Dr. Shades wrote:How do you know?Tobin wrote:We all see God and Angels eventually. It is not a question of if, just when.
Because I've experienced God and the scriptures and other accounts of God are true.
Dr. Shades wrote:How do you know?Tobin wrote:We all see God and Angels eventually. It is not a question of if, just when.
Tobin wrote:Because I've experienced God and the scriptures and other accounts of God are true.
I've mentioned several times how Don Bradley's joy at being accepted by people like DCP as someone to be treated kindly as a friend creeps me out. That's because it suggests what matters to them is not truth or friendship based on personal character, but rather fellowship with the faith. That reads to me as vaguely cultish where loyalty rises above all. Doubtless those bonds will just as easily be severed should Don apostatize once more. What kind of friendliness is that? What kind of discourse can you have with that?
Darth J wrote:
Totally. It will be just like Alma the Younger on the road to Damascus.
Whoops! I meant Saul and the four sons of Mosiah.
DonBradley wrote:Loyalty is, as you rightly point out, hugely important in the LDS Church. To be loyal to the Church is understood as one of the greatest goods, and to be disloyal to it as one of the greatest evils.
We claim the privilege of worshiping Almighty God according to the dictates of our own conscience, and allow all men the same privilege, let them worship how, where, or what they may.
DonBradley wrote:Hi EA,
I think you would see this somewhat differently if you knew, or remembered, the fuller story.
Dan Peterson was friendly to me while I was outside the Church. He and I ran into each other in the periodicals section of the BYU library two or three years before my return to the church and had about a two hour conversation in which I explained why I believed the problem of evil was insoluble and why I thought there was no afterllife. He explained his own perspectives on those same issues and was very kind in how he did so.
Subsequently, when I appeared on the FAIR board to critique the NHM argument, he responded with a polite comment about how 'it may be helpful for non-Semiticists' to understand a certain thing about the Hebrew language that was relevant to my critique but of which I had been ignorant. Rather than whacking me over the head with my ignorance, he simply explained what I had not known.
Admittedly, this is not always Dan's posting style; but he was then and continued to be polite and informative to me in our subsequent exchanges . He also later told me he would use whatever influence he had to help me publish a couple faith-neutral papers I wanted to submit to The Journal of Book of Mormon Studies, even though I was then a nonbeliever, and very publicly so.
His approach to me was, I think, based on his awareness, from our conversation, that I was not at heart an enemy to the church. His friendliness toward me was decidedly [i]not[/] conditioned on my being a believer, since I was not.
Also, if you will think back to the old days on ZLMB, you may remember that in 2003-2004 I spent several months being the nearest thing there was at the time to Dr. Scratch. I at that time made it my personal mission to combat "Freethinker" and then Daniel Peterson posting under his own name. I used a great deal of biting wit against him and called him, among other things, "a pious fraud"--at which he was, of course, greatly and rightly offended. For him to later take me as a friend meant he was willing to simply forgive and forget any such offenses.
I appreciated that then, appreciate it now, and will continue to appreciate it the future. I am glad for his friendship--and that he offered it well before I had the least glimmer of returning to belief in God, much less the church.
Cheers,
Don
DonBradley wrote:
Hi EA,
I think you would see this somewhat differently if you knew, or remembered, the fuller story.
DonBradley wrote:
Old friend EA, if you don't have better things to do with your time than criticize my gratitude, then we need to help you find some things of actual (i.e., positive) value.You are interested in philosophy, right? There is no end to what you could read and explore there. I seem to recall also that you have some pretty definite political values--and volunteers are always needed for political causes, as well as for local charities. For that matter, you could also undertake a more personal project--for instance, start a gratitude journal and take stock of the things others have done for you, for which you are grateful.
Cheers,
Don