What would it take for you to go back?

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_Runtu
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What would it take for you to go back?

Post by _Runtu »

Over on the board-that-must-not-be-named, Garden Girl asked me this question:

Okay, John W... as an apostate (are you really) what would it take to retain you, or I should say "regain" you (rhetorical question only). But think about it... Most of the time I quite enjoy your posts and have wondered not only about you but some of the others on the board.


The only answer I can think is that I would go back if it were true. Granted, there is much I really dislike about the church: its manufactured guilt, its relegation of women to a secondary caste, its deceptive glossing over of embarrassing doctrines and history, its using of families to keep people in line, and so on.

But if it actually were God's true church, I'd have to swallow my objections and go back.

Of course, this is a purely hypothetical situation because the church is not actually true. ;)

What would it take for you to go back?
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If you just talk, I find that your mouth comes out with stuff. -- Karl Pilkington
_Ren
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Post by _Ren »

For me, I'm not even sure if it would matter if it were true.

I'd only go back if I were actually interested in ending up in the Celestial Kingdom. And I'm not sure I would be...
_the road to hana
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Re: What would it take for you to go back?

Post by _the road to hana »

Runtu wrote:But if it actually were God's true church, I'd have to swallow my objections and go back.

Of course, this is a purely hypothetical situation because the church is not actually true. ;)

What would it take for you to go back?


Since it's already been conclusively demonstrated to me that it's not true, and isn't what it claims to be, there would be no going back.
The road is beautiful, treacherous, and full of twists and turns.
_Runtu
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Re: What would it take for you to go back?

Post by _Runtu »

the road to hana wrote:
Runtu wrote:But if it actually were God's true church, I'd have to swallow my objections and go back.

Of course, this is a purely hypothetical situation because the church is not actually true. ;)

What would it take for you to go back?


Since it's already been conclusively demonstrated to me that it's not true, and isn't what it claims to be, there would be no going back.


That goes for me as well. I was just thinking hypothetically. In the real world, it would take swallowing my conscience and engaging in massive denial to go back.
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If you just talk, I find that your mouth comes out with stuff. -- Karl Pilkington
_Who Knows
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Post by _Who Knows »

I don't live any other areas of my life based on 'faith' alone (without a strong track record). So why should I treat religion differently?

I guess what I'm saying, is that I'd need to see proof - lots and lots of proof. And the evidences against the church would have to be overturned.
WK: "Joseph Smith asserted that the Book of Mormon peoples were the original inhabitants of the americas"
Will Schryver: "No, he didn’t." 3/19/08
Still waiting for Will to back this up...
_Some Schmo
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Post by _Some Schmo »

Reasons I'd go back:

- If I were offered tons and tons of money (I'm a sucker for a good paying job)
- If I found out they just baptized several Playboy playmates in my ward; I would make it my personal quest to "re-corrupt" them... muhahahahahaha...
- If I had a lobotomy
- If my daughter was curious about it and wanted to go (of course, she'd have to be begging to go, or threatening to go with or without me)
- If the magical Mormon god or one of his fantasy minions visited me and threatened me with great discomfort for not going back
- If I were really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really bored (in other words, there was not a single thing else in the world for me to do)
- If church was held at NFL stadiums and sermons consisted of commentary and analysis from NFL experts

In other words, nothing really. And if I found out somehow that it was actually true, I'd be all like, "Well god's a dick, then! I'm not joining his silly church. I do not like this god. I would not worship in a box, I would not kneel down with a fox, I would not confess in the rain, I would not sing hymns on a train, I do not like that dude, I Am, I do not like him, Sam I Am..."

Side note: Hey, it just occurred to me that Dr. Seuss co-opted the name "I Am..." I thought only the writers of Popeye cartoons did that.
God belief is for people who don't want to live life on the universe's terms.
_Sethbag
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Post by _Sethbag »

I'd have to go along with Runtu and say that only the church actually being true would get me back. All the things we complain and criticize the church for are true, and are problems that result from this man-made church doing things in bad ways, but even if they changed all these things, it wouldn't get me back, because it would still not be true. Only God really having appeared to Joseph Smith, and only the Book of Mormon really being the record of actual people who really did exist, and all the rest, would get me back.
Mormonism ceased being a compelling topic for me when I finally came to terms with its transformation from a personality cult into a combination of a real estate company, a SuperPac, and Westboro Baptist Church. - Kishkumen
_BishopRic
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Post by _BishopRic »

I've been asked this a few times, and my answer is different today than it was a few years ago. Since "church" is such a part of my family, and it does at least bring us together in a common community, and because I don't believe any "church" is truer than another, I would consider returning if higher-ups proclaimed:

"Okay, we admit Joseph made it all up; we don't get any more "inspiration" than any other human being, but we are doing the best we can to teach a good lifestyle, and if there is a God, we hope that teaching the Golden Rule to our members will create a culture and society that will serve all equally. We are no better, nor any worse, than other spiritual organizations, but we enjoy our life, and will do the best we can to continue that positive lifestyle."

Then maybe I'd consider it.
Last edited by Guest on Tue Feb 05, 2008 6:34 pm, edited 4 times in total.
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_skippy the dead
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Post by _skippy the dead »

I used to give this quite a bit of thought. I used to think that if women were given the priesthood, that may be enough to bring me back (it was women wielding the priesthood in the temple, however minimally, that kept me in probably 5 years longer than I would have stayed otherwise). But as I began my studies of the church and the circumstances of its beginnings, I realized that priesthood in the church would be meaningless, since it wasn't really God's church - just an organization born out of Joseph Smith's religious philosophies, using stories of heavenly messengers and manifestations as a way to imbue it with authority. Then I began to consider that there most likely isn't even a God in the traditional Christian sense (note the use of "most likely" - I'm agnostic at this point, not atheist). I'm pretty far down the road at this point.

So there's no way I'd go back.

So as to Charity's comment on another thread: Nope - no "kernel" here. I participate in discussions about Mormonism because it is truly fascinating. Not many religions have such an interesting history and philosophy behind it. Plus, my mother and sisters (and their families) are still active participants, so I like to be able to keep up with things to maintain that connection with them.
I may be going to hell in a bucket, babe / But at least I'm enjoying the ride.
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_Pokatator
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Post by _Pokatator »

For me nothing would get me back except a personal visitation from God.

Some Schmo wrote:Side note: Hey, it just occurred to me that Dr. Seuss co-opted the name "I Am..." I thought only the writers of Popeye cartoons did that.


For Schmo concerning "I am" and Green Eggs and Ham: http://content.lib.utah.edu/cdm4/docume ... 688&REC=19

Hebraicisms, Chiasmus, and Other Internal Evidence for Ancient Authorship in Green Eggs and Ham

Robert Patterson 1

Theodor Geisel was born in 1904 in Springfield, Massachusetts. After an unremarkable adolescence, he attended Dartmouth College and later Oxford University in England where he studied literature. He then embarked on a career in writing and published numerous articles and cartoons in various magazines. During World War II he worked for Frank Capra's Signal Corps Unit and earned the Legion of Merit. In 1954, Geisel's publisher was struck by an article entitled Why Johnny Can't Read, concerning childhood illiteracy. In order to promote academic interest in the very young, the publisher asked Geisel to write a children's book, limiting the vocabulary to the level of a first grade student. The result was The Cat in the Hat, a short story that used only 220 different words. Acclamation and preeminent professional success followed, and Geisel went on under the nom de plume Dr. Seuss (his mother's maiden name) to author many more books, richly illustrated with his distinctive and quirky drawings. He eventually published 44 books, earning three Academy Awards and a Pulitzer Prize in the process. Geisel passed away in 1991, but over a decade after his death, he remains a top-selling author.

According to popular legend, circa 1960 an editor bet Geisel $50 that he couldn't write an entire book with a lexicon of only 50 words. Dr. Seuss accepted the challenge, and the result was the now classic Green Eggs and Ham.2

Upon an initial and cursory reading, the book appears to be a simple morality play. A zealous purveyor of an unusual gustatory selection hawks his wares to an Everyman, whose initial biases preclude his acceptance of the unfamiliar. By the end of the story, the Everyman has overcome his baseless prejudices and rejoices in his newfound knowledge. The book made perfect bedtime reading for the generation of youth later known as the baby boomers.

Deeper analysis, however, reveals that the book has complex subtexts comprehensible only when the factual nature of its real authorship is known. Indeed, there is overwhelming evidence that the manuscript did not originate with Geisel, who likely fallaciously claimed credit for an archaic work that he or someone else surreptitiously translated from an ancient language into modern English. In the absence of uncontested external proof, the true origins of Green Eggs and Ham only become clear with an analysis of the text itself, i.e., through internal evidences present in the body of the work. When preconceptions are cast aside, a strong case can be made for the antiquity of this fascinating and complex work. In particular, the narrative is rich in Hebraicisms, chiasmus, biblical themes, and cultural references familiar to the pre-Common Era Israelites.

Hebraicisms may be defined as writings that reflect a Semitic influence in cognates, syntax, or grammatical accent. Chiasmus, also known as inverted parallelism, is an ancient poetic method that states a series of ideas (ABC. . .) and then repeats them in reverse order (...CBA). Green Eggs and Ham may read awkwardly in English, but its inelegant articulation is immediately pardonable when it is properly understood to be the translation of an ancient Asian text.

The first six words of the manuscript send a chill of recognition through the spine of any scholar familiar with Near Eastern religious documents:

I am Sam.

Sam I am.3

This opening couplet immediately demonstrates a simple chiasmus, a hallmark of biblical Hebrew stylistics. Of significance also is the meaning behind the words. "I am" is the classic Old Testament tetragrammaton. "Sam" is English for the Hebrew word "Shem," meaning name. The word Shem itself is one of the Hebrew names for deity. Thus, the informed reader will immediately recognize that this is a work of divine importance, commencing with two names of deity, each presented twice in an inverted parallel fashion.

The next few verses demonstrate another literary device from antiquity. Echolalia is the instantaneous repetition of a phrase; examples are found in both the Hebrew Old Testament and the Greek New Testament. Inclusion of echolalic phrasing early in the text again reflects its ancient roots.

That Sam-I-Am.

That Sam-I-Am.

I do not like

That Sam-I-Am.4

Numerous other Hebraicisms are found throughout the text. One striking example is the commencement of a sentence with a negative conjunction or negating adverb. In English, it is grammatically improper to start a phrase with "No" or "Not," such as "Not in my backyard." The omniscient word processor will immediately highlight such a phrase as a sentence fragment. However, in Hebrew it is common to start a sentence with the word "lo" (meaning "no" or "not"); seven of the Ten Commandments begin in this way. It is, therefore, of significance to note the multiple, sequential sentences initiated in the negative, as in this passage:

Not in a box.

Not with a fox.

Not in a house.

Not with a mouse.5

Although this phrasing would be crossed out in red ink by any vigilant high school English teacher, the citation makes perfect grammatical sense in Hebrew.

An uninformed skeptic could argue that interpretation of segments of the text, as Hebraicisms is a subjective and inexact science. However, the definitive presence of chiasmic phrasing is not so easily dismissed, and numerous examples are found scattered through the body of the manuscript. Some are straightforward and easy to recognize, as in this excerpt:

I do not like them, S a m-I-a m.

I do not like green eggs and ham.

Would you like them here or there?

I would not like them here or there.

I would not like them any where.

I do not like green eggs and ham.

I do not like them, Sam-I-am.6



Other chiasmi are more complex and woven cunningly into the narrative. For example, Sam-I-Am poses a number of non-rhetorical questions to the anonymous other character in the narration in a lengthy passage similar in construct to the interrogation of Job by his three friends. From the depths of despair, the unnamed protagonist summarizes his stance on the relevant culinary issues with a forceful, yet eloquent plea. A careful reading of his declaration reveals that his poetic soliloquy is a twelve part (twelve is a sacred number to the Hebrews) perfect inverse parallelism reflecting the preceding protracted dialogue from Sam-I-Am, in which he is queried concerning preferential selections of transportation, ungulates, meteorology, diurnal rhythms, habitat, and small furry rodents.

I could not, would not, on a boat.

I will not, will not, with a goat.

I will not eat them in the rain.

I will not cat them on a train.

Not in the dark! Not in a tree!

Not in a car! You let me be!

I do not like them in a box.

I do not like them with a fox.

I will not cat them in a house.

I do not like them with a mouse.

I do not like them here or there.

I do not like them anywhere!7

A plethora of Semitic cultural references is also found in the text. For example, the goat and the fox are both Old Testament animals. Also, the "green eggs" referred to repeatedly can be understood in the light of the times. Without modern-day refrigeration techniques, putrefaction would quickly have commenced in unconsumed food, resulting in moldy (green) eggs. In the worldview of the ancient Israelites, one can, therefore, certainly understand the reluctance of the unnamed central character to consume a meal that is potentially pathogenic and also non-kosher.

Finally, multiple traditional Old Testament themes flow through Green Eggs and Ham, including the chronicle of the flood. According to the book of Genesis, Noah had three sons-Shem, Ham, and Japheth. As already discussed above, Shem is the Hebrew equivalent of the English name Sam, which appears in the text a total of 19 times. The word "ham" appears 10 times. Japheth is never mentioned specifically but may be the enigmatic unnamed character in the story. Also of significance, the word "rain" appears four times while the word "boat" (a synonym for "ark") is mentioned three times. And although not part of the written text, an illustration near the end of the manuscript shows a bleak image of apparently endless water, on which there floats a solitary vessel filled with animals. Taken all together, this cumulative evidence must be accepted as being far more than merely coincidental.

To summarize to this point, the rich presence of complex chiasmi, multiple Hebraicisms, Israelite cultural references, and Old Testament themes supports the theory that Green Eggs and Ham is, in tact, an ancient text of Semitic origin. Theodor Geisel, though a clever and charismatic man, was not a student of Near Eastern history or languages and would not be familiar with these writing techniques. He simply did not have the knowledge or resources to produce such a work and clearly is not the author of the book.

Part of the solution to the mystery as to the true source of the manuscript may lie hidden within the text itself. In 1997, a former Wall Street Journal reporter named Michael Drosnin published an astounding book entitled The Bible Code, in which he examined equidistance letter sequences in the Bible.8 Using the original Hebrew characters, every fifth letter was placed into a matrix, which was then analyzed for meaning. The resulting revelations have shed new light on the scriptures. A similar study was carried out on the text from Green Eggs and Ham, employing standard Word Search Puzzle techniques. Up/down, backwards/forwards and diagonals were all permitted. The study is ongoing, but preliminary results have yielded tantalizing clue words and phrases such as STATS, NINNY, and the cryptic message IDONOTOUX (possibly "I do not owe you anything").

In conclusion, this paper is the first to reveal the true origins of an ancient complex manuscript that for too long has been cavalierly dismissed as a mere twentieth century work of fiction. Although we have arrived at a better understanding of the roots of this crucial work, many critical questions remain unanswered. If Geisel was not the author, as he claimed, then who was? Is the book entirely allegorical, or was the shadowy Sam-1-Am an actual historic personage? What geographic hints in the text allude to the location of the physical setting for the events described? What possible anomaly in the arcane process of translation would account for the apparent anachronistic mention of cars and trains? And what moral and spiritual lessons does Green Eggs and Ham hold for us today in our lives? No doubt, inspired scholars will soon research and discover the answers to these and many other questions as this complicated but vital narrative finally receives the serious academic scrutiny it so richly merits.

1. The author wishes to thank Dr. Salvatore Federico, a friend and Linguist, teaching in Phoenix, who reviewed the manuscript and provided invaluable assistance in preparing this article.

2. Dr. Seuss., Green Eggs and Ham (New York: Random House, Inc., 1960).

3. Ibid., 5, 7.

4. Ibid, 9.

5. Ibid.. 24.

6. Ibid.,12-16.

7. Ibid., 46.

8. Michael Drosnin. The Bible Code (New York Simon and Schuster, 1997).
I think it would be morally right to lie about your religion to edit the article favorably.
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