Yet what are they to do if their prophet tells them the word Mormon is Satanic?
They can resume the word Mormon and continue to eat ham once a future prophet gives the all clear signal.
Yet what are they to do if their prophet tells them the word Mormon is Satanic?
Did a president say the word was Satanic? If that's true then the church has created this problem. People are just going to fight against being called Mormon. It would create a massive distraction. How in their right mind would they assign a word that is only relevant to them as Satanic. The outcome is that one, you are saying the word that you created is evil and two, you are causing unnecessary unrest because true followers won't want to be associated with a word that is Satanic. That's crazy. Did they think that through properly? I'm wondering if it's a joke because its posted by moksha.
Nelson, General Conference 2018Imwashingmypirate wrote: ↑Thu May 16, 2024 10:51 amDid a president say the word was Satanic? If that's true then the church has created this problem. People are just going to fight against being called Mormon. It would create a massive distraction. How in their right mind would they assign a word that is only relevant to them as Satanic. The outcome is that one, you are saying the word that you created is evil and two, you are causing unnecessary unrest because true followers won't want to be associated with a word that is Satanic. That's crazy. Did they think that through properly? I'm wondering if it's a joke because its posted by moksha.
https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/stu ... h?lang=engWhat’s in a name or, in this case, a nickname? When it comes to nicknames of the Church, such as the “LDS Church,” the “Mormon Church,” or the “Church of the Latter-day Saints,” the most important thing in those names is the absence of the Savior’s name. To remove the Lord’s name from the Lord’s Church is a major victory for Satan. When we discard the Savior’s name, we are subtly disregarding all that Jesus Christ did for us—even His Atonement.
AHH. Well that's kind of different but that is also probably why people are now offended.I Have Questions wrote: ↑Thu May 16, 2024 1:13 pmNelson, General Conference 2018Imwashingmypirate wrote: ↑Thu May 16, 2024 10:51 am
Did a president say the word was Satanic? If that's true then the church has created this problem. People are just going to fight against being called Mormon. It would create a massive distraction. How in their right mind would they assign a word that is only relevant to them as Satanic. The outcome is that one, you are saying the word that you created is evil and two, you are causing unnecessary unrest because true followers won't want to be associated with a word that is Satanic. That's crazy. Did they think that through properly? I'm wondering if it's a joke because its posted by moksha.https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/stu ... h?lang=engWhat’s in a name or, in this case, a nickname? When it comes to nicknames of the Church, such as the “LDS Church,” the “Mormon Church,” or the “Church of the Latter-day Saints,” the most important thing in those names is the absence of the Savior’s name. To remove the Lord’s name from the Lord’s Church is a major victory for Satan. When we discard the Savior’s name, we are subtly disregarding all that Jesus Christ did for us—even His Atonement.
Unsurprising, unfortunately. RM is one of those who cannot admit being wrong. No matter which positions he takes, even contradictory ones, they are right because he says they are. Zero credibility.Sophocles wrote: ↑Thu May 16, 2024 7:46 pmMy favorite Pahoran episode was from ZLMB, when the subject of Ronald E. Poelman's re-taped conference talk was raised. He had never heard of this and outright denied that it could be true.
When his fellow apologists on the board finally managed to convince him that it happened, he immediately changed course and began defending it as if it were the most natural thing in the world.
It was quite a thing to behold. One moment he found the story so outrageous that he was offended that critics would have the gall to invent such a thing. The next, he regarded it as so benign and commonplace that he couldn't believe anyone would ever have any problem with it.
Sometimes Mormon apologists get so ridiculous all you can do is laugh...DCP wrote:A more efficient approach -- I'm watching it in real time over at the Peterson Obsession Board -- is to simply dismiss all the accounts, sight unseen, accompanied by snorts of derision and, among the higher organisms there, airy but factually-ungrounded theoretical explanations of why the accounts needn't be seriously considered.
It's conjured up an involuntary image in my mind of a ritual gathering of such folks: "By the great throbbing brain of Dumb-Dud!" goes the incantation. Dumb-Dud actually explained, a few weeks ago, that dissenting from His views indicates that the dissenter has the mental power of a "gnat." (The mightily engorged self-esteem is rather cute, in its way.)
Help me out here. What would a factually-grounded theoretical explanation of an imaginary event that violates all laws of physics look like? All I have the patience for is......factually-ungrounded theoretical explanations of...
The FARMS group did the exact same thing with the Hoffmann forgeries of the Salamander Letter... It's all for an image. Truth stopped being a part of their church since 1805. Yes, do the math and figure out why I chose this year as the beginning of the end of truth in Mormonism.Sophocles wrote: ↑Thu May 16, 2024 7:46 pmMy favorite Pahoran episode was from ZLMB, when the subject of Ronald E. Poelman's re-taped conference talk was raised. He had never heard of this and outright denied that it could be true.
When his fellow apologists on the board finally managed to convince him that it happened, he immediately changed course and began defending it as if it were the most natural thing in the world.
It was quite a thing to behold. One moment he found the story so outrageous that he was offended that critics would have the gall to invent such a thing. The next, he regarded it as so benign and commonplace that he couldn't believe anyone would ever have any problem with it.