wenglund wrote:I am unhopeful as well. You seem unwilling, in your statement above, to even compromise in accepting my acknowledgement that the Pinnock case could "reasonably" be viewed as a "lie" according to connotation #2.
I agreed with you that it could be viewed as such. You then went on to suggest that connotation #2 was too broad for our discussion. So, no, I'm not hopeful here.
And, my point about compassion seems still, for the most part, lost on you. I would have thought that your not appreciating me using you as an object lesson may have brought you closer to understanding at least part of the point of my previous post (having the shoe put on your foot, and thereby thinking that if you don't appreciate such things, you will be disinclined to do the same to others, like Pinnock or the Church in particular), but I am not certain that it has.
I understand why you did what you did. I don't find it helpful. My use of Pinnock's statement was not lacking in compassion. It was and still is a simple illustration of a rather clear-cut falsehood. If I've been guilty of doing the same thing he has, I am quite willing to take criticism for it. But "putting the shoe on the other foot" seems unhelpful here. If we can't even discuss the possibility of someone's having lied without this kind of "oh, yeah, see how you like it" response, then, no, there's no hope of common ground. If you think it's uncompassionate to view him as having deliberately told falsehoods to the police, then we simply disagree.
The bottom line, as I see it, and the real cause for the impasse, is that your intents in discussing this issue are seemingly quite different from mine. I suspect that you are intent on justifying, as "reasonable", your belief that the Church lied about what it claims to be, and thus your hurt and anger and venting and grieving was "reasonable" and justified. Whereas, my intent is to find a way of "reasonably" viewing and conceptualizing things to the benifit of all parties concerned, and to eliminate or diminish the hurt and anger and grief, and the cycle often caused thereby.
Thanks, -Wade Englund-
I've said before that I am convinced that I reacted badly in many ways to the loss of my faith, and I would be happy to learn how to avoid that again. I see no need to justify what I believe to you, Wade. You've seen the same evidence I have, and we disagree. There's no malice on my part toward any church leader or member. It just is what it is.
All I've attempted to do here was to understand where we could agree on what constitutes a lie and how we could reasonably conclude that there was one. I've said before that being lied to does not necessarily have to make one angry or even hurt.