Even Jason is slowly, ever so slowly beginning to show some true colore here, and its painful, to say the least, to see yet another head spinning exercise in tendentious mudslinging at things most here clearly have virtually no understanding of (but actually think they can fool those who do know with their verbiage).
I am not sure what true color you are speaking of. I have been fairly consistent here. In some cases I defend the Church and argue against critics, and in some cases I may speak up about problems I see. I do not have a one track mind regarding the LDS Church. Some of it I think is terrific; some things I think could use improvement. I think the main thing that I do not like is the monolithic all or nothing Mormonism that you and P seem to portray. You do not have a corner on what an LDS person should be, look like or do. Your tendentious posts reflect that to often.
Mormons who don't go on missions are not thought of as second class citizens by members of the church. They are not stigmatized, they are not ostracized, they are not thought less of, and nothing is held against them by "the church" Anyone who says that this is the case is a smiling ear to ear liar and should now remove him or herseslf to the flat rock from which he or she emerged.
Oh and should I add your posts are full of personal ad hominem attacks. But there is a stigma in the Church. Girls are encouraged to marry an RM, young men who do not go are marginalized for a time. But I will agree that over time, as the young man who does not go matures, if he remains active the stigma fades. There are many very active and serving men who did not serve missions for various reasons.
Never the less, the pressure from 3 years old to the mid 20's is applied and when a young man fails to go there is a perception that there is something wrong with him. I have seen it and so has everyone else here. Heck, I have been guilty of it as well.
I did not go on a mission. I have never been punished or otherwise kept out of church callings or activities becauses I didn't. Nobody I have ever known has ever held it against me, nor shunned me because of it. The Bishipric in my Ward when events transpired such that I chose not to go, held nothing against me. This does not mean they were not dissapointed. This does not mean they would have rather I had gone. I would have rather gone. It was the damn dumbest mistake I ever made in my life, second only to my first marriage.
Your reasons for not going may well have been a mistake for you. For others it is a good decision not to go. Not all young men are cut out for a mission. I went and I am happy about it. For me it was a very good decision. But there was so much pressure and for me, I was never going to go in spite of the pressure from ward members. Though my inactive parents never pressured me. When through some spiritual experiences I knew I should go I was pretty fired up about it. But I was happy I decided to go out of more then it being required or expected.
Yes, it is a duty. Yes, it is a commandment and mandate from the Lord. Yes, there is pressure, and so what?
Encouragement is fine. Major programming week after week after week is not.
There is also pressure on young LDS men to do a lot of other things, and many of those are or the either utterly trivial, compared to going on a mission, or stupid, immature, or unambiguously evil
I am not sure what items you refer to so I cannot opine.
If you don't like it, don't worry about it, its none of your business. Find another church, get a life, eat, drink, and be merry at Dairy Queen, pull up your pants, turn your hat around, and get a job
Well Loran thank god it is not your Church and Jesus welcomes all people of all sorts of views and opinions as well as sinners and the weakest human. It may well be that you are just so much more ahead of the average Joe in testimony and sanctification. If so you should lovingly interact and teach rather then beat and request those less good then you to leave. On the other hand it man be well that it is your type that will destroy the Church. I think it may be the latter. Is this how you treat your home teaching families that may be inactive? Or is your bishop smart enough to keep your poison away from less active members?