WEBVTT
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[inaudible].
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Welcome to the Project Zion podcast.
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This podcast explores the unique spiritual and theological gifts Community of Christ offers for today's world.
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[inaudible].
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That is why we are deigned for the children of Israel, that whoever takes a life and less as a punishment for murder or mischief in the land, it will be as if they killed all of humanity and whoever saves a life, it will be as if they saved all of humanity.
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Hello everyone and welcome to Project Zion podcast.
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I'm Karin Peter and today we're visiting with Dr.
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Gregory Jackson.
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Dr.
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Jackson is assistant director of national security studies.
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Wow, that sounds really important.
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And assistant professor of integrated studies at Utah Valley university.
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He's also the host of a podcast called history that doesn't suck.
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So hi Greg.
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Hello.
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And I'm just glad it sounds important.
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That's all.
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That's all we're going for.
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We're just trying to make people think that we do important things.
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It sounds great.
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That's a great title.
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Excellent.
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Good work there.
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So the quote that I just shared is really has to do with why we invited you to come and share with us here at Project Zion.
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And when, when you and I first met you were teaching a course that compared Islam and Mormonism.
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And that's our topic for today's episode.
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And so that quote actually came from the Quran, I forget what was the chapter and verse?
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That's Surah five 33 I believe.
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If I'm recalling that from the top.
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All right, well good for you and your and your memory cause I can't even remember that about Bible verses good.
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So let's
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at least Surah five I can, I can definitely lock that in and in the third year
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That's where it is.
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Okay.
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So first I want to thank you so much for coming on the podcast.
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You're a Podcaster yourself and, and a very busy person and I appreciate that you are taking time out to visit with us today here at project Zion.
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So let's start out with what led you to develop a course that compared Islam and Mormonism because that didn't just happen.
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No, it didn't.
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I mean, to start off, you gotta remember that I'm in Utah Valley, right?
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I, as you just said, I'm a professor at Utah Valley University and one of the areas of expertise that I have is the middle East.
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So I, every time I teach a course, whether it's the history of Iran or modern Middle East, one of the first things I do in the course is I spend two weeks just giving my students a basic primer on Islam.
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So even though the course might be 20, 21st century stuff, simple fact of the matter is you don't understand the modern middle East.
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Just as I'd say, you don't understand Utah if you don't understand Mormonism.
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So you should have a basic primer on what Mormonism is.
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Same thing with the Middle East.
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You've got to understand Islam.
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So, you know, I'd give them this crash course basically on the absolute fundamentals of Islam.
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No one's a scholar on Islam after you know, two weeks.
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Right?
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But, but we can move on from that point.
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And I had a number of students that as I start talking about this individual Mohammad, who finds that society has strayed from their principles and correct teachings of how to live.
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And so he's retreating to a secluded area and engaging a prayer and getting an angelic visitor and suddenly has a new book of scripture.
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And as a prophet, you know, I, I very much is not trying to draw parallels to Mormonism, but my students who are predominantly LDS and predominantly active LDS, and even if they're not active, that's kind of a moot point.
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You know, that's their background and you could just, I would just see their faces kind of registering this you know, familiarity slash shock kind of going, Oh, Whoa, Whoa, Whoa.
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I, this sounds a little familiar to me.
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And you know, initially the first few times I taught the class, to be honest, I wasn't uncomfortable with making the comparisons, but I am keenly aware that this is a state institution.
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And so I tried to keep things very much a kind of dry and you know, not go down that road.
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Not, I mean, I have two degrees from BYU.
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Love BYU and all, but I know it's not BYU.
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So, you know, I'm trying to make sure we're not disenfranchising the the non-Mormon students in the classroom as well.
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But I'd have a number of these Mormon students of mine who came out to me and said, Hey, Greg, we want to talk about this more.
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We want to go deeper on this.
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So with them asking me to I spoke with the director of the religious studies program at UVU, and he encouraged me to create a course where basically we could create a space for our, our Mormon students to be able to dive deep and make the comparisons that they want to without it kind of, you know, derailing in our, or rather in my typical middle East courses.
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In the other classes.
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Yeah.
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So now we can spend, yeah.
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Four months just kind of nerding out on these these points where they're in common.
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And you know, it is a comparison course, which I think some people misconstrue as thinking that we're going to say, Oh look how they're super, super similar all the time.
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Sometimes it also means pointing out the ways in which they're vastly different.
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But that's, that's where it grew out.
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It was basically my my Mormon students interest and me trying to respond to the needs of the community.
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I'm thrilled with that, that that's how it came about, that people were interested in that and learning more and broadening their scope of understanding.
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Being a religion nerd myself, that's fun stuff.
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Well, they're a good bunch at UVU.
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Yeah, we have, we have good students, inquisitive minds and all that jazz.
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So most of our projects I and listeners would be somewhat familiar with the narrative of how Mormonism came to be.
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But if you feel there are some aspects of that that might be lesser known, this is the time that we might want to review some of that.
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And then if you could kind of walk us through in a super abbreviated way how Islam developed in that in i ts time period so that we can kind of get an idea.
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Like I said, we're sort of familiar most of us with how Mormonism came to be, but we might need a bit of a refresher and then launch into the inception of Islam.
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Sure.
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So to give kind of a more academic take on how Mormonism came to be.
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Really we have to understand the second great awakening.
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I think a lot of us we forget, we don't realize that the United States really wasn't very much of a church g oing nation in the 1790s when, when the United States first started going.
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Now some people misconstrue that to think that it means it was a godless country that that people weren't really into religion.
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Well, not necessarily you had figures like say Thomas Jefferson, who had a deep reverence for spirituality.
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He had a, in fact, a copy of the Quran in his library, but he also had a copy of the Bible where he had removed the miracles of Jesus.
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So, you know, he's an interesting enlightenment figure.
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We have, say Alexander Hamilton who didn't go to church really until he's getting on in his years after his son had died.
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He started become more of a church goer.
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George Washington.
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He wasn't much of a churchgoer except that Martha liked to go.
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So, you know, he, he'd go for her sake.
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So like every, like every husband sitting in your ward lately.
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Yeah, we'll, we'll just knock, will not build on that comment.
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And yeah, so, you know, point point being that, and you can sometimes see people kind of tug a war on trying to make the founding generation sound more church going or less churchgoing, um, per their interests.
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But the fact is there was, there's definitely spirituality, but only about 10% of free Americans, non enslaved Americans were attending church services on a regular basis.
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I mean, that's pretty low.
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So then we got to the second grade awakening.
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So it's not that the enlightenment's been lost, you know, its principles have been lost, but America kind of shed a little bit of this very scientific objective worldview that the, that the revolution was kind of born in a little bit and shifted into a kind of a new found spiritualism.
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And y'alls, not to say that these are bad things, they're just, these are different parts of the human experience objective observations of truth versus spirituality.
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And during this time, a number of different takes on Christianity were born.
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Particular there was a region known as the burned over district in upstate New York, and that's where Joseph Smith was growing up.
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So he's, he's coming out of this era where there's a lot of questions being asked about.
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And a lot of pondering and rebirth, if you will in terms of how Americans are viewing and thinking about Christianity.
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There's a lot of thoughts about the second coming that Jesus is going to come against soon.
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So a millenarianism and Joseph Smith's movement can basically be described as a restoration movement.
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There are a number that are trying to do this.
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They're trying to restore ancient Christianity.
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So Joseph falls into that camp and he also falls into the Jesus is coming soon camp.
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So in many ways he fits in with the, you know, just exactly what you expect to come out of this era.
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And Mormonism is, you know, one of one of the few that has both of those elements that also survived.
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There are countless religions and faith movements that are, are founded and fizzle out, you know, before the community get to a second generation.
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So honestly, in any faith that makes it pass two or three generations as, as Mormonism has, uh, that's a massive, incredible success.
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So what about Islam?
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So Islam o n, on the other hand, we're going all the way back to the six hundreds AD and w e're going to the Arabian peninsula.
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So t he, the, the city of Mecca a t at this time had become a hub of trade.
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So there's a lot of trade going on throughout the Indian ocean and some of these sailors would head up toward mecca where they would be able to unload goods and then they could be taken via caravan, across land, up into Asia minor and in that area.
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And in fact, Muhammad worked within that industry as he got older.
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He ran caravans.
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Now his experience and you know, you can see some parallels for those who know a little more details about Joseph Smith's background of poverty you know, struggling to make ends meet, that sort of a thing.
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Well, similarly Mohammad's born into a very poor family.
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He's orphaned by the time he's six years old, he ends up having to move in, ultimately with a, with an uncle and as he's passed around, you know, he watched his mother be a widow for two brief years before she died.
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And then he's orphaned.
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Well pre Islamic Arabia, which is extremely polytheistic, is supposed to have a major value point on taking care of orphans and taking care of widows.
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So what he's observing though is that as all this cash is, has fluctuated into Mecca and this is a fairly newish element, a thing that that has been changing the Bedouin lifestyle.
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You still have the bedroom lifestyle going on around, but Mecca has become very sedentary.
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Crucially an important thing to note, it houses basically every idle you can imagine.
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So this is part of how they, they cater to the various nationalities they're passing through and conducting trade in Mecca.
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One of the ways that laws people lose people in it that sounds the worst.
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I mean, it's you, but you get my point, I kinda kind of lures them in is that, uh, whatever their mixed nationality crew is, whatever God they want to worship when they're on land, they've got that idol.
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You name it, they've got it.
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So, uh, basically Muhammad seen a lack of spirituality and he's known for being this extremely honest person.
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Everyone likes him to run their caravans because if he gets confronted out in the, in the deserts of the Arabian peninsula, he's going to put up a fight.
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He doesn't just roll over and let thieves hijack the caravan.
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And as he gets older, he starts contemplating, well, why is our society not in line with what its principles are?
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Which is for those who are familiar with the Joseph Smith story that is very similar Joseph asking, you know, this idea that people draw near to God with their lips, but their hearts are far from him, that sort of thing.
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And as he's doing so, he receives a angelic visitation on Mount Hera from Gabriel.
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So tapping into Judeochristian you know, canon if you will and Gabriel starts to give him revelations.
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And these revelations will happen for over two decades.
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These are re citations, which is what the Quran means.
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And in Arabic, and this is, y ou k now, t he, the final word of God.
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So he becomes a prophet.
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He's chased out of Mecca, eventually heads up to Medina.
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And I'll sum this up very, very briefly.
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They have some battles between the two cities and eventually his underdog group wins.
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And when they come i nto Mecca rather than raping and pillaging, which is the ethic of the day, if we want to use such a word as ethic he instead spares all the inhabitants.
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And this is just mind blowing and for the era.
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So you know, he is the peace Springer and now we get into this idea that Islam is a religion of peace.
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He has brought peace and stability to the region.
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A rating ceases to happen inside of the community that is Islam.
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And as the whole peninsula becomes basically Islamic, you have peace.
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So now I'll stop there.
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I think that's k ind of done the basics.
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Well and you said that he became a prophet.
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Yes.
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Right.
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As he received these recitations over the a couple of two decades.
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Did you say lasted?
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Yeah.
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Becomes a prophet.
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And I'd like to explore that a little bit.
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So the founder of both of these traditions, Mormonism and Islam, they both bear the label prophet.
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But what do they mean in each, each case?
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What does prophet mean in Mormonism?
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What does prophet mean in, in Islam?
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And how closely is the kind of receiving of new scripture tied to what it means to be a prophet?
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Well, so both of them definitely receive new scripture that that is a part of this.
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Honestly prophet has a very similar, at least in my opinion there are plenty of articles that talk about the different meaning of prophet and different fades, but really prophet has a very similar meaning to the Mormon world as it does to the Islamic world.
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In both cases, the prophet's role is to share the word of God, to call people, to basically return to God and to warn that there will be a final judgment that you know, they need to basically be in line.
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I think some interesting similar s imilarities slash d ifference between the two, just follow me.
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You'll, you'll see what I mean.
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M ohammed is considered to be the seal of the p rophets.
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So he is the last prophet and many of the preceding prophets i n Islam.
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They're the same prophets that are accepted in Judaism as well as in Christianity and in the subset of Mormonism.
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So, for instance, Adam is considered to be the first prophet for Muslims.
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Well, I remember saying that exact same thing as an LDS missionary years ago as setting up this, the first discussion that's used by the LDS church emphasizes this idea of recurring prophets and Joseph Smith, just one in the succession.
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Same thing with Mohammed.
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Now here is an interesting distinction though, is the last prophets.
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So there's no prophets out after him.
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Of course, that is a jarring difference from the Mormon tradition or rather the whole Joseph Smith's restoration movement where the idea of prophets succeeding is, is crucial though here.
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Here is the sort of, you know, different yet similar thing I would point out while you do have a of profits afterward, at least within the LDS version of, uh, of the restoration ad, I would love for you to tell me how much this carries over in the Community of Christ.
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Joseph Smith is, I'm not gonna say he's elevated, but he is considered to have, you know, opened this final dispensation.
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So there's kind of this greater reverence, I guess, in a way for, for these prophets who, who opened dispensations.
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Just kind of an asterisk next to the name, I guess you could say.
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Right.
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So we would have had a similar maybe phrased differently, but a similar kind of understanding about Justin Smith early on and even up into probably the mid 20th century, but with Community of Christ that the continuing prophets have continued to add to the body of scripture, right through the Doctrine and Covenants.
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And, and rather than having each piece of scripture be like an addendum to what's already there, sometimes it almost replaces earlier scripture.
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Interesting.
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And the body of the people at times have voted to excise pieces of scripture from what Joseph Smith brought.
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So for example, t he, the section on baptism w ith the d ad, the Doctrine and Covenants, we voted to put that in the appendix years ago.
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And then finally we voted to like, you know, get rid of it completely.
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So I think we have a different understanding of the p rophet's r ole with scripture then the LDS would have.
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Yeah, we do have the similarity of the, the idea that there's still a profit, still a profit.
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Right, right, right.
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And so, so Islam of course would utterly reject that.
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But I do think that idea of opening a dispensation, at least within the LDS, a mind frame versus the seal of the prophet.
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I think that's a kind of, I know it sounds so contradictory as I say it, but can you see the parallel?
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I'm kind of going for?
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Well, yeah, yeah, absolutely.
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Because he's the last one.
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He's the seal on it w ith Joseph Smith.
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He was like the main head guy, p rophet h e, we've had other profits since, but they don't have the same stature.
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They're not, he's the last first.
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Right, right.
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And
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He's the last founder prophet.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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Which more Mormonism holds that you have a number of those, right.
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These different dispensations and that, that apostasy will not happen again.
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So.
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Interesting.
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So sometimes when I talk to people who knew a lot about Mormonism and use different phrases like that one, the dispensation,
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Sorry.
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Yeah, no, I'm thinking, Oh my God, I remember that from when I was a kid.
00:20:37.819 --> 00:20:43.220
But you know, that's just not part of our understanding and part of our life together anymore.
00:20:43.250 --> 00:20:44.779
Happy to give you that throwback.
00:20:45.230 --> 00:20:45.950
Oh, thanks.
00:20:47.470 --> 00:20:48.039
Thank you.
00:20:48.430 --> 00:20:54.160
So for our listeners, I'm old enough to remember all of those good things from that period of time.
00:20:55.180 --> 00:20:57.130
So they each have a prophet.
00:20:57.910 --> 00:21:09.789
They each have come out of this kind of cultural and societal paradigm of, of needing kind of religious reconstruction, if you will.
00:21:09.849 --> 00:21:12.160
Yes, I think that's perfectly put.
00:21:13.140 --> 00:21:13.140
Okay.
00:21:13.240 --> 00:21:20.799
So, and each tradition has a really unique set of scriptures that goes along with that.
00:21:20.800 --> 00:21:24.430
They each received word of God and substance.
00:21:24.431 --> 00:21:28.450
So compare a little bit the book of Mormon in the, in the Quran.
00:21:28.451 --> 00:21:33.039
How does the use of the, of the text connect them?
00:21:33.040 --> 00:21:45.460
I mean, in a way, Mormonism is connected to Islam because Islam comes out of the Abrahamic tradition and Mormonism comes out of Christianity, which comes out of the Abrahamic tradition.
00:21:45.880 --> 00:21:46.630
Absolutely.
00:21:46.750 --> 00:21:48.309
So there, there are all those connections.
00:21:48.310 --> 00:21:57.460
But if you'll follow me here, I'd actually say the greater similarity isn't between the Quran and the Book of Mormon, which is what everyone jumps to.
00:21:58.720 --> 00:22:00.490
It's the Quran and the Doctrine and Covenants.
00:22:01.089 --> 00:22:02.109
Really?
00:22:01.089 --> 00:22:02.109
Say more.
00:22:04.750 --> 00:22:06.910
Okay, here, hear me out now.
00:22:08.319 --> 00:22:18.549
So the, the Quran is, isn't a sequential story that you kind of read like the Bible, the book of Mormon reads like the Bible.
00:22:18.550 --> 00:22:26.109
You've got a civilization, things are happening, there are life lessons, doctrines of Jesus are being taught by prophets.
00:22:26.890 --> 00:22:45.460
And you see, you know, an arc, you know, a plot basically that, that you can follow through, whether that's the children of Israel in the Bible you know, the, the life of Jesus and the in the gospels and or the Nephites over, over in the book of Mormon, the, the Quran has surahs basically just think chapters.