Mormon Transhumanist Association

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Mormon Transhumanist Association: Faith

On the Task of Mormon Theology

"The Mormon concept of man exhibits the affirmative qualities relating to the capacity of human reason and the possibilities of free moral endeavor that characterized Enlightenment thought in the early part of the nineteenth century, that were basic to the liberal Protestantism in the latter part of that century and into the present, and that today lie at the foundations of typical secular humanism that has issued from American intellectual life. But Mormonism's conception of human possibility far exceeds those of humanism and the standard forms of religious liberalism. Its conception of man is an integral element in the doctrine of cosmic progress that lies at the foundation of both its metaphysics and religion and that informs the general character of all Mormon thought. It is held that, in the forward, upward movement of the world in which God himself is involved, the human soul has infinite possibilities, because in an infinite time through the progressive achievement of knowledge and the mastery of moral will it may even know a measure of perfection that marks the attainment of divinity. Such a doctrine, of course, is an invitation to an easy speculation that some Mormon theologians have been unable to resist. And from it has issued a plethora of ideas that at times are quite irresponsible as serious doctrine. Such ideas are, nevertheless, a frank and ample testimony of the possibile reaches of liberal religion when supported by a conception of God that is grounded in the same optimism that nourished the liberal estimate of man.

"The primary task of theology is the reconciliation of the revelation to the culture, to make what is taken on faith as the word of God meaningful in light of accepted science and philosophy. Mormon theology has in the past pursued this task with some consistency and at times with intellectual strength, and certainly with a stubborn independence and indifference to criticism from traditional thought. Today, much of that strength is gone as Mormonism suffers the impact of religious and social conservatism, as the Mormon mind, in the general pattern of contemporary religion, yields to the seductions of irrationalism, and as the energies of the Church are increasingly drained by practical interests.

 

"The most important recent development in occidental religion is the rise of Christian neoorthodoxy that on a sophisticated level has reestablished the dogma of original sin and the negative conception of man. Although Mormonism has known little of the social and personal failure that has contributed to the success of neoorthodoxy, for the past two decades, in common with American and European religion generally, become increasingly conservative in its theology. The most interesting facet of this conservatism is a noticeable tendency, especially in Mormon Church academic circles, to deny the traditional liberalism of Mormon theology by favoring a negative description of human nature and the human predicament. This tendency is more than a criticism of the excessive optimism that has been characteristic of liberalism. It appears to be grounded especially in a strong appetite for traditional orthodoxy that is whetted by a reading of The Epistle to the Romans and a taste for occasional passages like the Mosiah “enemy to God” statement which appear in the Mormon scriptures. And it is aided and abetted by the predilection of the orthodox for whatever demeans humanity for the glory of God. But that Mormonism reflects Christian orthodoxy in its treatment of the Bible, and its acceptance of many of the dogmas central to Christianity, does not invalidate its essentially liberal character which is defined by its concepts of man and God. A departure from this fundamental liberalism is a departure from the authentic spirit of the Mormon religion.

 

"If it is to satisfy the demand of reasonableness, every theology must today contend with the positivistic critique of metaphysics that denies the meaningfulness of metempicial statements, the naturalistic critique of theism which demands that the natural world of human experience be explained in terms of itself, and the criticism of a modern enlightened conscience which refuses to accept the tyranny of antiquated religious forms that are insensitive to the requirement of a genuinely moral and spiritual life. In addition, Christian theology must satisfy the historical criticism that demands the extrication of authentic history from myth and legend, and it must face the scientific judgment that modern culture must inevitably make against philosophies and religions that are committed to now discredited concepts associated with their distinct origins. Mormon theology must do all these and more. It must justify its finitistic theism in a world increasingly divided between absolutists and naturalists, and defend its positive assessment of man and history in a world disenchanted by human failure. It must reconcile its supernaturalism with its own naturalistic and humanistic propensities and defend its belief in revelation in a world grown skeptical and sophisticated in the ways of knowing. It must contend with its own body of myth and legend and with its own provincialism and intense literalism and legalism.

 

"Mormon theology is young and unsophisticated and is not overencumbered with creeds and official pronouncements. Its structure has been virtually untouched by serious and competent effort to achieve internal consistency or exact definition. Yesterday it was vigorous, prophetic, and creative; today it is timid and academic and prefers scholastic rationalization to the adventure of ideas. It is in great need of a definition of the relation of reason to revelation that will preserve the intellectual integrity of the Mormon people and encourage them in an honest and courageous pursuit of truth. It needs a conception of religion in history which will conform to the profound Mormon insight into the dynamic character of all things and thereby release the Mormon religion from the tyranny of the past. And it needs and deserves a new appreciation of the strength of those very heresies in the concepts of God and man that must inevitably make of it an offense to the traditional faith but which are the chief sources of its strength and should already have released it from bondage to orthodoxy.

 

"But wherever the Mormon theologian turns and to whatever tasks, for a long time to come he must work within the difficult but interesting context of a body of thought and attitude that is a unique and uneasy union of nineteenth-century liberalism with fourth-century Christian fundamentalism."

 

(Sterling McMurrin. (1965). “On the Task of Mormon Theology” from The Theological Foundations of the Mormon Religion. Salt Lake City: Signature Books, pg. 110-113)

Published Wednesday, February 28, 2007 12:27 PM by Joey

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Lincoln Cannon said:

"The primary task of theology is the reconciliation of the revelation to the culture, to make what is taken on faith as the word of God meaningful in light of accepted science and philosophy. Mormon theology has in the past pursued this task with some consistency and at times with intellectual strength, and certainly with a stubborn independence and indifference to criticism from traditional thought. Today, much of that strength is gone as Mormonism suffers the impact of religious and social conservatism, as the Mormon mind, in the general pattern of contemporary religion, yields to the seductions of irrationalism, and as the energies of the Church are increasingly drained by practical interests."

Amen!
February 28, 2007 2:05 PM
 

Joey said:

Yes, Amen.

Keep in mind that this was written over 40 years ago.

I thought that the second to last and third to last paragraphs were the most pertinent to what we are trying to do here at the MTA. Mormons need to be persuaded to see the changes going on in the world through their religious eyes.
February 28, 2007 3:14 PM
 

Carl Youngblood said:

These are great insights, and I was amazed to see how long ago this was written.  Everything still seems very much in touch with the current challenges we face.  I wasn't sure how to interpret the phrase: "...as the energies of the Church are increasingly drained by practical interests."  Is he just saying that this is an inevitability, or that the Church should actually pursue the impractical at the expense of the practical?  I guess I agree with the facts of that statement, but I'm not sure there is a better alternative.

I was also struck as I read this with how few Mormons, leaders and laypersons, would even understand it.  I just don't think most Mormons are interested enough in gaining a strong enough education in these matters to even begin to understand the challenges he describes.  Sorry for being so pessimistic.  I'm basing this assessment on my own family and friends and how little most of them think about these things.
March 1, 2007 12:11 PM
 

Joey said:

The opening paragraph of the foreward to the book addresses that indirectly. . .

"The most interesting thing about Mormon theology is that it incorporates a liberal doctrine of man and a radically unorthodox concept of God within the general framework of historic Christian fundamentalism. This anomaly marks the distinctive character of the theology and sets its basic problems. It provides the Mormon religion with intellectual foundations which are compatible with its biblical literalism yet support its humanistic temper. <b>This has far reaching implications, for, while it strengthens the naturalistic and pragmatic propensities of the Mormon people without weakening their ties to Christian origins, it must inevitably produce fundamental tensions in the intellectual life of the church</b>, tensions arising ultimately from the basic conflict of the Greek and Hebrew components of the culture.
March 1, 2007 3:22 PM
 

Lincoln Cannon said:

To the Greeks foolishness, and to the Jews offense.
March 1, 2007 7:45 PM
 

Carl Youngblood said:

Here is an interesting Sunstone interview of McMurrin in 1993:

http://lds-mormon.com/newell_mcmurrin.shtml

And another newspaper article about him:

http://lds-mormon.com/1833.shtml

Great stuff in there about David O. McKay and other recent prophets.  I definitely need to buy that book too.
March 1, 2007 9:05 PM
 

Lincoln Cannon said:

Hey, if you buy the book, don't forget to do it through our bookstore so that the association can get a cut of the sale through Amazon. Here is the link:

http://transfigurism.org/community/forums/thread/2228.aspx
March 1, 2007 10:06 PM
 

Carl Youngblood said:

By the way, if we are including McMurrin's book, we should probably include Blake Ostler's two similar publications.  From what I hear, they are as good as or better than McMurrin's.
March 2, 2007 2:06 PM
 

Arcturus said:

"The most important recent development in occidental religion is the rise of Christian neoorthodoxy that on a sophisticated level has reestablished the dogma of original sin and the negative conception of man.”

What I find interesting here is that Christian pessimism about human potential is generally shared today by non-Christian humanists. The transhumanist FM-2030 did a great expose of that pessimism in his works, too.

I sometimes wonder if it isn’t just a matter of Zeitgeist. World War I and II almost destroyed the West; the Holocaust was a devastating moral failure; and the rise of thermonuclear weapons threatened to end humanity altogether. So basically, secularists and religious came to the same conclusion: humans are evil.

Nowadays on the secular left, the focus is on humans causing global warming, humans destroying the environment, humans starting wars, humans creating global poverty, humans violating human rights and dignity.

It seems to me Mormonism, and transhumanism, hold on to an essential kind of optimism. That humans can turn this around. That we can become better if we try. That the future isn’t all gloom and doom.

“It must justify its finitistic theism in a world increasingly divided between absolutists and naturalists, and defend its positive assessment of man and history in a world disenchanted by human failure. It must reconcile its supernaturalism with its own naturalistic and humanistic propensities and defend its belief in revelation in a world grown skeptical and sophisticated in the ways of knowing.”

Surely the world’s Zeitgeist can change. Or maybe that is just me being optimistic :)  

Is it possible to think of revelation as a fresh, positive vision? A vision of how things could be. Of something to strive for, something worth striving for. Not that which comes from God, but that which brings us to God.
April 3, 2007 3:00 PM

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About Joey

Joey West is a founding member, director and secretary of the Mormon Transhumanist Association. He is a 30 year old, full-time parent and husband. He's married to his best friend and together they have two children, a five year old boy and a two year old girl. He recently finished an undergraduate degree in philosophy at the University of Utah and will begin graduate work in sociology in the fall at the University of Arizona. He's an active and faithful member of the LDS Church, although he often struggles to feel like he fits in, not because he's not Mormon enough for them, but because sometimes he wonders if they're Mormon enough for him.

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