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| *It is often claimed, despite the fact that these discplinary actions are carried out by local leaders, that they are in reality instigated by general authorities. | | *It is often claimed, despite the fact that these discplinary actions are carried out by local leaders, that they are in reality instigated by general authorities. |
| *Critics claim that the Church is silencing honest people for telling the truth. | | *Critics claim that the Church is silencing honest people for telling the truth. |
| | *The Church is claimed to take a "dim view" of intellectuals. |
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| ===Source(s) of the criticism=== | | ===Source(s) of the criticism=== |
Revision as of 05:05, 23 July 2008
This article is a draft. FairMormon editors are currently editing it. We welcome your suggestions on improving the content.
Criticism
- Critics claim that the Church excommunicates or disfellowships scholars who publish historical information that is embarrassing to Church leaders.
- It is often claimed, despite the fact that these discplinary actions are carried out by local leaders, that they are in reality instigated by general authorities.
- Critics claim that the Church is silencing honest people for telling the truth.
- The Church is claimed to take a "dim view" of intellectuals.
Source(s) of the criticism
Response
- Another article that Buerger was preparing for publication apparently caught the attention of the First Presidency of the LDS Church, and he was asked once again to explain his personal religious views to ecclesiastical authorities (p. 7). After this incident, Buerger's ties to the church "became increasingly tenuous. When he presented his paper on the temple endowment ceremony at the August 1986 Sunstone Symposium, he had to borrow a temple recommend from a friend to, as he put it, 'ma[k]e me look like a card-carrying member.' Research became increasingly difficult [for him] when he was officially banned from entering the LDS Church Archives and Library in the summer of 1986" (p. 8). By 1987, the year that his article on the temple endowment was published in Dialogue, Buerger was losing his interest in Mormon history (p. 8). In 1992 he contacted LDS authorities and requested that his name be officially removed from the records of the church (p. 10). - Matthew B. Brown, "Of Your Own Selves Shall Men Arise, Review of The Mysteries of Godliness: A History of Mormon Temple Worship by David John Buerger," FARMS Review of Books 10/1 (1998): 97–131. off-site
Conclusion
[needs work]
Further reading
FAIR wiki articles
Template:LyingWiki
FAIR web site
Template:LyingFAIR
External links
Template:LyingLinks
Printed material
Template:LyingPrint