The Nehor wrote:Yes, that particular picture is intentionally trying to deceive. It is in a current Church teaching manual and has, therefore, been officially sanctioned by 'The Bretheren'.
Nehor, as soon as you acknowledge that the Church has covered-up and has been less than forthcoming with some of its more disturbing and troublesome history, the less contentious and defensive you will feel about this issue.
Those people and organizations who describe themselves as the most moral, lie, cover-up and deceive too. There are studies which show that a sense of moral superiority can lead to unethical acts, such as deceiving and cheating. "In fact, some of the best do-gooders can become the worst cheats. For example, somebody could rationalize cheating on a test as a way of achieving their dream of becoming a doctor and helping people. In the new study, detailed in the November issue of the Journal of Applied Psychology, researchers find that when this line between right and wrong is ambiguous among people who think of themselves as having high moral standards, the do-gooders can become the worst of cheaters." ( Jeanna Bryner , "Oddly, Hypocrisy Rooted in High Morals," November 15, 2007)
Some people call this "Lying for the Lord". I feel this is never acceptable.
Michael Quinn said, "The tragic reality is that there have been occasions when Church leaders, teachers, and writers have not told the truth they knew about difficulties of the Mormon past, but have offered to the Saints instead a mixture of platitudes, half-truths, omissions, and plausible denials. Elder [Boyd K.] Packer and others would justify this because "we are at war with the adversary" and must also protect any Latter-day Saint whose "testimony [is] in seedling stage." But such a public-relations defense of the Church is actually a Maginot Line of sandy fortifications which "the enemy" can easily breach and which has been built up by digging lethal pits into which the Saints will stumble. A so-called "faith-promoting" Church history which conceals controversies and difficulties of the Mormon past actually undermines the faith of Latter- day Saints who eventually learn about the problems from other sources." (On Being a Mormon Historian, A Lecture by D. Michael Quinn)
I really feel that openness and honesty is the only honorable choice for the Church. I also don't think there is any possible way of turning back the flood gates in this information age, and we will continue to see the Church become more and more open and honest.