EV Kids Get Lectured by LDS Cop
Posted: Mon Apr 02, 2007 4:16 am
This was posted by Tsuzuki over on the fittingly named MADboard:
Quite interesting, in my opinion. The responses on the thread have been intriguing too, including some who have tried to discredit the authenticity of the story. The most recent post features a frothing-at-the-mouth Pahoran, claiming that the DVD uses "underhanded tactics." I cannot help but wonder if he feels that failure to tell black investigators about the priesthood ban, or failure to discuss Joseph Smith's court trial and use of a seer stone are also "underhanded tactics."
Tsuzuki wrote:http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article....RTICLE_ID=54948An officer with a state police force has confronted a team of college students on a spring break missions trip, telling them that handing out Christian literature is "shameful."
In Pakistan? India? Perhaps Syria? Nope. In Utah. Not only that, but a second officer, this one with a local police force, confronted the same students just a day later, telling them that handing out such information was "looked down on here."
Nelson Koon, of Hudsonville, Mich., and a junior at Frontier School of the Bible in LaGrange, Wyo., led the team of college students on their missions trip, and described for WND how these two incidents happened this week, starting in Payson, Utah.
"We got stopped by a police officer, the group of eight of us in a school vehicle," he said. "He said it was shameful, what we were doing."
The team had volunteered to raise their own funds and spend their spring breaks helping various Christian organizations, including TriGrace Ministries, and others in Utah hand out Christian brochures, and in one case, a DVD called "Jesus Christ/Joseph Smith".
"He said he got one on his door," Koon said of the officer. "He said, 'what were we doing, putting all these lies on the DVD?'"
"He asked us what group or church were we with, … then he chewed us out a little. He kind of warned us, then he took off," Koon reported.
Quite interesting, in my opinion. The responses on the thread have been intriguing too, including some who have tried to discredit the authenticity of the story. The most recent post features a frothing-at-the-mouth Pahoran, claiming that the DVD uses "underhanded tactics." I cannot help but wonder if he feels that failure to tell black investigators about the priesthood ban, or failure to discuss Joseph Smith's court trial and use of a seer stone are also "underhanded tactics."