cinepro wrote:Dr. Shades wrote:I have a rhetorical question for you, Cinepro. There is no right or wrong answer, I'm just trying to get a better peek into your mind:
WHICH WOULD YOU PREFER:
A. That your son grow up to believe everything about Mormonism, or
B. That your son grow up to believe nothing about Mormonism?
If you include basic things like "honesty", "chastity" and "charity" in the "everything", then I would say "everything". In other words, I don't want him throwing the baby out with the bathwater.
The problem here is that the LDS church has no monopoly on values like honesty, charity, even chastity. If you recognize, in your heart of hearts, that the LDS church is not really being actively lead by a God who really exists, then where do you suppose these values came from? The answer is simple: from the hearts of well-intentioned fellow human beings. And there are 7 billion other human beings on the planet - I'm sure you can find others willing to provide good lessons and role models for your son of virtuous attitudes.
The bathwater, in this case, is Joseph Smith hero worship, when you now know, for the most part, that Joseph Smith was in fact a charlatan and a manipulator. The bathwater also contains at least two works of "scripture" that in fact Joseph Smith had a hand in (perhaps all the hands in) inventing, namely the Book of Mormon, and the Pearl of Great Price. The Bible is an ancient work, but is a work of an ancient people's mythology, and also contains an awful lot of really horrible stuff (mainly in the Old Testament). All of these things are talked of in LDS church meetings as literally true, ancient works by people who actually existed, doing things that really happened. They're teaching your son that Noah's Ark really happened, that Adam was the first human being, that nothing died in the world until Adam "fell" from the garden, etc. I'm guessing you probably don't believe those things anymore either.
You're seemingly willing to subject your son to all of this teaching of false facts and made-up, mythological "history", just because they also teach your son not to lie, steal, or touch his pecker. And you seem willing to subject your son to all of this even though he already has told you that he doesn't believe it.
As an analogy, it's like your willingly taking your son to a place where people teach seriously, and truly believe, that Santa Claus really exists, and you think how wonderful it is that these people are also teaching your son to grow up to be a good man. Along with teaching him that Santa Claus really exists, they also teach him mental gymnastics so that, as evidence arises that Santa Claus really doesn't exist, your son can twist and turn his way out of the jam and continue believing in Santa. By the time your son has gone through their whole program long enough, he will be a lifelong believer in Santa and
nothing will be able to convince him otherwise, because he's already learnt mental defensive techniques to disarm and dodge and weave around any challenge to the belief that may arise. Is this what you are shooting for? A grown man who is basically honest and charitable, but whose mind is now in the thrall of a modern-day cult of personality?
If the "everything" is just beliefs about God and scripture, independent of ethics and and morality, then I would chose "nothing".
As it is, I think he would place himself in the "nothing" column, and he's a pretty good kid, so I think he already knows the difference.
I like your use of the cliché about the baby and the bathwater. Your son is truly sitting in a brown, icky tub of dirty bathwater. He's expressed a desire to get out of the tub so he hasn't got this dirty water all over him, but you seem content to leave him in there, and even force him to stay.
I seriously question this approach. I respect you hella much as a person and as a thinking person, but I can't say I' agree with you on forcing your son to keep going to a false church that he already doesn't believe in.
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