The contributors to this volume seek to explore the textures and contours of apologetics from multiple perspectives, revealing deep theological and ideological fissures within the Mormon scholarly community concerning apologetics. However, in spite of deep-seated differences, what each author has in common is a passion for Mormonism and how it is presented and defended. This volume captures that reality and allows readers to encounter the terrain of Mormon apologetics at close range.
Contributors:
Preface: A Brief Introduction and Orientation
- Blair G. Van Dyke and Loyd Isao Ericson, volume editors
1. Critical Foundations of Mormon Apologetics
- Blair G. Van Dyke
2. A Brief Defense of Apologetics
- Daniel C. Peterson
3. Boundary Maintenance that Pushes the Boundaries: Scriptural and Theological Insights from Apologetics
- Neal Rappleye
4. I Think, Therefore I Defend
- Michael R. Ash
5. A Wall Between Church and Academy
- Benjamin E. Park
6. Mormon Apologetics and Mormon Studies: Truth, History, and Love
- Ralph C. Hancock
7. The Intellectual Cultures of Mormonism: Faith, Reason, and the Apologetic Enterprise
- Brian D. Birch
8. The Role of Women in Apologetics
- Juliann Reynolds
9. Avoiding Collateral Damage: Creating a Woman-Friendly Mormon Apologetics
- Julie M. Smith
10. “The Perfect Union of Man and Woman”: Reclamation and Collaboration in Joseph Smith’s Theology Making
- Fiona Givens
11. Lamanites, Apologetics, and Tensions in Mormon Anthropology
- David Knowlton
12. Conceptual Confusion and the Building of Stumbling Blocks of Faith
- Loyd Isao Ericson
13. Shifting Intellectual and Religious Paradigms: One Apologist’s Journey into Critical Study
- David Bokovoy
14. Toward a New Vision of Apologetics
- Joseph M. Spencer
15. Apologetics as Theological Praxis
- Seth Payne
Blair G. Van Dyke is an independent scholar and teaches philosophy and religious studies at Utah Valley University. He is a Senior Research Fellow at the Foundation For Religious Diplomacy and is the Custodian of the Mormon Chapter of the Foundation. He holds a Doctorate in the philosophy of education from Brigham Young University. Van Dyke is the co-author of Holy Lands, A History of the Latter-day Saints in the Near East.
Loyd Isao Ericson received his B.S. in philosophy at Utah Valley University and pursued an M.A. in philosophy of religion and theology at Claremont Graduate University. Since 2009 he has been the managing editor of Greg Kofford Books. He is a series co-editor for the Perspectives on Mormon Theology series and a co-editor of Discourses in Mormon Theology: Philosophical and Theological Possibilities and has been published in Sunstone, Element: The Journal of the Society for Mormon Philosophy and Theology, and the Claremont Journal of Mormon Studies, which he helped found.