Did you notice that the quality which differentiated the "smaller mjnds" was arrogance, as opposed to humility? The better educated understand how much they don't know were my exact words.The smaller minds think they knkow it all.
I will stick by that. No one knows it all. The ones who think they do are wrong. And when they begin go try to prove they know more than everyone else, that is certainly a prideful behavior.
No one thinks they "know it all" unless they are mentally ill. What you are really referring to is when posters think they know more about a specific subject than another poster. If there is no basis for that opinion, then it may be based on pride and arrogance, but if there is a real basis for that opinion, then it is just a matter of reality.
"By their fruits ye shall know them." Someone who calls a person who disagrees with him as stupid or an idiot, and then says he is the smartest person in his ward? I don't see a lot of humility there.
You're now describing a very different behavior than was originally being focused on. If someone goes around saying he/she is the smartest person in a group, then yes, that is proud and arrogant. But that's not the behavior you originally described. You were talking about two people debating a certain topic, and one calling the other a name. You said that automatically meant the name caller lost the argument because he/she reverted to name calling out of frustration of not being able to best the opponent. This is what I was arguing with you, not whether or not someone who goes around bragging about being the smartest person in a ward and calls other people names is arrogant. He/she is. I agree with you on that.
We could talk about how pride enters into many situations where sin, taking offense, etc. is involved. But for the purposes of this discussion, I will limit the response to what happens when someone has some kind of "intellectual" problem with what the Church teaches. Pride is almost always in there right from the beginning. "I learned this thing. People tell me I am wrong, but I know I am right and you can't tell me any different." That is pride. I have seen ex-Mormon posters here declare that "I once thought like you did, but then I became enlightened. And you are blind, brainwashed, etc." Pride. Feelings of being brighter, more enlightened, better than others is pride.
Now we get to the heart of the matter. If a person is not convinced by the apologia (and I'm not using the term in a pejorative sense, just in the true meaning) other believers offer, then that means that person is proud and arrogant. They won't accept the defense that you believe is sound.
Is it possible, charity, that they won't accept the defense not out of pride and arrogance, but due to the simple fact that the defense just doesn't make sense to them, or is not convincing?
Here's a clear example: informed people on both sides of the fence agree that Joseph Smith used to use his peep stone to see buried treasure. He then tried to help people obtain that buried treasure with no success. He then used that same peep stone in the same way to translate the Book of Mormon.
Believers offer the defense that Joseph Smith was being trained in the revelatory process.
Now, is it arrogance and pride that leads others to reject this defense, or is it simply that the defense isn't adequate in their eyes?
If you believe that people who don't accept the reasonings that apologists offer for these problems don't accept them due to pride and arrogance, then I suggest it is really
you who is arrogant and proud - too arrogant and proud to understand that these defenses are not air-tight, and reasonable people can find them inadequate.
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