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05-10-2007, 03:42 PM | #1 | |
Demiurge
Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 36,365
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The zealot defenders of blacks and the priesthood
http://www.cougarboard.com/noframes/...tml?id=2681361
Quote:
I think this is a case where common members of the church have stepped up and inserted an answer THAT MAKES SENSE, when no answer was forthcoming from the church. This isn't about attacking the church, this is about helping that member that is really struggling with the issue and can't reconcile Jesus being a racist. It's comforting to accept that view that Jesus is not in fact a racist. Fallible men, however, can be racists. |
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05-10-2007, 03:46 PM | #2 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Between Iraq and a hard place
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Quote:
Lamanites were cursed with a dark skin because of their wickedness and some of them had the cursing removed when they repented. Is God racist? God didn't want the Gospel preached to the Gentiles for a long period of time. Is God racist? |
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05-10-2007, 03:53 PM | #3 | |
Demiurge
Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 36,365
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Quote:
Men and women aren't equal. Women can have babies, men cannot, for starters. But I doubt you would argue that a black man is unequal to a white man. In fact, you would have a hard time even defining what a black man is. Which is part of what made the ban so ridiculous. Who is black? The one drop rule? What happens when you do your geneaology and discover that 4 generations back there was a black ancestor? My personal belief is that no person in the BoM magically had their skin color change. It was metaphor, or represented a natural process--like intermarrying with indigenous peoples with darker skin. The whole preaching to the gentiles thing--it's interesting that it did not even take one generation after Christ to start preaching to the gentiles. Do we have any record of a prophet praying to include blacks, but being denied? I think we have some record of DOM approaching the subject but feeling it was not time. The reason being, in my mind, disharmony in the quorum. If we are to believe this policy was of God, how do we say that, but at the same time argue that all the statements made by the prophets that justified it were wrong? This is ludicrous. |
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05-10-2007, 03:59 PM | #4 |
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I'm saying that on the surface, given our 21st century morality, there are certain things God has done or said that would be construed as <xxx>-ist by people who don't possess His divine perspective.
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05-10-2007, 04:00 PM | #5 |
Demiurge
Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 36,365
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The church's current position as far as I can tell, is that there is not one iota of doctrinal evidence for the ban.
They have instructed us to ignore all justification in the past. That is a refutation of prophets and apostles. But they don't take that next step, which is to say "it was a mistake." |
05-10-2007, 08:58 PM | #6 |
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Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 748
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Actually, I think the church is doing to address the priesthood ban exactly what it does to address polygamy - "we don't practice it anymore, so you can't ask us about it."
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05-10-2007, 04:52 PM | #7 |
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05-10-2007, 04:54 PM | #8 |
Active LDS Ute Fan
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__________________
"It's not like we played the school of the blind out there." - Brian Johnson. |
05-10-2007, 04:57 PM | #9 |
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05-10-2007, 04:01 PM | #10 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Memphis freakin' Tennessee!!!!!
Posts: 4,530
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Quote:
I think it's more tortured to accept that God had his whims and feels no need to explain than to accept that man is imperfect and that imperfection can stand in the way of God's designs on a temporary basis.
__________________
Give 'em Hell, Cougars!!! Religion rises inevitably from our apprehension of our own death. To give meaning to meaninglessness is the endless quest of all religion. When death becomes the center of our consciousness, then religion authentically begins. Of all religions that I know, the one that most vehemently and persuasively defies and denies the reality of death is the original Mormonism of the Prophet, Seer and Revelator, Joseph Smith. |
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