Tuesday, October 15, 2024

Excerpts from Joseph Fielding McConkie, "The Doctrine of Names in the Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ"

  

For a Latter-day Saint, the message of salvation cannot be disassociated with the name Joseph Smith any more than the Law of Moses can be disassociated with the man whose name it bears. The Book of Mormon contains a prophecy attributed to Joseph, son of the Patriarch Jacob (Israel), wherein he prophesies of a descend­ant of his who is destined to stand at the head of the gathering of Israel in the last days and who would bear his name. “His name shall be called after me,” the ancient Joseph said, and continued:

 

and it shall be after the name of his father. And he shall be like unto me; for the thing, which the Lord shall bring forth by his hand, by the power of the Lord shall bring my people unto salvation. (2 Nephi 3:15)

 

In this context, the etymology of the name Joseph is of special interest. Usually rendered “the Lord addeth” or “increaser” from the Hebrew word yasap, a richer meaning is also associated with it. At the birth of her son Joseph, Rachel proclaimed, “God hath taken away my reproach” (Genesis 30:23–24). The Hebrew word ’asap, “taken away,” carries not only the meaning “take away” but also “gather.”5 Significantly enough, the idea of gathering is prominently associated with ancient Joseph. And just as he gathered the family of Israel together that they might have grain to eat, so his latter-day counterpart was to gather Israel to the bread of life or doctrines of salvation that they might know of the covenants God had made with their fathers. (Joseph Fielding McConkie, “The Doctrine of Names in the Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ,” in Perspectives on Latter-day Saint Names and Naming: Names, Identity, and Belief, ed. Dallin D. Oaks, Paul Baltes, and Kent Minson [London: Routledge, 2023], 205)

 

 

The Gathering

The whole concept of the latter-day gathering of Israel, as revealed to Joseph Smith, centered in the promise that Jacob’s posterity would return to their God and once more take his [Christ’s] name upon them.

 

I have called thee by thy name; thou art mine.… For I am the Lord thy God, the Holy One of Israel, thy Saviour.… Fear not: for I am with thee: I will bring thy seed from the east, and gather thee from the west; I will say to the north, Give up; and to the south, Keep not back: bring my sons from far, and my daughters from the ends of the earth; Even every one that is called by my name. (Isaiah 43:1–7; italics added)

 

In the title page of the Book of Mormon, Moroni sets forth the two basic doctri­nal threads that bind the book together: first, that those who bear the name Israel—the descendants of Abraham—are to come to a knowledge of the covenant God made with their ancient father and, second, that they come to the knowledge of their Redeemer. Only then are they to return to the lands of their fathers.

 

It is held by the prophets of the Book of Mormon that the latter-day gathering must be first spiritual and then temporal. The scattered remnants of Israel must first return to the covenants and faith of their ancient fathers. Only after they have taken upon themselves the name of the God of Abraham will they have rightful claim to their ancient lands of inheritance (cf. 2 Nephi 9:1–2). Joseph Smith explained:

 

The time has at last arrived when the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob, has set his hand again the second time to recover the remnants of his people, which have been left from Assyria, and from Egypt, and from Pathros, and from Cush, and from Elam, and from Shinar, and from Hamath, and from the islands of the sea, and with them to bring in the fulness of the Gentiles, and establish that covenant with them, which was promised when their sins should be taken away. See Isaiah xi; Romans xi:25, 26 and 27, and also Jeremiah xxxi:31, 32 and 33. This covenant has never been established with the house of Israel, nor with the house of Judah, for it requires two parties to make a covenant, and those two parties must be agreed, or no covenant can be made. (Smith, Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, 14)

 

This is the doctrine that binds the restored Church of Jesus Christ so closely to the prophecies of the Hebrew Bible. As early as 1831, the year after the Church was organized, the Prophet Joseph Smith received a revelation that stated in part:

 

Abraham received promises concerning his seed, and of the fruit of his loins—from whose loins ye are, namely, my servant Joseph—which were to continue so long as they were in the world; and as touching Abraham and his seed, out of the world they should continue; both in the world and out of the world should they continue as innumerable as the stars; or, if ye were to count the sand upon the seashore ye could not number them. (D&C 132:30)

 

This text announces that Joseph Smith is a descendant of Abraham and reaffirms the importance of the promises God made to the ancient Patriarch concerning his seed, and as seen in the above passage from Isaiah, this covenant relationship requires that the descendants of Abraham take upon themselves the name of the God of Abraham. (Ibid., 206-7)

 

 

 

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Joseph Fielding McConkie on "Elias" in D&C 110

  

On April 3, 1836, a week after the dedication of the Kirtland Temple, Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery were visited by Moses, Abraham, and Elijah. Each of these ancient prophets laid their hands on the heads of these two men and gave them specific power and authority (priesthood keys) to act in the sacred office these ancient prophets held when they ministered on the earth. Moses restored “the keys of the gathering of Israel” and “the leading of the ten tribes from the land of the north” (D&C 110:11). Abraham (or a messenger from the dispensation of Abraham) restored the special promise made to him and his posterity. (Joseph Fielding McConkie, “The Doctrine of Names in the Restored Gospel of Jesus Christ,” in Perspectives on Latter-day Saint Names and Naming: Names, Identity, and Belief, ed. Dallin D. Oaks, Paul Baltes, and Kent Minson [London: Routledge, 2023], 214)

 

 

Joseph Smith’s account of this event states that “Elias appeared, and committed the dispensation of the gospel of Abraham” (D&C 110:12). The name Elias is used in a number of revelations received by Joseph Smith as a name title rather than a proper name. The best of Mormon scholars have assumed that in this text it must be used in this way, having reference either to Abraham or Melchizedek. In my judgment, it refers to Abraham. (Ibid., 215-16 n. 22)

 

 

Further Reading:

 

“Elias” as a “forerunner” in LDS Scripture

 

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Eric A. Eliason on Church Leader Names

  

Church Leader Names

 

The General Authorities, or highest-level leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints present a special case for LDS naming ways. For many years now, men called to serve in this capacity who are not already in the habit (if they go by their middle name) have quickly learned to do so. For example, officially in Church publications and in over-the-pulpit announcements, “Russell Nelson” is “Russell M. Nelson” and “Russell Ballard” is “M. Russell Ballard.”

 

The Church does not officially explain this custom anywhere, but it may be influenced by at least two factors: (1) many General Authorities in the past have come from a limited set of inter-related families and (2) many parents in these families tended to name their sons after noteworthy previous family members. These two facts made it so men sharing a similar name have occasionally come to occupy Church leadership positions over the years. Using initials helps mitigate confusion in such circumstances. Sometimes the whole of an initialized name needs to be spelled out to avoid confusion. The most famous example of this is when Church founder Joseph Smith Jr.’s nephew, Joseph Smith, became a General Authority (and later Church president) and started going by Joseph F. (Fielding) Smith. When Joseph F. Smith’s son, Joseph F. Smith, became the General Authority (and later Church president), he spelled out his initialized name to be called Joseph Fielding Smith (Adding further to this confusion, Joseph Smith Jr.’s son, Joseph Smith III, was the first president of the separate Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints). A similar naming situation happened with the grandson of apostle Ezra T. Benson, Ezra Taft Benson, who came an apostle and later Church president. This pattern of initialization also applies to prominent women such as Eliza R. Snow and the first three 20th century presidents of the Relief Society: Zina D. H. Young (1888-1901), Bathsheba W. Smith (1901-1010), and Emmeline B. Wells (1910-1921).

 

Another possible reason for initialization is that it has come to indicate a certain dignity of high office. Even in informal conversation, few, if any, Latter-day Saints would think of referring to the late President Hinckley as “Gordon Hinckley.” It was always “Gordon B. Hinckley,” if not “the prophet” or “President Hinckley.” The tradition of using initials for formal purposes was not unknown in 19th century America and still continues today among public figures and authors. While writing middle initials is somewhat common in formal settings outside Latter-day Saint circles, the oral use of them is almost unique to Church members. The desire for dignity may also influence many Latter-day Saint academic and writers to emulate General Authorities by using the initial(s) of their less-used given name(s) to adorn their books and articles. However, Church members generally do not include middle initials when referring orally to even the most well-known Latter-day Saint scholars and authors. This practice is most often reserved for General Authorities and is a subtle, informal marker of respect and recognition of their office. (Eric A. Eliason, “Nameways in Latter-day Saint History, Custom, and Folklore,” in Perspectives on Latter-day Saint Names and Naming: Names, Identity, and Belief, ed. Dallin D. Oaks, Paul Baltes, and Kent Minson [London: Routledge, 2023], 85-86)

 

 

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Catholic "Answers" on the Number of God

After a crushing defeat of Trent Horn by Jacob Hansen (see my review here), pop-level Catholic apologists again show that they have never truly studied informed Latter-day Saint apologetics and scholarship with the following from Tim Staples (author of Behold Your Mother, second only to Christadelphian apologists Duncan Heaster's The Real Devil as the most eisegesis-filled book I have read in my life):


How to Respond When a Mormon Claims More than One God



Staples, notwithstanding his claim that he knows how LDS interact with the Bible (which I am sure is an absolute falsehood), throws out Deut 6:4 (the Shema) and various texts from Isaiah (e.g., Isa 44:24) without any exegesis. This only shows that pop Catholic apologetics is about "boundary maintenance" and not interacting in a meaningful manner with the best the other side (not just LDS) has to offer.


For an exegesis of the relevant texts, see, for e.g., Exegesis of texts quoted in Micah Beaumont, "A comparison between Joseph Smith's 'King Follett Sermon' and the Bible"



 

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Monday, October 14, 2024

Matthias Scheeben (RC) on the main forms in which the Pope Issues Ex Cathedra Decisions

  

The main forms in which ex cathedra decisions are given, especially according to the newer style, are as follows:

{508} 1. The most solemn and most prominent form consists of the so-called Dogmatic Constitutions or Bulls, which lay down and promulgate judgments expressly in the form of general ecclesiastical laws [canons] that are sanctioned with strict punishments, e.g. the Constitutions Unigenitus and Auctorem fidei against the Jansenists, and Ineffabilis Deus about the Immaculate Conception. With these, since the text is usually very clear by itself, it makes no difference whether they are addressed in the inscription to the whole Church (like the Bull Unigenitus) or not (like the Bulls Unam sanctam and Ineffabilis Deus).

{509} 2. After the Constitutions come the Encyclical Letters addressed to the Universal Church, provided that they are of a dogmatic nature, i.e. in categorical terms make it the bishops duty to propose and assert or to suppress and uproot certain doctrines, and to command the faithful to hold or to reject those doctrines [as the case may be]. They resemble the Constitutions in their direct, general intention and differ from them as a rule only by their lack of punitive sanctions. They themselves in turn are subdivided into those which (with the exception of the punitive sanctions) otherwise, as far as the formulation of the doctrine in question and the emphasis on authority is concerned, are worded in strict juridical forms (like the Encyclical Quanta cura, which at first had also been prepared as a formal Constitution), and those which inculcate Catholic doctrines or reject anti-Catholic teachings in a freer, more rhetorical, yet peremptory form (like the well-known Encyclical of Gregory XVI Mirari vos from 1832, about which the same pope declared in the Encyclical Singulari Nos dated July 10, 1833: “We declared [denuntiavimus; in another passage: definivimus] in it the only sound doctrine to be followed concerning the main points in the fulfillment of the duties of Our office for the whole Catholic

flock”). In the latter case it can nevertheless easily happen that the ex cathedra pronouncement is discernible merely with moral certitude or that the act in question has only approximately the same force as one.

{510} 3. Other Apostolic Letters, which are not issued with the solemnity of the Constitutions but merely in a brief form or are not addressed directly to the entire Church, are to be regarded as ex cathedra pronouncements if they either a) resemble the Constitutions in that they impose general theological and punitive censures on the denial of particular doctrines, or b) like dogmatic Encyclicals, define or condemn a doctrine in strict juridical terms or else declare and inculcate in the equivalent freer expressions that it is a duty of every Catholic to hold a particular doctrinehowever here, often even more than in the Encyclicals, the strictly dogmatic character of the Letter is obviously to be distinguished from its admonitory or disciplinary character. When in the edict itself the general and definitive intention is clear, the fact that the Letter may be addressed to a special group has no restrictive influence (just as Benedict XIV too, for example, declared in the Brief Ad eradicandum that some had rashly denied that the condemnation expressed in the Apostolic Letter Suprema, dated July 7, 1745, of the practice of inquiring about the accomplice in the confessional has the force and authority of a general definition and law). The somewhat less conspicuous lack of a general intention or of definitive forms is often counterbalanced, however, by the fact that such letters are also promulgated specially at the pope’s command or made into an Encyclical (as happened, e.g., with the Dogmatic Letter of Leo I to Flavianum and in very recent times with excerpts from the earlier manifold acts of Pius IX in the Syllabus, after the Encyclical that was issued simultaneously had said: “By several Encyclicals promulgated among the common people, Allocutions held in the Consistory, and other Apostolic Letters, We have condemned errors . . . and admonished all the children of the Catholic Church again and again”). The fact that here the Allocutions are mentioned between the Encyclicals and the Apostolic Letters, or rather are put on a par with the Encyclicals, indicates that they likewise can be employed as a means of instructing the whole Church and hence under certain circumstances can be used to promulgate or execute an ex cathedra pronouncement, because they are plainly not to be regarded as mere sermons or lectures for the cardinals, but rather as addresses to the whole Catholic world.

{511} 4. Finally the pope can speak ex cathedra through the confirmation of the judgments of other tribunals: a) especially of the judgments of General Councils, whereby the confirmation is naturally always and under all circumstances intended with its full efficacy; b) of the judgments of particular councils; here however the confirmation must be expressed as a positive, solemn, and full one (solemnis et plenissima); but in reality that is most often not so, since it is usually exercised only as an act of superintendence; c) of the judgments of the Roman Congregations; here however the confirmation must in any case be combined with the formal order to promulgate those judgments, so that the judgments are not merely approved by the pope in their intrinsic value but are also made his own and are presented as proceeding from him to the Church. (Matthias Scheeben, Handbook of Catholic Dogmatics, Book 1, Part 1 [trans. Michael J. Miler; Steubenville, Ohio: Emmaus Academic, 2019], §32 nos. 508-11)

 

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John A. Tvedtnes on the Kinderhook Plates (1997)

I recently came across a brief discussion of the Kinderhook Plates by the late John A. Tvedtnes; I am reproducing it for those who are fans of his work:



 


 

Kinderhook Plates a "Hoax"

 

This week I read J. G. Barton's article on the Kinderhook Plates that appeared in the latest issue of Ancient American. I don't know if the author is simply ignorant of more recent research on the topic or is aware of it but deceptive in omitting it from the article.

 

In 1980, the only plate known to still exist was submitted to various tests, using a scanning microprobe and X-ray fluorescence analysis. The tests demonstrated that, contrary to earlier opinions elicited in the article by my good friend, Welby Ricks (cited in the Barron article), the plate was produced by acid etching rather than by an engraving tool.

 

This matter was discussed at length by another of my acquaintances, Prof. Stanley B. Kimball, in his article, "Kinderhook Plates Brought to Joseph Smith Appear to be a Nineteenth Century Hoax," which was published in The Ensign (successor to The Improvement Era that carried the Ricks article), August 1981. Even more recent is Kimball's entry on the "Kinderhook Plates" in Macmillan's Encyclopedia of Mormonism, volume 2. It would be well for you to mention these facts, so your readers will not be misled.

 

John A. Tvedtness

F.A.R.M.S.

Provo, UT (John A. Tvedtnes, letter to the editor, Ancient American: Archaeology of the Americas before Columbus 3, no. 21 [November/December 1997]: 23)

 

 

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Sunday, October 13, 2024

Matthias Scheeben (RC) vs. the Protestant Understanding of the Bible and Sola Scriptura

  

§18. The false and self-refuting position and significance of Sacred Scripture in the Protestant system

{245} As the immediate divine record of revelation, Sacred Scripture has in itself, according to the preceding paragraphs, the highest dignity, unsurpassable by any other source or rule or communication of the faith; as a written record, it is naturally able and designed to be a constant, permanent source, as well as a constant rule of faith. But therefore it cannot and should not be the sole source, much less the sole rule, nor the complete, proximate, and general rule of faith, i.e. one that is immediately accessible to all believers and immediately necessary for each individual. It cannot even be acknowledged publicly and completely as a source of faith and continue overtly as such without a living organ, distinct from Scripture itself, which through its activity publicly authenticates, supports, and asserts the latter. In a word: Sacred Scripture cannot and should not have in all these respects the meaning that the Protestants in fact ascribe to it, so as to be able to deny the position and importance of the living teaching apostolate, or else must ascribe to it, because they deny the teaching apostolate and yet want to have an organ that performs its duties. Assuming the institution of a permanent teaching apostolate, it is evident that Sacred Scripture need not have and in fact does not have the significance ascribed to it by the Protestants. However it is also evident and easy to see that it cannot have this significance, which is to be demonstrated here in detail.

{246} I. The fact that Sacred Scripture is not the sole source of revelation, in other words, cannot form the entire apostolic deposit, is established later on in §21.

{247} II. Far less can Scripture be the sole rule of faith. For—apart from the fact that 1) it is a materially incomplete rule, in that manifestly it cannot serve as a rule for those truths which are not contained in it as a source, and therefore both another source and also another rule would necessarily be required, at least for these truths—Scripture itself, with reference to the truths contained in it, therefore cannot be the sole rule of faith, because 2) it is not a formally complete rule and therefore must be supplemented by another rule. However it is formally incomplete as a rule, despite all the perfection of its dignity and its content, because in its capacity as a dead book—one moreover that is not systematically formulated, but rather in manyplaces obscure and difficult and exposed to multiple misunderstandings—it is not at all suited, much less designed, to carry out by itself all the functions and to perform the duties that are necessary for the effective, uniform, and general regulation of the faith, i.e. one that strikes down all errors and doubts and asserts the truth in its full purity and certainty, firmness and decisiveness. In order for such regulation to take place, another principle, the living, authoritative proclamation of doctrine, which includes a true judicial authority, must be added to Sacred Scripture, in order to apply and assert fully the regulatory significance that is essentially inherent in Sacred Scripture as a source of faith, and hence to appear as the proximate rule. It follows at the same time that another reason why Scripture must not be the sole rule is that 3) although it too in a certain sense is a rule of faith, nevertheless it can only be a remote rule and not the proximate rule of faith. The final reason why it cannot be the sole rule of faith is because then 4) it would necessarily be an altogether general rule, i.e. one that is immediately applicable to all men at all times and in all places, which obviously is not the case; for precisely the circumstance that otherwise constitutes its intrinsic value—namely the fact that it is a written record, one that is so voluminous, profound, and written in the language and manner of the original organs of revelation—necessarily means that it has remained in itself until now entirely impervious to the use and the understanding of most of the faithful and, at least in its full extent, will always remain inaccessible. (Matthias Scheeben, Handbook of Catholic Dogmatics, Book 1, Part 1 [trans. Michael J. Miler; Steubenville, Ohio: Emmaus Academic, 2019], §18 nos. 245-47)

 

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