I really don't know much about this. I do know that the church banned African-Americans from the priesthood until the 1970s. (On the other hand, apparently Joseph Smith Jr. had ordained an African-American in the early days of the church, so...) -- SJK There is no conspiracy, there is simply a lot of religions and we should not hold one religion to be more true than other ones. Claims of 10 million church members does not make your religion the True Faith, it makes it a religion that claims a large membership. Each religion here should be taken in the context of other religions and of it's social history. Previously these articles tended to take everything said by this church at face value and this does not make for good encyclopaedia articles. If the LDS church allows its leadership to edit texts that are supposed to be divine revelations from mythical ancient people from their God then this is a very distinctive feature of this religion. So such comments can not be a strawman as people might be expecting the LDS church to behave like other religions and be prone to citicism if they are shown to edit their texts. -- Aristotle |
I really don't know much about this. I do know that the church banned African-Americans from the priesthood until the 1970s. (On the other hand, apparently Joseph Smith Jr. had ordained an African-American in the early days of the church, so...) -- SJK |
white is used in many places in the scriptures in a symbolic sense, and it would make sense to clarify that the use there referred to purity and not skin color, especially if individual members were starting to take it the wrong way.
The way the church works, it's not a church teaching unless the leaders taught it (and usually repeat it many, many times) in the official channels. The whole point being to not go off on single verses like that one. And I've never heard of changing skin color being church doctrine.
Reporting the Church's views is only NPOV if these view are put in the context of comparative religion and theological discussion. To dismiss such criticism as a "straw man" opens the path to declaring non-Mormon views as being heretic on the Wikipedia.
You're right, there is no such quote from Kimball. There is, however, one from Brigham Young. I had just forgotten the correct attribution -- remember, it was from memory.
I added an explanation of the history of the beliefs regarding black people to Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, under the history section. I tried *very* hard to be fair and npov, and I gave references.
So you didn't have to wait *that* long for an attribution. :-)
I'm really not interested in propogandizing one way or the other. If the information I have is not complete, and therefore slanted, I welcome your filling in what I've missed. --Dmerrill