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| |link=Mormonism and prophets/Do not address issues | | |link=Mormonism and prophets/Do not address issues |
− | |subject=Mormonism and prophets | + | |subject=Do Latter-day Saint prophets not address current issues? |
| |summary=It is claimed that General Authorities are very silent about some issues, and that the Maxwell Institute takes their place | | |summary=It is claimed that General Authorities are very silent about some issues, and that the Maxwell Institute takes their place |
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Revision as of 13:08, 5 May 2014
- REDIRECTTemplate:Test3
Mormonism and prophets
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General
Summary: Did Brigham Young declare that his sermons were scripture?
- REDIRECTAlleged false prophecies of Joseph Smith
Summary: If every President of the Church is a prophet, seer, and revelator, why have so few revelations after Joseph Smith been added to the Doctrine and Covenants? Revelations used to be printed in Church periodicals such as the Times and Seasons and the Evening and Morning Star. Why are revelations no longer published on an ongoing basis?
Jump to Subtopic:
Joseph Fielding Smith
Summary: It is claimedthat Joseph Fielding Smith taught or "prophesied" than man would never walk on the moon. Because of this, critics insist that Pres. Smith was a false prophet, or that nothing he taught can be replied upon.
Others
Summary: Did John Taylor receive a revelation on September 27, 1886 that promised that “polygamy would never be abandoned?”
Summary: Will members "walk back to Jackson County" before the second coming of Christ? Will the whole Church return to Jackson county before the second coming?
Summary: Did Wilford Woodruff receive a revelation on November 24, 1889 the said that the Church would prevail against the Government effort to seize the Church's assets?
Other related issues and claims
Summary: Some critics say that Latter-day Saint prophets aren't really "prophets" because they don't prophesy by foretelling unknown events. They commonly issue challenges such as, "If Gordon B. Hinckley is a prophet, tell me one event that he's prophesied." Do LDS prophets "prophesy"?
Summary: Critics sometimes impose absolutist assumptions on the Church by holding inerrantist beliefs about scriptures or prophets, and assuming that the LDS have similar views. Critics therefore insist, based upon these assumptions, that any statement by any LDS Church leader represents LDS doctrine and is thus something that is secretly believed, or that should be believed, by Latter-day Saints.
Summary: It is claimed that General Authorities are very silent about some issues, and that the Maxwell Institute takes their place
Summary: Statements by leaders of the Church on the propriety of Church members teaching new doctrines, or publicizing personal revelations, dreams, visions, etc.