liz3564 wrote: Come on, Schmo. That's not a fair comparison. He's talking to some naïve 19 year old missionary who is doing what he has been told to do to make his parents proud. Did you serve a mission? If you did, then you understand how tough it is.
Nope, never served a mission. I've never believed the church was true. I remember thinking Joseph Smith lied when I was about 12.
I imagine it is tough to serve a mission considering how stacked the deck is against you.
But I don't see how it's an unfair comparison. Why, because he's young and naïve?
liz3564 wrote: Going after some 19 year old missionary is not going to "further the cause" of bringing down Mormonism. At best, he's going to confuse the poor kid. At worst, the kid is going to be all the more fervent in his beliefs because he has "thwarted the enemy".
That may be true. I'm not saying the method is necessarily effective, but it's the thought that counts.
GIMR wrote:Schmo, you're comparing Apples to Oranges. This kid, if he were to take what PP put before him to his leaders, would be shamed and probably shunned, if not disciplined for his queries. What has PP achieved?
Well, who's to say he will bring it to his leaders? Maybe it's just a seed planted in his mind that can result in full-grown apostasy in a few years. Nothing wrong with that.
And if he did take it to his leaders and they did react as you describe, then he can observe in action how anti-intellectual and anti-informational the church leadership really is. That can't be too bad either.
The fact is, no matter how he finds out, his journey out of Mormonism will be painful if he decides to take it. Growing up is painful. They don't call 'em "growing pains" for nothing.
God belief is for people who don't want to live life on the universe's terms.