John Larsen wrote:wenglund wrote:John Larsen wrote:I don't think the problem with Mormon services is the mode of service per se. For some people, it is just what they like. Some will enjoy the trappings of an LDS service and I don't see anything wrong with that. One way is not necessary superior to another. The problem is that, in Mormonism, there is no room for people who would better respond to another mode of worship. Mormonism insists that there is one, and only one way of doing things.
Some people respond to a pipe organ, others might better respond to a bass and drums. Neither is right or wrong. I remember one of the first Unitarian services that I attended a man played some beautiful music on a trumpet. It was appropriate and sacred. This would simply never be allowed in LDS services because the Church has rules against such things.
Mormonism doesn't make people unhappy. It makes some people unhappy. That will be true as long as it insists on a single way and following the unwritten order of things.
To me, what you say is certainly true for those who condition their joy on external things (like the mode of worship) rather than on internal things (like themselves and what they bring to whatever mode of service).
Thanks, -Wade Englund-
I think you are exaggeration your stoicism to suggest that internal joy comes to you regardless of your surroundings. So I would counter that "those who condition their joy on external thing" includes everybody except for a few monks in Nepal.
I don't know that my position can accurately be described as "stoicism" (I think myself closer in secular terms to Choice Theory and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, though religiously I believe my position quite in line with Judeo-Christian beliefs and practices--not the least of which is are the principles of personal agency and responsibility even in matters of emotion), nor do I think that a person who chooses to be joyous (rather than choosing to leave one's joy in the hands of others) is all that rare among mankind. But, whatever the case may be, my interest in not so much in complying with majority habits, but in what may work in mine and others best interest. And, since I believe that joyousness is a good and healthy thing, and thus in our best interest, I believe it wise to find ways (through personal choice) that we can attain that condition, rather than leaving it to circumstances and the whims of others over which we have little or no control.
If you choice otherwise, and think it best to let your circumstances control your joy, and thus restrict your joyousness to drums and guitar modes of religious observance, then I can respect that. To each their own.
Thanks, -Wade Englund-