wenglund wrote:BishopRic wrote:On another thread, it was suggested that in order to move forward, we should forget about the bad parts of Mormon history. You know, exclusion of blacks from the priesthood, polygamy, MMM, "curing homosexuality," etc..
Start with a clean slate. We all make mistakes. Sounds good, in the spirit of repentence, forgiveness and love -- right?
Here's the problem I have with it. It is this same history that created the essence of the church! The magical money-digging seer stone that facilitated the translation of "the most perfect book on earth." The revelation that eternal marriage (polygamy") was required to get to the highest degree of heaven. That this priesthood withheld from the blacks was required to perform the ordinances to get us all into heaven...
How do we separate all that?
I'll make you a deal: you forget yours, and I'll forget mine. You stop promoting the first vision (especially the one you like to talk about), the claim of "the only true church on earth," the claim that the Book of Mormon is a true history of the America's for 1000 years, etc. -- and start teaching ONLY love, service, compassion, respect of differences, repentence, forgiveness, sekf-worth....
And I'll stop talking about the "bad parts" of your past too.
Deal?
How do you suppose this "deal" will work in improving relations between members and former members? Or has your former intent become so much smoke--not unlike your Church and marital covenants?
Far be it from me to deny you the "bad" LDS history. Clearly, it is of extreme importance to you, and likely the very justification for your apparent scorn for the Church and your sense of moral superiority. Without those things what else do you have to define yourself as a former member?
So, no deal. I wouldn't think to rob you of your precious.
Thanks, -Wade Englund-
Point is, for those that think like Wade that it is best for "relations" to ignore the warts of our past, that it is only in getting past denial that true healing can begin. Apologize for the past wrongs. Apologize to the blacks. Apologize to the gays. Only then can we have true negotions about real improved relations.
Anything less is denial, and without getting past it, no healing is possible.