Recent Comments

  • Jack on What Can We Learn from Visions of Glory? Part 2: “I’m suspicious of “mysteries” that have to do with the latter-days. There’s a lot of low hanging fruit there that anyone can get there hands on. But what about the mysteries of the Kingdom? Or the doctrines of the priesthood? Or the wonders of eternity? It’s not as easy to come up with stuff on those topics. That said, I think the primary reason why we don’t hear as much about the real mysteries is because those who know them don’t talk about them–and conversely, those who would talk about them don’t know them.Feb 1, 23:27
  • rogerdhansen on 20th and 21st Century Physicist Disciple-Scholars: “To be balanced, you need to include Kip Thorne, Nobel Prize winning astrophysicist. Born in Logan, UT, and raised LDS. To paraphrase Thorne: Many of my colleagues believe in God, I choose not to.Feb 1, 20:21
  • Andrew Jensen on What Can We Learn from Visions of Glory? Part 2: “I have watched the fear and “prepperism” that Visions of Glory has in many of its readers. This issue should be addressed. I have good friends who are now cashing out their 401k’s to hunker down in preparation for the Second Coming. Others have moved away from Utah, which apparently will be the epicenter of destruction, leaving their friends and family behind. I have some serious concerns about this book.Feb 1, 14:34
  • Kendall Buchanan on What Can We Learn from Visions of Glory? Part 2: “That’s super interesting, Jonathan, thanks. The more concrete the prophecy, the riskier. I hadn’t thought about the impact that recency has on risk as well.Feb 1, 13:41
  • Jonathan Green on What Can We Learn from Visions of Glory? Part 2: “Kendall, I’m just thinking about the visionary texts and popular prophecies from my research. It’s common to talk about how a text constructs its own authority, but with this kind of material, another strategy is to diminish their own authority. A text that successfully claims to record a vision of urgent importance for the whole world can contribute to the author getting canonized, but if it fails, the text gets suppressed or declared heretical and potentially multiple people end up in trouble. So raising the stakes is a high-risk strategy that often doesn’t pay off. On the other hand, a text can instead claim to have been recorded long ago in a distant land or make other moves to lower the stakes of its authenticity. It might still seem interesting and relevant to the current situation, but represent less of a potential challenge to whoever certifies textual acceptability. It’s never going to get mass distribution as canonical literature, but it has a better chance of avoiding censure. And to get back to your question, I think it’s a lot harder for a living human being to pull off the low-stakes strategy. It’s hard to say you’re seeing visions of the afterlife without implicitly making the claim that you have extremely valuable information that everyone should listen to. It’s hard to avoid raising all the concerns RLD mentions. I haven’t read VoG so I can’t say much about it specifically, but if it had claimed to have been recorded in the 19th century and to have been discovered only recently, my guess is that it probably could have avoided a good amount of controversy.Feb 1, 12:14
  • Kendall Buchanan on What Can We Learn from Visions of Glory? Part 2: “bhbardo, your questioning the universal applicability of a person’s revelation rings for me. Strange religious experiences are foundational to many people’s connections to God, and being flexible as you’re arguing takes pressure off us for demanding authenticity. RLD, thanks for the comments. Aliens and the gospel _does_ sound fun! The truth is Church members and leaders *alike* wrestle with revelation and uncertainty. Joseph Smith exhibits this throughout D&C (e.g. 46:7). Wilford Woodruff felt inspired to enact the 1890 manifesto, while simultaneously doubting it as a revelation. Jonathan, can you say more about the difference between the urgency of a personal encounter vs. a recorded manifestation?Feb 1, 09:58
  • bhbardo on What Can We Learn from Visions of Glory? Part 2: “I suspect that most revelations and visions, including canonized ones, including the first vision, only give us an infinitesimal glimpse. And the light from that sliver, we necessarily perceive it according to our own understandings and dispositions. It may feel so real, that we assume it must be universal and want to proclaim it far and wide, when really it’s tailored to us, to help us learn our next line or precept. I can believe that none of the descriptions in D&C 130 are literal, while still believing that they are true and finding meaning and learning. Sometimes, to our peril, we forget the nature of symbolism.Feb 1, 00:03
  • Jonathan Green on What Can We Learn from Visions of Glory? Part 2: “Translatio imperii culminating in Deseret. Great stuff. RLD, I’d qualify that a bit. If a person is claiming to receive revelation, then it does present an urgent problem of authenticity. But if some form of media claims to record revelation, people are pretty capable of treating it as interesting, while deferring any decision about its authenticity.Jan 31, 23:36
  • Jonathan Green on Cutting Edge Latter-day Saint Research, January 2025: “It’s not just this time. There are usually at least a few articles of this type each month. The pattern is pretty noticeable. It’s a real problem that a substantial segment of academic research (and not just about the Church and related topics) is motivated by disdain or even disgust for its subject.Jan 31, 23:32
  • Stephen C on Cutting Edge Latter-day Saint Research, January 2025: “Yeah, there’s definitely a defect/cooperate game theory dynamic going in some disciplines. In order to advance in those disciplines you have to do that dance, but on the whole the more those disciplines essentially become seminaries for a particular ideological worldview the less relevant they are to the real world, so they’re sort of in a doom spiral.Jan 31, 15:32