the road to hana wrote:charity wrote: There were different ideas going around. If peopple are getting their ideas from others, it proves they are not studying on their own, getting their own spiritual confirmation of the truth. That is their fault.
Charity, you're speaking out of both sides of your mouth here.
Either there is official policy, doctrine and practice, or there isn't. Either the church leaders speak on behalf of what is official, and correct, or they don't. Either truth is relative, or it isn't.
Saying it's an individual member's "fault" if they believe what they are taught from the pulpit, in official church publications, in religious instruction classes like Seminary, Sunday School, Relief Society, Priesthood, Young Women's, Young Men's, or Primary, or in the writings or speeches of church leadership, is borderline silly. "Faithful" members are expected to heed the counsel of their leaders.
What you're actually suggesting in terms of each member getting an individual witness is exactly what leads many out of the church. When they get that witness, it's that what they were being taught wasn't correct in the first place. So they act on it. And then what do you say?
They weren't following their leaders. They didn't have faith.
You're suggesting that each member approach the heavens individually for a spiritual confirmation of the truth. But when that truth differs from your version of it, it's apparently faulty.
If there aren't twelve million different realities for twelve million different members of your faith, then there is someone authorized to give the official version. If the members believe it, after being counseled to do so, that doesn't make it "their fault" if it is incorrect.
There is official doctrine. There are also ideas which are not doctrine. Exactly where the final battle in the Book of Mormon took place is not doctrine. Or where the Hill Cumorah is. Or a lot of opinions given, yes, by prophets.
Sometimes there are reasons given for doctrine which are not part of the doctrine itself. The prohibition on the priesthood to blacks, for instance. The doctrine that there should be a restriction is not the same as the reasons for it. We humans are funny creatures. We have an innate need to either be able to predict or to explain what we cannot predict. Sometimes in the attempt to explain we don't get it right. It is my opinion that some of the opinions expressed, even by prophets, on the reason for the restriction got it wrong. But that doesn't mean the doctrine was wrong.
Truth is not relative. Truth is truth. Each individual is supposed to govern his/her life by the Spirit. But you must discern which spirit. That is the hard part.