angsty wrote:Love the confidence! I'm thrilled they are attempting this route, although results might not be entirely favorable (from an LDS perspective). I too used to believe that if people would just engage in an honest, average, first-hand experience with Mormonism, their perceptions of Mormonism would be at least favorable and respectful (and of course it would eventually result in mass baptism). That was back before I understood anything about patriarchy, science, history, archaeology, sociology, or logic. That was before I understood that feelings aren't an infallible guide to special kind of knowledge of the supernatural, and that 'I know the gospel/this church is true' doesn't actually make sense.
This should be interesting (if anyone outside the church is even paying attention). I do hope curious parties would at least check out a F&T meeting.
This, of course, is why the "every member a missionary" program has been such an ongoing success.
[/snark]
I agree that every ward probably has a number of close-to-perfect members who would give a very good impression of the church. However, in my experience, there's a lot of members who are far enough from the ideal that a reporter who conducted several interviews across a ward would likely conclude that they are mostly just regular, good people in a religion that, is for the most part, unremarkable and no more convincing than any other, and that they have their share of quite strange individuals with unusual ideas.
Perhaps that's what the PR department wants: to continue with the "nothing special about us" theme. If so, they might succeed.
I think it would depend largely an how well the reporter prepared for the interview. If they asked about any of the controversial issues they might get the feeling that the members are quite ignorant of their own history.