beastie wrote:If you sacrificed then you believed. I know I did on my mission.
I believed with all my heart.
But when presented with sufficient contradictory evidence, I altered my beliefs. I was never a True Believer in the sense of the word as I understand it today - someone who is so enmeshed with his/her belief system that he/she will continue to believe no matter what contradictory evidence may arise.
I actually was a True Believer in the sense that I didn't, and couldn't, take seriously the possibility that the church wasn't actually true. I just knew it was, and it was so obvious to me that the alternative simply wouldn't be taken seriously. Since I had this attitude, I empathize a lot with others who still do have that attitude, because I know what it feels like for the church to be obviously true.
In the quotes above, I actually pretty much agree with what Daniel Peterson said. If the church really is true, then there's no good reason to leave it, there's only the freedom to choose not to obey God and follow his counsel. And as DCP said, the problem is that we don't have perfect clarity in our understandings and knowledge, so it's possible for someone simply not to know that the church is true. That would explain people like us, in DCP's mind, I think. The bottom line is, however, that I'm actually quite confident now that the LDS church really isn't true.
CaliforniaKid wrote:I argued a while back that I think in many cases where sin precedes a person's exit from the church, loss of faith preceded sin. People's faith erodes, and therefore so does their sense of obligation. People's motives are complicated, and I doubt anyone has ever abandoned religion simply because they wanted to sin.
Exactly. If a guy leaves the LDS church and then enjoys a beer from time to time, most TBMs will just say he left the church because he wanted to drink. People have been brewing beers and ales for millenia. Long, long before there was a temperance movement, or Joseph Smith to copycat it, there were people brewing "mild drinks" from barley and wheat and rice and what have you. Having a beer is actually a perfectly normal, human thing to do, and beer and ale and wine are very ancient parts of human existence.
One might still decide not to drink for sound personal reasons, like the desire to avoid the risk that one is susceptible to alcoholism, for example, or they just grew up assuming that anything that wasn't water or milk was sweet like soda or juice, and can't wrap their minds (and tastebuds) around the concept of drinks that aren't. But once one believes that Mormonism isn't true, the sin-based revulsion against having a beer fades away. They are not "leaving to sin", as it were, so much as just re-joining the rest of humanity in a normal part of human existence.
Can people overdo it? Yeah, of course. If you leave the church and get all dysfunctional, that's not a good way to live no matter what you believe, and TBMs are going to say "see!?!? he just left because he wanted to sin!" and use you as a poster child to scare others away from apostasy. It's a handy way of distracting people from the intellectual problems with Mormonism.
edited: trying to reduce my verbosity, so I went in and cut out about 40% of my original post - hey, I'm working on it!