much for the spirit which is put in the tabernacle? You can… Let this intelligent part labor to excess, and it will eventually overcome the tabernacle, the equilibrium will be destroyed, and the whole organization deranged. Many people have deranged themselves by thinking too much.[32]

Why did I leave the LDS church?

My experience in the LDS church was, on balance, positive. I am pleased to say that I almost always had kind and thoughtful teachers in Primary, Sunday School, Young Men’s, Cubs & Scouts, Seminary & Institute, and adult classes. When I consider the two currents of thought addressed above, my teachers almost always leaned toward the side of intellectual openness.

I can vividly remember being 4 or 5 years old, having recently learned about the LDS doctrines of spirits and the pre-existence (that we lived as spirit beings in heaven prior to birth), walking along holding my pregnant Mother’s hand, lost in thought trying to figure out when my baby brother or sister’s spirit was going to get connected to that growing physical body. As far back as I can remember, I have been immersed in such thought, trying to understand and justify my beliefs regarding the Church, faith, and spirituality.

My questioning nature was rarely discouraged by my church teachers and leaders. In fact, the opposite is true. The attitude of my teachers was always that because it is true, there absolutely are answers, and the answers, being truth, cannot damage faith. I was always encouraged to ask questions, and my teachers agreed with the sentiment expressed by President Hinckley that the answers to my questions would be “…clear and open and lead…to faith and strength and virtues.”

I have to say that I am grateful to my Church teachers for being in a very real and very large part responsible for my intellectual curiosity and intellectual honesty. I was always taught that the truth mattered. I internalized this value, and it contributed to my serving a proselytizing mission for the Church, then to my education, to my career, and somewhat ironically, to my eventual rejection of the LDS faith, and to my rejection of faith in general. It was a combination of the church inspired confidence that the faith could withstand scrutiny (as per Talmage and Widstoe), and my church nurtured propensity to pursue answers to occasionally thorny question that led me away from the Church.

I do not want to be ambiguous on the next point. Why did I leave the Church? If we again refer to lesson 27 of the manual Teachings of the Presidents of the Church: Joseph Smith, we learn that there is ostensibly a relatively short list of reasons for apostatizing from the Church.

1.      Not recognizing the prophet as a source of revelation for the church.
2.      Pride (and the manual gives an example of a petty squabble over milk)
3.      Being critical of leaders imperfections (the example offered is again petty, a misspelled name on a mission call)
4.      Being offended.
5.      Rationalizing Disobedience[33]
6.      Accepting false teachings of the world.

The manual “Teachings of the Presidents of the Church: Brigham Young” has an equivalent explicit message. Chapter 12 “Preventing Personal Apostasy” has President Young warning us that “…no person ever apostatized, without actual transgression.”

The lessons invite the faithful member to draw the implication that there can be no legitimate reasons for leaving the Church; if one does leave it is because they are petty, weak, sinful, blind, or under the influence of Satan.

To be clear: I did not leave because I was offended. I did not leave because I was hiding a secret sin, nor because I harbored a desire to sin. I most emphatically did not leave because I had become entrapped in the snares of Satan.

I would respectfully submit that there can be legitimate reasons for leaving the Church. These reasons are the purpose of writing this essay. Which brings me to my next point…

Is This Anti-Mormon Literature?
Members of the LDS faith are warned incessantly to avoid “Anti-Mormon Literature.”

Incessantly.[34]

The term “anti-mormon literature” is oh so frustrating. By tarring anything and everything that is critical of the Church, its leaders, or its beliefs and practices with the same “anti-mormon literature” brush, defenders of the faith fail to distinguish between legitimate criticism and whatever it is they believe “anti” literature to be (hate mongering, bold face lies, persecution, snares set by Satan…). By calling any and all criticisms of the Church “anti mormon literature,” defenders are implying (agreeing with Elders Oaks and Packer) that there is no such thing as legitimate criticism. One would be hard pressed to find any LDS source, including informal and unofficial sources, that acknowledges that any criticism of the Church could be legitimate.

I hope that the reader will agree, that after considering the above sentiments from Joseph Smith, Brigham Young, John Taylor, Gordon B. Hinckley, et al, that legitimate criticism of the faith is valuable and to be desired.

If the LDS church is a fraud, would you want to find out? Clearly, an affirmative response to this questions requires the possibility of constructive criticism. If the Church is what it claims to be, then the believer has nothing to lose from criticism. If the Church is not all it claims to be, then criticism can help us discover where we are mistaken.

Typically, almost all instances of “anti-mormon literature” shares a similar subtext. Critics commonly point out differences between more traditional forms of Christianity and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. Critics then state or presume that because the traditional forms are true and correct, the LDS Church is not true and correct. “Anti-Mormon” polemic is almost always religiously motivated, and implies that since you are not the same as us, you must be wrong.

I will not pursue this line of reasoning[35], as I think that other religions are wrong for the same reasons that I think Mormonism is wrong—that acceptance of the tenets of any religious or spiritual organization or movement requires the adherent to surrender reason to an unjustifiable acceptance of the validity of faith.

Consider for a moment the LDS claim to the only “true” church and what this entails. The canonical version of Joseph Smith’s First Vision (written 1838, published 1842, allegedly happened 1820), has Jesus Christ himself calling all other Christian religions “all wrong; and … an abomination in his sight; that those professors were all corrupt[36]. Later, Jesus again, dictating to Joseph Smith, says that Mormonism is “the only true and living church upon the face of the whole earth, with which I, the Lord, am well pleased.”[37]

President Spencer W. Kimball (the President/Prophet from 1973-1985) says: “This is the only true church ...This is not a church. This is the Church of Jesus Christ. There are churches of men all over the land and they have great cathedrals, synagogues, and other houses of worship running into the hundreds of millions of dollars. They are churches of men. They teach the doctrines of men, combined with the philosophies and ethics and other ideas and ideals that men have partly developed and partly found in sacred places and interpreted for themselves."[38] President Kimball’s successor, Ezra Taft Benson (President/Prophet from 1985-1994) likewise says that we are not part of the same category as the Christian churches: "This is not just another Church. This is not just one of a family of Christian churches. This is the Church and kingdom of God, the only true Church upon the face of the earth..."[39]

In most Christian faiths, salvation is relatively independent of which church one is a member; most Episcopalians would not have a problem believing that a Lutheran or Baptist can go to heaven, and vice versa. Not so in Mormonism. In the LDS church, membership in the Church is essential for salvation, and in the words of LDS Apostle Bruce R. McConkie “[t]here is no salvation outside The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.”[40]

So what about those who are baptized into other faiths? Will a loving and understanding God not honor these acts of faith? President Charles W. Penrose, who served as a Mormon Apostle and as 1st and 2nd Counselor in the First Presidency of the Church lays it out for us: “Every baptism of the Catholic Church, and of the Episcopal Church, and of the Baptist Church, or any other church, if God Almighty did not ordain and authorize the man who performed the ordinance even though he performed it in the right way and used the right words, is null and void…”[41]

And Spencer W. Kimball (shortly before becoming Church President/Prophet) goes even further: it’s not only meaningless, but “[p]resumptuous and blasphemous are they who purport to baptize, bless, marry, or perform other sacraments in the name of the Lord while in fact lacking the specific authorization.”[42]

With that in mind, consider the question of why the Church deploys a force of tens of thousands[43] of missionaries around the world. The Church’s missionaries are not out there doing charity work, building schools, digging wells, or doing other things commonly associated with modern day missionaries. At least, that is not their primary focus. No, the goal of the LDS missionary is to win converts to Mormonism.

In order to convert souls to the LDS faith, missionaries must, of necessity, convince investigators that their previous faiths are mistaken. In other words, for the mission force, there can be nothing inherently wrong with trying to convince others that they are mistaken in their beliefs. If there is nothing inherently wrong with trying to convince others of the errors in their beliefs, then there can be no reason to take umbrage when others are critical of Mormonism.

Furthermore, members of Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints literally believe that salvation can only come through formal membership in the one correct Church. Hence the justification for the large missionary force. If it is true that salvation requires membership in the one correct Church (as per Smith, Kimball, Benson, and Christ), then surely members of the Church are missing the mark when offended by non-believers and ex-believers arguing that current members are risking their salvation by maintaining membership in the wrong Church. Members who believe in “one true church” should consider it the duty of the critic to try to point out the Church’s errors (as was suggested by Brigham Young, John Taylor, Orson Pratt, Hugh B. Brown, John A Widstoe, James E. Talmage, et al, above), and, if anything, ought to be offended by non- and ex-believers who do not try to share legitimate criticism!

Exactly how to clearly delineate between legitimate and illegitimate criticism, I cannot say I have exactly figured that out. But…

I shall do my best to avoid sensationalist claims (like one might find in the overtly misleading books and films “The Godmakers).” [44]

I shall do my best to avoid ad-hominem attacks (though readers will disagree as to exactly what constitutes an ad-hominem attack or what doesn’t; I ask the readers understanding if (when?) I inadvertently cross the line between non-ad-hominem and ad-hominem).

I shall do my best to avoid logical fallacies in general.

I will try to avoid drawing conclusions that are stronger than the premisses warrant. When I am speculating, I will try to make it explicit that I am so doing.

Whenever possible, I shall try to use the words of Church leaders and thinkers themselves, and not the interpretations of critics of the Church. I shall also give references to sources where the reader can find the words for themselves. In doing so, I hope to avoid the perception that I am misrepresenting the Church.

When referring to 2nd (or 3rd) hand accounts of events or conversations I will try to state that that’s what they are, and do my best to offer some commentary on the reliability of the account.

Inevitably, I will make errors. Please know that when I err, it is only due to my fallibility, not because I am who Ephesians 4:14 warned you about, and that I “lie in wait to deceive.”

Are you a happy lifer?

There is a commonly used phrase in LDS theological discussions. “Milk before meat.” Neophytes should never be exposed to the deep doctrines, to the controversial teachings and practices—the meat—of the Church until they are familiar with the basics—the milk. The concept refers to the notion that it is justifiable to conceal the truth about more complex or controversial doctrines or practices of the Church, if it is in the Church’s best interests.

As seen above, Boyd K. Packer[45] has said so: “Some things that are true are not very useful…The Lord made it clear that some things are to be taught selectively and some things are to be given only to those who are worthy…” And Dallin H. Oaks[46] agrees with the sentiment: “… if [a source of information] reveals information that is detrimental to the reputation of [the Church], then it is necessary to try to limit its influence and that of its authors.”

As a young missionary, I recall being taught to use a strategy that was in line with what Elders Packer and Oaks are suggesting. Instead of directly answering the questions of those we taught (our “investigators,” or “‘gators”), we were taught to answer the question that the investigator should have asked. If an investigator asked a question about, say, plural marriage, temple rituals, or the Adam God doctrine, we were to divert the discussion in the direction of Joseph Smith’s divine calling, the Book of Mormon, or our relationship with God. We were to offer only milk, never theological or historical meat.

We might not have been permitted to teach the “meat” to our investigators, but that never stopped us from delving into the meaty theological questions ourselves. We were very interested in answering such questions as reasons for the 1978 lift of the prohibition of blacks in the Priesthood, the conception of Jesus, the Adam-God doctrine, polygamy, the prior mortality of God, etc.

But we also recognized that there were some who were simply not interested in such issues. There were some folks who were involved in Church for different psychological reasons. Perhaps they remained involved because of family reasons. Or the Church offered economic contacts. Maybe they enjoyed the Sunday fellowship. Maybe they received a sense of moral certainty. Maybe they just didn’t care, and being a believer was good enough, even if they didn’t know what it was that they believed. Maybe church offered a sense of purpose or belonging. For whatever reason, such members were just not interested in doctrinal questions—at least not in “deep” doctrine.

We missionaries had a nickname for such members. We called them “happy lifers.” They were perfectly happy with their church life without being concerned with complex theological issues, nor with the justification of belief claims. Church met some social or psychological need, and that was good enough. Such persons, when confronted with the question “if the Church were a fraud, would you want to know” might be perfectly satisfied to answer in the negative.

If you have read this far, you are presumably not a happy lifer. If you are, this book might not be for you. I have no axe to grind with people who wish to stay in the Church solely because it makes them happy. But reading further will raise questions about faith and knowledge, theology, history, metaphysics, etc—questions about which happy lifers will take little interest.

Still reading? Good.

The Church is True”—What does this even mean?

“The Church is true” is a statement I learned to make as a child; I learned to repeat the phrase mechanically before I had the cognitive wherewithal to evaluate the meaning of it. It is not a sentence about which I can say I honestly know what it means; it seems to me now to be essentially meaningless because it is, I think, a categorical error.

If I say “my daughter came home in a flood of tears” and you respond “really? I thought she came home on a train…” you have somehow missed the point of what I was trying to convey. Your error ought to be obvious. You treated the flood of tears and the train as though they are both the same sorts of things—as if they belong in the same category. Even though the train and the flood of tears might structurally fit into a sentence in exactly the same place, they change the meaning of the sentence by virtue of the fact that the flood of tears belongs to the category of emotional states, whereas the train belongs to the category of means of transportation.

A categorical error occurs when we conflate things that belong in one category with things that belong in another category. It was introduced by Gilbert Ryle[47] as a way of resolving the issue of the relationship between mind and body. He suggested, contra Descartes, that mind and body belong to different categories.

There is a category of things that can potentially be true or false.

Ask yourself: What sorts of things can be true and false? Is a question true/false? Or a rock? Can a rock be true or false?

That category of things that can be described as true or false is comprised of representations. Representations are things that are about something (usually something other than itself). Photographs, for example, are representations, because they are about something (a family, a party, a UFO…), books or films are about something. A memory, a belief or a proposition are all about something. 

Forgive the impreciseness of my language here, but here is my working definition of a representation: A representation is something that is about something.

Things in this category (things that are about something) might be accurate representations or they might not be. A book about WWII might contain errors. It is still a representation, just not an accurate one. A memory or belief may or may not accurately coincide with the way things actually were or are.

So this category of things can be true or they can be false, or can be a mix. Your memory of your 10th birthday party probably contains parts that are true and some that are not. For the purposes of this essay we will hold that a representation is true to the extent that it accurately corresponds to the facts—the way things are (or were, or will be).

So, quite simply, if I believe that Mt. Kilimanjaro is the tallest mountain in the world, is my belief true? It (my belief) is true if and only if, in reality Mt. Kilimanjaro is the tallest mountain in the world. If a sentence states the proposition “God exists,” then that sentence is true if and only if there is a fact that corresponds with that proposition. Conversely, if a photograph, memory, dream, etc. represents something in a way that does not correspond with the way things really are, then we can say that that photograph, memory, dream, etc is not true. It is not a true representation of the facts.

With that definition of the category of things that can be true in hand, it is now easier to see why “The Church is true” is a problematic statement.

There are clearly things that don’t fall into the category of things that can be true. Unlike propositions, some statements are not representations—questions, or performative utterances (“I do,” “I promise.”) do not represent the way things are. People are not representations (…well, maybe actors…), and so are not true in the sense that representations can be true.

Institutions are not representations. Would it make sense to say “your family is true” or that “the Provincial Government of Sakatchewan is true” or that “the Prime Minister of Great Britain is true?” Not in the same sense that a history book or a theory could be described as true.

Would it make sense to say “my family is false? No? Why not? Because families are not representations, and do not fall under the category of things that are about something, so cannot be true or false. Similarly, the LDS church, being an institution, is not about something else. It does not purport to represent, in the same way that a picture, memory, painting, sentence, or belief does, something else. It lacks aboutness. So the LDS church, like any other church, or any other institution, does not fall into the same category as those things that we might describe as being true or false.

Yet we still hear the phrase (“the Church is true”). And frequently. So what do we mean when we utter such a phrase. I suspect that in each speakers mind the sentence might mean something slightly different, but I can think of a few plausible interpretations of what it might mean to an individual.

“The LDS church is the only one with the real Priesthood, or with legitimate God given authority.”

“The LDS church is the only one led by a divinely inspired prophet, the only one with God at the helm.”

“The sum total of the teachings of the LDS church are true.”

“The core doctrines of the LDS church are true.”

“The LDS church is necessary for salvation; the LDS church is the only one that can offer salvation.”

I suppose we could extend this list further, but the list is meant to be representative, not exhaustive. In each case, it is not the institution itself that is true or false, but some statement or belief about the Church that can be described as being true or false. And each sentiment is the sort of thing that could plausibly be in the mind of the speaker who states “The Church is true.”

Now, ask yourself the following question. With any of the above interpretations of “The Church is true,” could the Church still be true even if Joseph Smith were not a legitimate prophet. Keep in mind that I’m not (yet) arguing that he’s not, I’m just posing a hypothetical question. Hypothetically, if Joseph Smith turned out to be a fraud (even a pious, well intentioned fraud) could we still claim that the LDS church has the only legitimate Priesthood? That the current president (President Monson as I write the first draft of this essay) is a legitimate prophet, seer, and revelator? That the teachings of the Church are true (especially the ones that appear “quirky” to those outside the Church)? That the LDS church is the only organization that can offer salvation?

It seems that if Joseph Smith is not a prophet, then all of the statements listed as corollaries of “the Church is true” have the rug pulled out from beneath them.

Very loosely speaking, this style of argument is Kantian. Immanuel Kant, one of the great 18th century enlightenment thinkers, developed a style of reasoning known as transcendental arguments (see, for example, his 1871 work, Critique of Pure Reason), in which one starts from the known, from the conclusion, and tries to derive what must necessarily be true in order for that conclusion to be true.[48]

In our Kantian-ish argument, we might ask the following: If the Church is true, by any of the corollaries above, then what else must be true? What does the statement “The Church is true” require in order to be true?

We have already intimated one. If the Church is true, it requires that Joseph Smith was a prophet. President Joseph Feilding Smith said so explicitly:[49] “Mormonism, as it is called, must stand or fall on the story of Joseph Smith. He was either a prophet of God, divinely called, properly appointed and commissioned, or he was one of the biggest frauds this world has ever seen. There is no middle ground.”

On more than one occasion, President Hinckley has made similar assertions, specifically in relation to Joseph Smith’s vision of God the Father and Jesus Christ (Pearl of Great Price, Joseph Smith History): “Without that history we have nothing; The truth of that remarkable event is the pivotal substance of our faith."[50] And [51]
…[t]hat becomes the hinge pin on which this whole cause turns. If the First Vision was true, if it actually happened, then the Book of Mormon is true. Then we have the priesthood. Then we have the Church organization and all of the other keys and blessings of authority which we say we have. If the First Vision did not occur, then we are involved in a great sham. It is just that simple. (Italics added)

On another occasion (long before he was the President of the Church, he starkly stated that “I would like to say that this cause is either true or false. Either this is the kingdom of God, or it is a sham and a delusion. Either Joseph talked with the Father and the Son, or he did not. If he did not, we are engaged in blasphemy”[52]

One might consider the prophetic calling of Joseph Smith a “pillar” of the faith. President of the Church Howard W. Hunter called the first vision “the first pillar of our faith…"[53]

If Joseph Smith is not the prophet he claimed to be, then The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, is, according to its own leaders, a great sham, engaged in blasphemy, and one of the biggest frauds this world has ever seen.

If the structure of the Church is to be upheld, there are going to be pillars supporting it. The divine calling of the Prophet Joseph is one of those pillars, without it, the Church is not what it claims. It is, we might say, a sine qua non, a “without which, not.” Without the prophetic calling of Joseph Smith, the Church is not what it claims to be.

The basic structure of the critique of Mormonism to be found in these pages is to consider the pillars of the Church, the sine qua non, and to try to argue that they do not hold up to scrutiny.

So there will be a section on Joseph Smith. I will follow various lines of evidence and reasoning to try to show that Joseph Smith was not really a prophet.

Now we might further ask if, in addition to the prophetic calling of Joseph Smith, there are other such sine qua non, other such pillars? What else must be true in order for the LDS church to be the “true” church?

Since Joseph Smith is the source of the Book of Mormon, if the Book of Mormon is not what it claims to be, then it stands to reason that evidence against the Book of Mormon would also count as one of the lines of evidence against the prophetic calling of Joseph Smith. However, due to numerous issues with the Book of Mormon, it is deserving of its own section.

According to President Ezra Taft Benson, if the Book of Mormon is not true, then neither is the Church. At the Fall 1986 general conference of the Church he refers to the famous statement by Joseph Smith in the introduction to the Book of Mormon that “…the Book of Mormon was the most correct of any book on earth, and the keystone of our religion… Then President Benson adds, in no uncertain terms, that
…the Book of Mormon is the keystone of testimony. Just as the arch crumbles if the keystone is removed, so does all the Church stand or fall with the truthfulness of the Book of Mormon…if it can be discredited, the Prophet Joseph Smith goes with it. So does our claim to priesthood keys, and revelation, and the restored Church.[54]

Among the numerous other issues with Book of Mormon are the theory of knowledge espoused by the book (also covered in this project), the difficulties with geographical interpretations (limited geography v. hemispheric models), issues of genetics and archeology, and descriptions of animals, agriculture, and technology. There are textual difficulties, significant (yes, significant) unaccounted for changes in the text, passages that come from the new testament, errors in Biblical passages that only recently crept into the Bible (i.e. long after the alleged source material for the Book of Mormon was compiled), and the apparently modern source of some Book of Mormon material . There are issues regarding the translation process, the gold plates, and the witnesses. Finally, considering that the Book of Mormon purportedly “contains the fullness of the gospel” and is “the most correct book on the face of the earth” it is remarkably insignificant in relation to the actual theology of the LDS faith.

Another pillar, perhaps less obvious, follows from the fact that the Utah Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints is not the only branch of Mormonism. Following the death of Joseph Smith it was not clear to the membership (or even to the leadership) how the Church was to move forward. A number of leaders put forward proposals and drew large numbers of followers. A sizable plurality of the membership accepted Brigham Young’s initial proposal that the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles should assume the leadership of the Church, and this branch of believers became the dominant Utah branch of Mormonism, the largest and most well known faction of the movement.

But others made conflicting proposals. Many had made a case for a lineal succession in which Joseph’s younger brother would have taken the helm of the Church. Along the same lines, others argued that Joseph’s son, Joseph Smith III ought to be the next prophet. Interestingly, Brigham Young might have held this view as late as 1860 (16 years after the death of Joseph, 13 years after Young became President of the Church and settled the Salt Lake valley).[55] FYI, 1860 was when Joseph Smith III accepted the presidency of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

Another proposal came from Sidney Rigdon, one of the co-founders of the Church, and the only surviving member of the First Presidency. He contended that there should be no successor to Joseph Smith per se. Instead of having a replacement prophet, he proposed that he should act as a protector or guardian at the head of the Church.

A very large number of followers (including most of the members of Joseph Smith’s family) accepted the claims of James Strang on the grounds that he possessed a letter from Joseph Smith that apparently appointed him to be the next president of the Church. The church organized by Strang exists today, with about 300 members, as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Almost the same name as the Utah/Brigham Young faction, except there is no hyphen between “Latter” and “Day.”

            There were other factions (following Granville Hendrick and Alpheus Cutler for example), and today there are dozens (maybe hundreds) of organizations claiming to be the legitimate heir to Joseph’s church.

            If we accept that Joseph Smith was a real prophet, and that the Book of Mormon really is true, that does not necessarily entail the validity of the faction of the Church as lead by Brigham Young. The third pillar upholding the structure of the LDS church’s claims is the legitimacy of the claim that Brigham Young’s faction of the Church is the legitimate, and only legitimate claimant to being the same church as founded by Joseph Smith.

            So we will take up the question of the succession crisis, and whether the current Utah based LDS church has a legitimate claim to be that church started by Joseph Smith in 1830.    

A fourth pillar concerns the very nature of God. The LDS perspective on the nature of God is rather unique. In the chapter on the nature of God, we will first consider just how different the LDS conception is as compared to the God of traditional theology. Of course, pointing out that the different conceptions are dissimilar does not, on its own, provide grounds for demonstrating the LDS position to be wrong. But pointing out the differences will highlight some essential characteristics of the LDS God that make belief in such to be somewhat less plausible.

So we will consider Mormon Metaphysics. We will address the differences between the LDS God and the God of traditional theology, and examine the implications for the possible existence of such a being, and the implications acceptance of this being would have for moral questions. We will consider the changes in the understanding of the nature of God that occurred during the formative years of the Church. We will address the Plan of Salvation, and raise questions about whether it is reasonable to believe. We will consider the LDS version of dualism, (it is different from traditional or Cartesian dualism) and ask whether this version of dualism helps or hinders our understanding of the nature of reality.

One of the central tenets of the LDS faith is that it is possible to have knowledge regarding such important questions. Not an opinion, mind you,--not even a belief. But knowledge. LDS persons commonly believe that they know that they are right, and those those who subscribe to different faith systems are incorrect. LDS persons believe that they can know that God exists, that Joseph Smith was a prophet, that the Book of Mormon is true, that the current Utah LDS church is God’s one and only true church, etc. An essential and central key to this essay will be to argue that such knowledge is not possible.

This question of faith is the heart of this essay.

If faith is a legitimate way of knowing, then the quality of all other arguments in this essay become moot. The reader might counter the arguments with a sentiment like “yes, I know that the evidence says it is probably not true, but I have faith, and faith is a gift from God.” The sections on faith will cover questions of belief, logic, and epistemology, specifically LDS epistemology, but also a general consideration of the concept of faith. I will try to argue that faith is not a legitimate way of knowing, and that belief claims based on faith do not meet any minimum requirements to qualify as knowledge.

In living the faithful life, there are many aspects that people find to be of value. For example, many people think that in order to be a properly good and moral person, there has to be an absolute moral code to which one can subscribe, something that can only come from God, and that therefore morality requires religion. My case against religious based morality gets its own chapter.

Many people believe that they are in need of salvation, and thus in need of religion. A good many honest seekers of truth long to know the true nature and meaning of life and the universe[56], and find comfort in the fact that religion offers answers to these metaphysical questions, answers not dependent on the ever-changing sciences.

And religion offers, for lack of a better term, a place: it tells you how and where you fit into the universe. It defines your relation to God. It offers milestones like baptism, confirmation, weddings, etc., that mark off your progress along the path of life. And it gives you an extended family in your community of likeminded believers.

As much as one might find comfort in these aspects of faith, I will put forth the position that if religions truth claims are not true, then their comforting quality is not a satisfactory reason to believe in them. Furthermore, perhaps sadly, the specific benefits offered by a life of religiosity are largely illusory, so there is less value in the religious life than the believer might hope. You don’t need religion for morality. You don’t require salvation. When science and religion conflict, religion does not fare well.

Losing one’s “place,” however, is very difficult, especially when one is shunned by family and by ones extended church family.
           
The Unexamined Faith

            Socrates (470-399 BCE) is among the most influential thinkers in all of human history. His method of teaching by asking his students the right questions in such a way that they figure things out for themselves is an ideal to which many educators aspire. Not only was he a great thinker and teacher, but his influence is extended by the fact that one of his students was Plato, and one of Plato’s students was Aristotle.

            Socrates, as it turns out, was executed for heresy. There were most likely political motivations, but the actual charge was that he was undermining the state religion and corrupting the young people.[57] Plato calls Socrates “The Gadfly” in that he “stings” those that hear him into action. Socrates had made a bit of a habit of stinging people into questioning their beliefs. In so doing, they could discover where they had made errors in judgment, could jettison false beliefs, and have a deeper confidence and appreciation in what they continued to believe.

After his conviction, Aristotle was offered some alternatives to death. He could choose between death, exile, and silence. In rejecting exile and silence, he uttered these immortal words: “The unexamined life is not worth living for a human.”[58] Issues of life, freedom, or virtue are so central to human existence that if one were to live without the possibility of gaining knowledge of truth and rejecting falsehood, such a life would be unsatisfactory.

It is a strong conclusion to draw, and this is not the place to consider whether such a strong conclusion is warranted. I mention it only because the title of this project is an allusion to Socrates’ sentiment.

As I grew up in the Church, I always had a sense that understanding the doctrines and practices of the Church was a positive. Elder Marion D. Hanks sums up my feelings toward knowledge of the Church perfectly:[59]
No one knows anything about Christ’s work simply by being born a member of the Church, and often he knows little about it after years of unmotivated exposure in meetings or classes. He must learn. And learning involves self-investment and effort. The gospel should be studied ‘as carefully as any science.

To ask questions was to enhance understanding. To have doubts offered the possibility of clarification. There were places where I was mistaken on points of LDS theology, and I would not have discovered so had I not been willing to ask questions.

The theology of the Church has changed over the years, and it does so because people ask questions.[60]

That feeling that I had growing up in the Church, that asking questions and raising doubts was a benefit to my set of beliefs—I didn’t quite know how to state it. While contemplating a title for this project and thinking about Socrates it dawned on me that a very similar sentiment is true in regards to questions of faith. We know that we are going to mistaken in some of our beliefs. If I sincerely want to believe that my beliefs are true, I need to be willing to discover where I am mistaken. If I truly and sincerely want to understand the virtues of faith, the foibles of faith, the purpose of faith, etc, it is incumbent upon me to examine that faith.

So to conclude this introductory chapter, I echo the sentiments of some the great thinkers and leaders of the LDS faith…

Of Brigham Young who says that we have to see if the faith will stand the test, and if not, that we ought to be grateful to the person who proves to us that it does not.

Of Orson Pratt who says that those who can redeem us from errors in doctrine by the use of logic, reason, or scripture will ever have our pleasing reflections.

Of Hugh B. Brown who reminds that only error fears freedom of expression; of J. Rueben Clark who asserts that truth cannot be harmed by investigation, and that “if we have not the truth it ought to be harmed.[61]

            And of James E Talmage who warns that the individual who cannot listen to criticisms of his views is intolerant and a fanatic, because one who knows half of a question is worse off than one who knows nothing of it. And that “No opinion that cannot stand discussion or criticism is worth holding.”[62]

            In my best Socratic fashion, as a theme for the forthcoming pages, I submit to you, gentle reader, that the unexamined faith is not worth believing.

            Are you sitting comfortably? Then we’ll begin.




[1] History of the Church 5: 340
[2] The “First Vision” eventually went on to be considered the foundational event for the LDS church. If you are not familiar with the “First Vision” or the fact that there are multiple versions of it, not to worry, it will be discussed at length.
[3] Pearl of Great Price, Joseph Smith History 1:25
[4] “Isreal” is a term the LDS use to refer to themselves.
[5] Millenial Star, Archive Volume 14, Number 38, Pages 593-595
[6] Journal of Discourses, Vol. 16, p. 46
[7] Journal of Discourses, Vol. 13, p. 270
[8] challenge accepted
[9] Journal of Discourses, Volume 20, Page 264
[10] Pratt, O. (1853) The Seer. p. 15. http://www.archive.org/details/OrsonPratt
[11] Please note, I recognize that the source publication for the above passage (Orson Pratt’s The Seer) is controversial, and was not published by the Church, and defenders of the Church criticize critics of the Church for quoting passages from it. My use in this instance is not to bring up some controversial doctrine, but strictly for the purposes of illustrating an intellectual openness and optimistic honesty amongst early Church fathers.
[12] Brown, H. B. (1988) The Abundant Life: The Memoirs of Hugh B. Brown, ed. Edwin B. Firmage (Salt Lake City: Signature Books). Pp. 137-139
[13] I say “allegedly” and “quoted as” because I have never actually seen that phrase in works of Hume. It may be in something I haven’t read, but as of now I’ve only seen it attributed to him. I suspect that it may be a misattribution…
[14] For example. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, 1962
[15] For example The Logic of Scientific Discovery, 1959.
[16] Improvement Era, Jan 1920, p. 204
[17] Widtsoe, J. A. (1943). Evidences and Reconciliations: Aids to Faith in a Modern Day. Salt Lake City, Utah; Bookcraft. pp. 97-101
[18] Quinn, D. M. (1983). J. Reuben Clark: The Church Years. Provo, Utah: Brigham Young University Press. p. 24
[19] I shall do my best.
[21] U.S. Congress, Senate, 1904-1907, Vol. I, pp. 97-98
[22] Anderson, L. F. , "The LDS Intellectual Community and Church Leadership: A Contemporary Chronology." Vol. 26 No. 1 Spring 1993, Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, p. 11
[23] Anderson, R. D. (1999). Inside the Psychobiography and the Book of Mormon. Mind of Joseph Smith. Salt Lake City, Utah; Signature Books. footnote 28, p. xliii
[24] Oaks, D. H. (1985).Reading Church History,” CES Doctrine and Covenants Symposium, Brigham Young University, 16 Aug. 1985. p. 25
[25] Anderson, R. D. (1999). Inside the Psychobiography and the Book of Mormon. Mind of Joseph Smith. Salt Lake City, Utah; Signature Books.
[26] who at the time I write this first draft will be the next president/prophet of the Church if he outlives President Thomas S. Monson. At the time of revisions Elder Packer has passed away.
[27] Packer, B. K (1981) Boyd K. Packer, 1981, BYU Studies, Vol. 21, No. 3, pp. 259-271
[28] PBS, Interview D. Michael Quinn  http://www.pbs.org/mormons/interviews/quinn.html
[29] Packer, B. K. (1993). All Church Coordinating Council Meeting. http://emp.byui.edu/HUFFR/All%20Church%20Coordinating%20Council--Boyd%20K.%20Packer.htm
[30] I’m sure you are wondering. The other two great dangers to the Church, according to Packer, are the feminist and gay rights movements.
[31] Journal of Discourses 3:247, March 16, 1856. There ae some sins that are so bad that Jesus’s atonement doesn’t cover them. Execution, of a kind requiring shedding of blood, at the hands of the Church, would be necessary.
[32] Off topic, but if we accept this passage at face value, it seems to say that the mind is not a property of the spirit/soul, but of something else, presumably the brain. If this is so, it would be interesting to ask Brother Brigham a follow up question about how our minds remain intact after death (brain death) and before the resurrection…
[33] interesting to note that the manual is more concerned with obedience than goodness or righteousness per se…
[34] The casual observer could be forgiven for suspecting that there is something that the Church does not want its members to stumble upon…
[35] I will point out differences between the LDS conception of God and the God of classical theism, and differences between the LDS Church a broader category of Christianity, but not for the purpose of arguing that one is wrong and one is right.
[36] Joseph Smith History 1:18-20
[37] D&C 1: 30-31
[38] Spencer W. Kimball, Teachings of Spencer W. Kimball, p.421
[39] Teachings of Ezra Taft Benson, p.164-165
[40] Mormon Doctrine, p.670
[41] Journal of Discourses, Vol. 25, p.339
[42] found in the horribly misnamed The Miracle of Forgiveness, p. 55.
[43] Currently more than70,000.
[44] Decker, E. & Hunt, D (1984). The God Makers. Harvest House Publishing.
[45] Packer, B. K (1981) Boyd K. Packer, 1981, BYU Studies, Vol. 21, No. 3, pp. 259-271
[46] Anderson, R. D. (1999). Inside the Psychobiography and the Book of Mormon. Mind of Joseph Smith. Salt Lake City, Utah; Signature Books. Introduction p. xliii f28

[47] Ryle, G. (1949). The Concept of Mind. University of Chicago Press
[48] He argued, for example, that in order for our minds to perceive the way that they do, they must contain built in categories such as time, space, and causation.
[49] Smith, Joseph Feilding. (1976) Doctrines of Salvation. Salt Lake City: Bookcraft. Vol 1, p. 188
[50] BYU Newsnet 6 Oct 2002
[51] from the lesson manual Teachings of Gordon B. Hinckley
[52] Conference Reports, October 1961, p.116
[53] The Ensign, September 1994, p. 54
[54] Ensign, November 1986
[55] Journal of Discourses 8:69
[56] It’s 42 (apologies if you haven’t read The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy).
[57] See Plato’s (The) Apology (of Socrates).
[58] Apology 38a
[59] Theological Illiterates” September IE, 1968. 42
[60] Consider the revision of the meaning of the word “Lamanite.” Lamanites were the principal characters of the Book of Mormon, and were once considered the ancestors of modern Native Americans to the extent that when I served as a missionary I served in a Lamanite congregation. But as I write the first draft of this project, the word “Lamanite” barely been mentioned in Church publications nor in a talk by a General Authority of the Church since about 2000, and the wording of the introduction to the Book of Mormon has been subtly changed to reflect a growing realization that the Church does not actually know what—if anything—constitutes a Lamanite.

[61] Quinn, D. M. (1983). J. Reuben Clark: The Church Years. Provo, Utah: Brigham Young University Press. p. 24
[62] Improvement Era, Jan 1920, p. 204





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