Jason Bourne wrote: I also understand that not everyone is like me and some people may be happy as peaches to sit quiet on the bench and sleep through sacrament meeting every Sunday for forty years. I have a hard time understanding people like that as I am quite passionate about what I believe, but I do understand they exist.
But you see once again it is not that simple. I don't sleep at church, I enjoy it about 60% of the time. I have faith in a God, and I hope Jesus was what he claimed. I think Joseph Smith was inspired in many aspects to bring truths to the earth but also that he got some thing wrong. I do not believe one group has all truth and most have some. I believe participating in religion for me is worthwhile. I enjoy the spirituality I get, what it does for my personal relationships, it help me ponder life in ways I may not and I enjoy the social aspects as well. That is where I am at now. Could I go another way? Sure, I could decide to leaev at some point or become more TBM again or who knows. But I have goign on three years now and this is where I am at and am quite happy. I think John's approach is good and healthy. He says it does not work for all and he does not marginalize those who choose to leave.
I have arrived at the point in my life...now in my fifties...where I can accept the church on the basis of plausibility. Now if I thought that the whole thing was a total scam and knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that it was...as many do here...I would leave. A number of years ago I came close to doing so. I stayed because of familial/church ties and pressures to conform. In the meantime, since that time, I've mellowed somewhat and have accepted the possibility that Mormonism may play an important part in a plan that God may have for this world. On the assumption...which I think is valid and reasonable...that there is a God. With a number of not unreasonable tweaks and paradigm shifts it is possible to look at the church as being what it claims to be...in it's basic form. Gospel way of life, core commandments, ordinances, and core beliefs concerning God and the universe, etc.
Living within the church and yet accepting the possibility that it could all be bogus... and yet realizing that there are valid reasons for belief are why I stay. There are many reasons to leave and there are many reasons...besides societal/familial pressures...to stay. So I choose to stay. The way of life is good. Virtue, goodness, kindness, service, thoughtfulness, and love for one's family and fellowman are all part and parcel of being a Mormon. It's not a bad way to live one's life. I talked with my bishop a few years ago in an interview and he said, in effect, if the church isn't true it's a good place to raise a family. I'm a family man, so it works for our family.
To be honest, if I hadn't been a family man a number of years ago when the crap hit the fan as far as my testimony was concerned...I would not be a part of the church membership today. There was too much that was just too weird and clumsy in the whole "restoration story". I stuck with it, however, and now am able to exist reasonably well with in the society of saints accepting the possibility that the church is true... plausibly. In other words's, I don't think that there enough reason/evidence to leave the church behind when there is enough reason/evidence to stay. At least at this point in time.
So I think that I'm OK posting on this thread because at the same time that I'm somewhat agnostic in some of my meanderings and thinking, I'm also willing to look at the flip slide and accept plausible/hopeful belief.
Regards,
MG