charity wrote:So, what is the difference between the two? From what I have seen, the difference is humility, which is the opposite of pride. The believers are willing to accept that they don't know everything, that they can't know everything, and that there may be alternate explanations for the areas of confusion. And until absolute proof shows up, they are able to trust that there will be a resolution in favor of the view of the faithful.
Believers are convinced that they and they alone know truth and that all those who disagree with them will be punished forever. This is not humility, this is arrogant hubris.
I'd say it's actually the opposite. True believers have always tended to have a resolute assurance that they're right and everyone else is wrong. This belief, in turn, has empowered them, in their own minds, to seek to impose their truth on others, peacefully if possibly, forcibly if necessary. A true believer is far more apt to commit human rights abuses than the skeptic--the former empowered by her conviction that God's on her side, the latter less cocksure and more appreciative of diversity.
I ask a general question. Let's assume we can choose one of two people to serve a "king," with full coercive power of the state at her disposal. Who would people annoint as king, a true believer, or a skeptic?
To my way of thinking the true test of humility is whether one would seek to impose a set of beliefs on others. Truly humble people would not deign to do so. The arrogant would take the opportunity, perhaps convinced that they're doing God's will in the process.
If the Mormon Church were to assume the power of the state, to what extent do we expect that it would, over time, continue to respect the full slate of civil liberties and rights? (Hint: A rhetorical question.)
charity wrote:Those who decide that they were wrong and have now come to the right position, have the idea that their reasoning powers are sufficient to settle any questions. That there are, in fact, no questions to settle. They know it all.
And THIS is the true believer, not the skeptic. You've just described the true believer in dogmatic religion.
Skeptics aren't true believers. That is why they're called skeptics.
charity wrote:Ask yourself this: When people gain testimonies and join the Church, they aren't angry with those who aren't LDS, or at their former church leaders. But many who leave the Church become angry, at the Church, at those who are still LDS. Anger is an emotion of pride. "I have an entitlement to something, and I am as mad as heck that I didn't get what I was entitlted to." That is pride.
Ah yes, the angry Ex-Mo. And this from the person who assured us just the other day that she was really, really trying to understand us apostates.
You're insight, Charity, is kiddie pool deep.
God . . . "who mouths morals to other people and has none himself; who frowns upon crimes, yet commits them all; who created man without invitation, . . . and finally, with altogether divine obtuseness, invites this poor, abused slave to worship him ..."