Uses of the Judeo-Christian Bible in the Anti-Abolitionist

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Uses of the Judeo-Christian Bible in the Anti-Abolitionist View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by D-Scholarship@Pitt THIS FIERCE GEOMETRY: USES OF THE JUDEO-CHRISTIAN BIBLE IN THE ANTI-ABOLITIONIST AND ANTI-GAY RHETORIC OF THE UNITED STATES by Michael J. Mazza B. A., State University of New York at Buffalo, 1990 M. A., University of Pittsburgh, 1996 Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of Arts and Sciences in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy University of Pittsburgh 2009 UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH FACULTY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES This dissertation was presented by Michael J. Mazza It was defended on April 15, 2009 and approved by Nancy Glazener, University of Pittsburgh Moni McIntyre, Duquesne University William Scott, University of Pittsburgh Committee Chair: Jean Ferguson Carr, University of Pittsburgh ii THIS FIERCE GEOMETRY: USES OF THE JUDEO-CHRISTIAN BIBLE IN THE ANTI-ABOLITIONIST AND ANTI-GAY RHETORIC OF THE UNITED STATES Michael J. Mazza, PhD University of Pittsburgh, 2009 Copyright © by Michael J. Mazza 2009 iii Jean Ferguson Carr_______ THIS FIERCE GEOMETRY: USES OF THE JUDEO-CHRISTIAN BIBLE IN THE ANTI-ABOLITIONIST AND ANTI-GAY RHETORIC OF THE UNITED STATES Michael J. Mazza, Ph.D. University of Pittsburgh, 2009 This dissertation examines the citational use of the Judeo-Christian Bible in two sociopolitical debates within the United States: first, the debate over the abolition of slavery in the nineteenth century, and second, the contemporary debate over gay rights. This study incorporates two core theses. First, I argue that the contemporary religious right, in its anti-gay use of the Bible, is replicating the hermeneutical practices used by opponents of the abolitionist movement. My second thesis parallels the first: I argue that the contemporary activists who reclaim the Bible as a pro-gay instrument are standing in the same hermeneutical tradition as nineteenth-century Christian abolitionists. This study is thus about the acts of interpreting texts and putting those interpretations to use in the public sphere. The first chapter lays out the historical and conceptual groundwork for this study. Among the issues considered are the evolution of the biblical canon, the role of interpretive communities in biblical interpretation, and the matrix of human difference, privilege, and marginalization. The second chapter reviews more than thirty biblical passages used by anti- abolitionist activists in their public discourses. There is a comparative thrust to this chapter, iv because it juxtaposes this “slavemaster’s Bible” with the biblical passages used in anti-gay discourse. The third chapter is a comparative analysis of the biblical hermeneutics practiced by nineteenth-century abolitionists and contemporary pro-gay thinkers. In this chapter I identify seven general strategies which these two groups hold in common as each engages the biblical text. The fourth and final chapter considers the possible connections that link the hermeneutics of the American abolitionist and gay rights movements to three other currents of thought: first, the ubuntu theology of Desmond Tutu; second, the minjung theology of South Korea; and third, the philosophy of hermeneutics developed by Hans-Georg Gadamer. The study ends with a brief coda, which considers some of the political and cultural events of 2009 in light of the dissertation’s main ideas. v TABLE OF CONTENTS 1.0 INTRODUCTION: SODOMY, SATAN, AND THE SUMMER OF 2008 ............. 1 2.0 CHAPTER ONE: DIFFERENCE, PRIVILEGE, AND BIBLICAL INTERPRETATION .................................................................................................................. 19 3.0 CHAPTER TWO: THE SLAVEMASTER’S BIBLE AND THE ANTI-GAY BIBLE ..................................................................................................................................... 70 4.0 CHAPTER THREE: THE LIBERATIONISTS’ BIBLE ..................................... 137 5.0 CHAPTER FOUR: HERMENEUTICS WITHOUT BORDERS ....................... 232 6.0 THIS FIERCE GEOMETRY: A CODA ............................................................... 275 WORKS CITED........................................................................................................................ 280 vi A NOTE ON THE TEXT Unless otherwise indicated, all Bible verses quoted in this document are in the King James Version translation as presented in The African-American Devotional Bible. Verses marked with NIV are taken from the New International Version translation as presented in The NIV Study Bible, and verses marked with NRSV are taken from the New Revised Standard Version translation as presented in The HarperCollins Study Bible. This document makes occasional reference to three works recognized as sacred writings within the Latter-day Saint faith community: the Book of Mormon, the Doctrine and Covenants of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and the Pearl of Great Price. I have represented these titles according to the recognized convention that sacred writings are neither italicized nor placed in quotation marks when mentioned in the body of a work. I do, however, italicize the specific editions of these books which appear in this document’s Works Cited section. Parenthetical references to Doctrine and Covenants as scripture are given in chapter and verse format, as with biblical references. In citing specific passages from Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics, I have followed the notation convention used by Joseph Dunne in his study Back to the Rough Ground. vii Furthermore, I have supplemented these citations with page references to the primary English translation I consulted. Some of the nineteenth century sources cited herein make use of spelling, punctuation and capitalization in ways that are not in accordance with current standard English usage; so as not to excessively distract from these historic texts, I have opted not to append the Latin marker sic in brackets after each such incident. I have opted to further eschew the use of sic when citing non-U.S. Anglophone writers who employ British spelling conventions in such words as colour. The title of this dissertation is inspired by a line from an English translation of Jorge Luis Borges’ sonnet “Emanuel Swedenborg.” An excerpt from this particular translation may be found on page xi of this document; the Spanish original may be found in a number of volumes, among them Borges’ own Obra poética, 2 (140). More on Swedenborg and on his relevance to my arguments may be found in the first chapter of the dissertation. viii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to express my gratitude to the following institutions and individuals, each of which has, in some way, contributed to my progress on this dissertation: Barco Law Library, University of Pittsburgh; Clifford E. Barbour Library, Pittsburgh Theological Seminary; Cross- Cultural and Leadership Development, University of Pittsburgh; Associate Professor Alexis De Veaux of the State University of New York at Buffalo; the Rev. Roberta Dunn, Pastor of Metropolitan Community Church of Pittsburgh; East Suburban Unitarian Universalist Church, Murrysville, Pennsylvania; the Rev. Elder Darlene Garner, Vice-Moderator of Metropolitan Community Churches; Hillman Library, University of Pittsburgh; Humanities and Social Sciences Library, New York Public Library, New York City; Levittown Public Library, Levittown, New York; the late Rev. Michael Lumberger of Covenant Church of Pittsburgh; Professor Dwight McBride of the University of Illinois at Chicago; Mid-Manhattan Library, New York Public Library, New York City; The National Association of African American Studies; Chancellor Mark Nordenberg of the University of Pittsburgh; Professor Emeritus Donald Petesch of the University of Pittsburgh; the Pittsburgh First Ward of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints; Pittsburgh New Church, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Rainbow ix Alliance, University of Pittsburgh; Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, New York Public Library, New York City; the late Professor Richard Tobias of the University of Pittsburgh; and Wilkinsburg Public Library, Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania. I am particularly grateful for the guidance I have received from the three individuals who have held the position of Graduate Secretary in the Department of English at the University of Pittsburgh during my time as a student at this institution: Philippa Carter, Sue Borello, and Connie Arelt. I would like to additionally thank my dissertation committee: Nancy Glazener, Moni McIntyre, William Scott, and chair Jean Carr. I also wish to acknowledge all of my professors at the State University of New York at Buffalo, the United States Naval Academy and the University of Pittsburgh; my family and friends; and, finally, my sisters- and brothers-in-arms, past and present, in the armed forces of the United States and its allies. x He would see That which earthly eyes do not see: The fierce geometry, the crystal Labyrinth of God and the sordid Milling of infernal delights. --Jorge Luis Borges, “Emanuel Swedenborg” (lines 4-8) xi 1.0 INTRODUCTION: SODOMY, SATAN, AND THE SUMMER OF 2008 In the summer of 2008, the people of the United States were intensely focused on the evolving presidential campaign. Democrat senators Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York and Barack Obama of Illinois—respectively, the first truly viable female and African-American candidates for the highest elected office in the land—spent the beginning of the summer locked in an historic
Recommended publications
  • Uses of the Judeo-Christian Bible in the Anti-Abolitionist
    THIS FIERCE GEOMETRY: USES OF THE JUDEO-CHRISTIAN BIBLE IN THE ANTI-ABOLITIONIST AND ANTI-GAY RHETORIC OF THE UNITED STATES by Michael J. Mazza B. A., State University of New York at Buffalo, 1990 M. A., University of Pittsburgh, 1996 Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of Arts and Sciences in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy University of Pittsburgh 2009 UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH FACULTY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES This dissertation was presented by Michael J. Mazza It was defended on April 15, 2009 and approved by Nancy Glazener, University of Pittsburgh Moni McIntyre, Duquesne University William Scott, University of Pittsburgh Committee Chair: Jean Ferguson Carr, University of Pittsburgh ii THIS FIERCE GEOMETRY: USES OF THE JUDEO-CHRISTIAN BIBLE IN THE ANTI-ABOLITIONIST AND ANTI-GAY RHETORIC OF THE UNITED STATES Michael J. Mazza, PhD University of Pittsburgh, 2009 Copyright © by Michael J. Mazza 2009 iii Jean Ferguson Carr_______ THIS FIERCE GEOMETRY: USES OF THE JUDEO-CHRISTIAN BIBLE IN THE ANTI-ABOLITIONIST AND ANTI-GAY RHETORIC OF THE UNITED STATES Michael J. Mazza, Ph.D. University of Pittsburgh, 2009 This dissertation examines the citational use of the Judeo-Christian Bible in two sociopolitical debates within the United States: first, the debate over the abolition of slavery in the nineteenth century, and second, the contemporary debate over gay rights. This study incorporates two core theses. First, I argue that the contemporary religious right, in its anti-gay use of the Bible, is replicating the hermeneutical practices used by opponents of the abolitionist movement. My second thesis parallels the first: I argue that the contemporary activists who reclaim the Bible as a pro-gay instrument are standing in the same hermeneutical tradition as nineteenth-century Christian abolitionists.
    [Show full text]
  • Mormon Millennialism: the Literalist Legacy and Implications for the Year 2000
    ARTICLES AND ESSAYS Mormon Millennialism: The Literalist Legacy and Implications for the Year 2000 Dan Erickson ONE'S SEARCH FOR MEANING usually leads to eschatological inquiry. More than mere theology, millennialism is a way of looking at world history and the destiny of humankind.1 Beginning with Joseph Smith's initial re- ligious experience, the idea of an imminent millennium preoccupied Mormon aspirations and set the tone for the new movement. Smith, blessed by his father that he would continue in his ecclesiastical office un- til Jesus Christ should come again, described the mood of his age when in 1832 he wrote, "It is a day of strange appearances. Everything indicates something more than meets the eye. ... The end is nigh."2 Smith's account of the angel Moroni's visit records Moroni's citing of prophecies from the Old and New Testaments which emphasized the last days and Second Coming.3 The texts quoted by Moroni validated the view that Christ's re- turn was near and his millennial announcement was clear: "the day had not yet come 'when they who would not hear his voice should be cut off from among the people,' but soon would come."4 Prophecy was shortly to be fulfilled. A great work "was speedily to [be] commenced ... that a people might be prepared with faith and righteousness, for the Millennial 1. J[ohn]. F. C. Harrison, The Second Coming: Popular Millenarianism, 1780-1850 (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1979), 228. 2. Joseph Smith et al., History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 7 vols., 2d ed.
    [Show full text]
  • "That Jesus Is the Christ" - Typology
    "That Jesus Is the Christ" - Typology Essentially every event or person in the Book of Mormon may well remind us of another event or person; the book is like a beautifully composed symphony with repeated themes and motifs. Reference to the deliverance of Lehi and his family from Jerusalem evokes the deliverance of Israel from Egypt. We are reminded of Noah by Lehi, of Joseph the Patriarch by Joseph the son of Lehi, and of Captain Moroni by Moroni the son of Mormon. Most signicantly, all God-given events or God-directed persons in the Book of Mormon are reminders of Jesus Christ or his gospel. This is Nephi’s point in saying, “Behold, my soul delighteth in proving unto my people the truth of the coming of Christ; for, for this end hath the law of Moses been given; and all things which have been given of God from the beginning of the world, unto man, are the typifying of him” (2 Nephi 11:4).1 Abinadi says that all performances and ordinances of the law of Moses “were types of things to come” (Mosiah 13:31). Through their being types, the “things which have been given of God” in the Book of Mormon testify that Jesus is the Christ. By “typifying” or “types,” Nephi and Abinadi mean a likeness of Christ or something pertaining to him. That which is represented (for example, Christ) is the antitype. We might think of a type being the printed impression left on a sheet of paper and the antitype being the solid piece of metal or wood with a raised character on it used in making the impression.
    [Show full text]
  • March 21, 2021 Sermon
    Kerry Mansir March 21, 2021 Christ Church Gardiner Lent 5 In the parish news a couple of weeks ago, I shared the story of the Philadelphia 11 in honor of Women’s History Month. The Philadelphia 11 are the women who, in July of 1974, were ordained to the priesthood at Church of the Advocate in Philadelphia. This was remarkable because just a year before, at the General Convention of the Episcopal Church, women had been denied ordination to the priesthood. And nothing had changed regarding women’s ordination in that year. But these eleven women, and others like them, were tired of waiting. They had tried the legislative routes within the church, but they were weary of being put off so that the Church could continue to “study the matter.” Choosing to be ordained without the blessing of General Convention carried great risk in that the women could be deposed, in other words, permanently barred from the priesthood in the future, and possibly any role in the Church at all. Their ordination was an historic moment in the Church. Knowing the story of these women is important to understanding our church history. But as one of you pointed out to me, the press release from July 31, 1974 that I shared in the parish newsletter failed to name any but two of these women. The news release did name the three male retired or resigned Bishops who performed the ordination, the male Harvard professor who preached the sermon, and several of the male Bishops who opposed the ordinations, including the Presiding Bishop at that time.
    [Show full text]
  • EDUCATION in ZION We Move Forward Faithfully Into the Future Only by Understanding Our Past
    EDUCATION IN ZION We move forward faithfully into the future only by understanding our past. Our founding stories reveal to us the higher purposes for which our forebears strove, and help us know the path that we should follow. Come unto me … and learn of me. —Matthew 11:28–29 I am the light, and the life, and the truth of the world. —Ether 4:12 I am the vine, ye are the branches: He that abideth in me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit. —John 15:5 I am the good shepherd: the good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep. —John 10:11 Feed my lambs. … Feed my sheep. —John 21:15–17 As Latter-day Saints, we believe Christ to be the Source of all light and truth, speaking through His prophets and enlightening and inspiring people everywhere. Therefore, we seek truth wherever it might be found and strive to shape our lives by it. In the Zion tradition, we share the truth freely so that every person might learn and grow and in turn strengthen others. From our faith in Christ and our love for one another, our commitment to education flows. Feed My Lambs, Feed My Sheep, by a BYU student, after a sculpture in the Vatican Library Hand-tufted wool rug, designed by a BYU student Circular skylight, Joseph F. Smith Building gallery [L] “Feed My Lambs … Feed My Sheep,” by a BYU student, after a sculpture in the Vatican Library [L] Hand-tufted wool rug, designed by a BYU student [L] Circular skylight, Joseph F.
    [Show full text]
  • Yale SOM Impact Philanthropy Report 2016-17.Pdf
    Impact Support for the Yale School of Management 2016– 2017 Contents A Culture of Innovation 2 Yale SOM Boards and Councils 18 Paying Tribute 5 Giving to the Yale School of Management 26 Giving Back 12 Beinecke Society 45 Making an Impact 14 Ways to Volunteer 46 Financial Report 17 On the cOver: a detail from Adrian Schiess’s site-specific Painting (2013), framing student breakout rooms on the north side of Bekenstein Atrium. Photo by Tony Rinaldo. When I speak with new students, I frequently talk about how the “and” in the Yale School of Management’s mission to educate leaders for business and society is an essential and meaningful conjunction. It is a small word, and an easy one to overlook beside its polysyllabic neighbors, but it signals that the most vexing problems confronting us on the planet will require the best ideas across all sectors of the economy and all regions of the world. Our integrated curriculum combines multiple perspectives and academic disciplines to bring organizational challenges into clearer focus. Our community, similarly, brings together people from a remarkable diversity of backgrounds who pursue wide- ranging interests. The power of conjunction is evident every day in the classroom, when students contribute new insights and points of view gathered from experiences around the globe. And the spirit of combination extends to our faculty, whose team- teaching in our courses and scholarly collaboration with colleagues often spans disciplinary boundaries. The result is both a better framework for understanding the most significant and meaningful challenges in the real world and an environment that encourages new ideas.
    [Show full text]
  • The Word – November 2017
    St. Alban’s Episcopal Church he word November 2017 Volume 16, Issue 9 From the Rector October 2017 Volume 16, Issue 8 In last month’s newsletter I posed the question, “are you going to church, or are you the Church?” I followed that question with the statement that “Church isn’t a place, it’s people.” That statement became very real to me as I attended a workshop on church growth (Invite -Welcome -Connect) in October. I was accompanied by your Senior Warden Linda Cummings and parishioners Debbie Rosse and Kate Wettstein . The workshop facilitator challenged us to look at our current methods of inviting others to church, making them feel welcome and then making them feel “connected” – part of the church. At the workshop, the Invite -Welcome -Connect facilitator shared an anecdote with us. During a break at a workshop she was leading, one attendee from a smaller church came up to her and confided that she “really didn’t want her church to grow” because she liked her church just the way it is. We all have differing levels of comfort with change, and change in our church can be very difficult for some. But churches should never be content to just exist. Churches must be thriving, active in the community, and raising up disciples to share the Good News. But that will never happen if the invitation and the welcome are taken care of by a committee. We are all responsible for inviting and welcoming to church people hungry for the Good News of God’s love.
    [Show full text]
  • Krispy Kreme Challenge February 4, 2012 Raleigh, NC Timing By
    Krispy Kreme Challenge February 4, 2012 Raleigh, NC Timing by www.PrecisionRace.com CHALLENGER and CASUAL RUNNER OVERALL RESULTS BELOW Top 10 Challengers - MALES Place Bib # Name KKC Split Gun Time Chip Time Age Gender Division City Team Name 1 2066 ALEX VARNER 17:06 28:37 28:35 26 M Challenger CARRBORO NC 2 1821 JACOB SEARS 17:15 29:52 29:51 18 M Challenger CARY NC PCXC 3 2640 RYAN FUHS 17:09 29:59 29:59 25 M Challenger GREENSBORO NC 4 2145 REESE WELLS 17:02 30:17 30:17 20 M Challenger CHAPEL HILL NC 5 1232 REED LYON 17:38 30:22 30:20 26 M Challenger DURHAM NC Bull City Track Club 6 341 MIKO CLARK 19:19 32:02 32:02 22 M Challenger CHARLOTTESVILLE VA Dough-not underestimate us 7 1526 DANIEL OSBORNE 19:05 32:14 32:04 18 M Challenger BOONE NC 8 1018 MICHAEL JONES 19:11 33:15 33:12 19 M Challenger CHAPEL HILL NC UNC Club XC 9 1318 RICHARD MCDONNELL 19:22 33:26 33:26 29 M Challenger GREENSBORO NC 10 3051 COREY MISENHEIMER 18:34 33:40 33:40 20 M Challenger WAXHAW NC Top 10 Challengers - FEMALES Place Bib # Name KKC Split Gun Time Chip Time Age Gender Division City Team Name 1 1982 CARLY SWANSON 20:38 36:16 36:13 22 F Challenger CONCORD NC Gnarly Carly 2 1728 KELLY ROGERS 21:46 36:35 36:35 19 F Challenger MCLEAN VA Dough-not underestimate us 3 2134 CHELSEA WEIERMILLER 23:32 39:10 39:07 20 F Challenger ALPHARETTA GA 4 422 JULI CUOMO 22:48 39:54 39:54 18 F Challenger CLIFTON VA Dough-not underestimate us 5 3195 BLAIR RAMSEY 25:17 41:43 41:42 14 F Challenger GREENSBORO NC 6 1083 JENNA KOENIGSHOFER 25:10 42:07 42:07 29 F Challenger WAKE FOREST
    [Show full text]
  • Buddhism from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia Jump To: Navigation, Search
    Buddhism From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search A statue of Gautama Buddha in Bodhgaya, India. Bodhgaya is traditionally considered the place of his awakening[1] Part of a series on Buddhism Outline · Portal History Timeline · Councils Gautama Buddha Disciples Later Buddhists Dharma or Concepts Four Noble Truths Dependent Origination Impermanence Suffering · Middle Way Non-self · Emptiness Five Aggregates Karma · Rebirth Samsara · Cosmology Practices Three Jewels Precepts · Perfections Meditation · Wisdom Noble Eightfold Path Wings to Awakening Monasticism · Laity Nirvāṇa Four Stages · Arhat Buddha · Bodhisattva Schools · Canons Theravāda · Pali Mahāyāna · Chinese Vajrayāna · Tibetan Countries and Regions Related topics Comparative studies Cultural elements Criticism v • d • e Buddhism (Pali/Sanskrit: बौद धमर Buddh Dharma) is a religion and philosophy encompassing a variety of traditions, beliefs and practices, largely based on teachings attributed to Siddhartha Gautama, commonly known as the Buddha (Pāli/Sanskrit "the awakened one"). The Buddha lived and taught in the northeastern Indian subcontinent some time between the 6th and 4th centuries BCE.[2] He is recognized by adherents as an awakened teacher who shared his insights to help sentient beings end suffering (or dukkha), achieve nirvana, and escape what is seen as a cycle of suffering and rebirth. Two major branches of Buddhism are recognized: Theravada ("The School of the Elders") and Mahayana ("The Great Vehicle"). Theravada—the oldest surviving branch—has a widespread following in Sri Lanka and Southeast Asia, and Mahayana is found throughout East Asia and includes the traditions of Pure Land, Zen, Nichiren Buddhism, Tibetan Buddhism, Shingon, Tendai and Shinnyo-en. In some classifications Vajrayana, a subcategory of Mahayana, is recognized as a third branch.
    [Show full text]
  • Smith, Ann Robb
    The Archives of Women in Theological Scholarship The Burke Library (Columbia University Libraries) At Union Theological Seminary, New York Finding Aid for Ann Robb Smith Papers, 1971 - 2004 Finding Aid prepared by: Ruth Tonkiss Cameron, May 2006 Additional material prepared by: Patricia LaRosa, July 2006, revised by Ruth Tonkiss Cameron, July 2008 Summary Information Creator: Ann Robb Smith Title: Ann Robb Smith Papers Inclusive dates: 1971 - 2004 Bulk Dates: 1974 - 1975 Abstract: Member of the Women’s ordination planning group prior to the ordination of the first women Episcopal Priests at the Church of the Advocate, Philadelphia, July 29, 1974 [the Philadelphia 11]; lay presenter for the ordination of Sue Hiatt; ordained Asst at Church of the Advocate. Contains newspaper clippings, articles, correspondence, minutes of planning meetings, reports, statements, sermons, service sheets, and the ordination service sheet for the Philadelphia 11, July 29, 1974. Size: 2 boxes, 1 linear ft. Storage: On-site storage Repository: The Burke Library Union Theological Seminary 3041 Broadway New York, NY 10027 Email: [email protected] AWTS: Ann Robb Smith Papers 2 Administrative Information Provenance: Ann Robb Smith donated her papers to the Archives of Women in Theological Scholarship in October 1999 with another addition in 2006. Some of the material donated consists of records from the Women’s Ordination Now support group. Access: Archival papers are available to registered readers for consultation by appointment only. Please contact archives staff by email to [email protected], or by postal mail to The Burke Library address on page 1, as far in advance as possible Burke Library staff is available for inquiries or to request a consultation on archival or special collections research.
    [Show full text]
  • Why the King James Version?: from the Common to the Official Bible of Mormonism
    ARTICLES AND ESSAYS Why the King James Version?: From the Common to the Official Bible of Mormonism Philip L. Barlow THE EXCELLENCE OF THE King James Version of the Bible does not need fresh documentation. No competent modern reader would question its literary excel- lence or its historical stature. Yet compared to several newer translations, the KJV suffocates scriptural understanding. This essay offers a historical per- spective on how the LDS Church became so attached to a seventeenth-century translation of the ancient biblical texts. To gain this perspective, we must distinguish between the sincere justifica- tions offered by leaders and teachers in recent decades and the several histori- cal factors that, between 1867 and 1979, transformed the KJV from the common into the official Mormon Bible. In addition to a natural love of the beauty and familiarity of KJV language, these factors include the 1867 pub- lication of Joseph Smith's biblical revision, the nineteenth-century Protestant- Catholic conflict over governmental authorization of a single version for use in American public schools, the menace of higher criticism, the advent of new translations perceived as doctrinally dangerous, a modern popular misunder- standing of the nature of Joseph Smith's recorded revelations, and the 1979 publication of the LDS edition of the Bible. While examining these influences, I give special notice to J. Reuben Clark, who by 1956 had appropriated most previous arguments and in the process made virtually all subsequent Mormon spokespersons dependent on his logic. So influential was his work that it too must be considered a crucial factor in the evolving LDS apologetic for the King James Version.
    [Show full text]
  • A Symposium in Celebration of the 40Th Anniversary of Women's Ordination When: Where: Why: Register: All Are Welcome!
    A Symposium in Celebration of the 40th Anniversary of Women’s Ordination A Continuation --- “Telling the Stories” FEATURING TWO OF THE PHILADELPHIA 11 and AUTHOR OF NEW BOOK ABOUT THEM: the Rev. Dr. Carter Heyward, the Rev. Alison Cheek, Dr. Darlene O’Dell — and — the Rev. Anne B. Bonnyman Moderated by the Rev. Michelle Warriner Bolt When: Saturday, April 11 from 9:30 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. Coffee and pastries and lunch will be provided. A small donation for lunch would be appreciated. Where: Parish Hall of the Episcopal Church of the Ascension 800 South Northshore Drive Knoxville, TN 37919 Why: Following the presentation on this topic at the ECW Fall Ingathering last September, many requests were made for more information and the sharing of the stories for the women who were leaders in this effort. In response to these requests, we have scheduled a panel discussion with the Rev. Dr. Carter Heyward, the Rev. Alison Cheek (two of the original Philadelphia Eleven), Dr. Darlene O’Dell, author of “The Story of the Philadelphia Eleven,” and the Rev. Anne Bonnyman (one of the first woman ordained in East Tennessee). The Rev. Michelle Warriner Bolt, priest associate at St. John’s Cathedral, will serve as moderator. Register: Please register to Susan Bolt at [email protected] or 865-584-8173. All are welcome! Special appreciation to St. John’s Cathedral for their support in making this event a reality! Sponsored by: The Episcopal Church Women of the Diocese of East Tennessee Directions to Church of the Ascension: From east and north of Knoxville, take I-40 west to Exit 383 Papermill Drive.
    [Show full text]