sock puppet wrote:Chap wrote: ...
The key lies in rejecting the false dichotomy of "Either true or false. Either the church of Jesus Christ or the church of the devil." Why should the world be so simple?
I'm not so sure that in the LDS context it is a false dichotomy. It is the very proposition that the LDS church makes. ...
Chap wrote:Well, that's my point. It is an essential element in the membership retention strategy to keep members thinking in this simple, all or nothing way. They want to set up a situation like this in a member's stream of consciousness;
1. Hey, I think teaching X of the church looks pretty unlike anything that I can accept as something Jesus would want us to do.
2. Uh-oh. The church is true, like, all true. The only alternative is that it is all false.
3. So that issue about teaching X can't really be what I think it is, since otherwise all the church's teachings, like not raping and murdering babies or not selling drugs to schoolkids, would be false too. And that would be awful.
4. So I'd better put it on the shelf.
The minute the member starts to think that the CoJCoLDS is not either just true or just false, it all risks coming unravelled.
I think that #3 hinges on a false thinking that is inculcated into LDS by the Brethren that it alone has a monopoly on teaching anything and everything in the LDS morals lexicon. If there is anything good in the world or mankind's behavior, it is an exclusively LDS teaching. Never mind that rape and murdering babies and not selling drugs to schoolkids are virtues that the vast majority of mankind holds, and has since before Mormonism was founded.
There are plenty of other outlets for these moral principles, not the least of which is the individual's own conscience as nurtured since birth by parents, teachers, experience with others, etc.
Perhaps a false dichotomy you are getting around to is that which posits that all that is good and virtuous is uniquely LDS and without the LDS church one would have no moral bearings, internally or externally.
Once the LDS Church is rejected, there is no residual need for it to supply any moral teachings. There are many other sources available. The question of morals is not pertinent to the dichotomy that Hinckley and the LDS truth claims posit: it's all true as the one and only god-directed organization on earth or it is a fraud. I for one found that dichotomy quite useful. It made it very easy to ****-can the whole kit and caboodle once I uncovered its fraudulent inducements, its whitewashed past that mythologized it and covered up JSJr's peccadilloes and lies.