asbestosman wrote:Alright, that's fair. How about this instead. Let's say I sign a non-disclosure agreement with a company but later discover some facts that make me wish I had never signed such a thing in the first place.
What if the information you learn makes you realize that you were induced to sign the NDA under false pretenses? What if the inducement to sign turned out to be fraudulent?
Here's the bottom line. Every single temple covenant made is made, as is depicted in the movie, at the request of Elohim ("go down and put Adam and Eve under covenant to...") by someone who is represented as having authority from Elohim to do so. Elohim does not actually exist, and nobody on Earth can therefor have this non-existent entity's "authority". The entire premise of the covenants is fraudulent.
Then there is the matter of consideration. The Celestial Kingdom does not exist. You will not, no matter how faithful you are to the LDS Church, ever rule in this non-existent place as a King and a Priest to a Most High Imaginary Being. The reward that you are promised in return for your faithfulness with these covenants is an illusion, a mirage, a pipe dream. Therefor you are not receiving the consideration that was offered up in return for entering the covenants.
Between the fraudulent representation of the covenant administrators as authorized representatives of a being who is in fact no more than a figment of our imaginations, and the fact that you
will not ever get the promised Celestial reward, it is abundantly clear that there can in fact be no binding covenant or promise on your part.
The entire "covenant breaker" epithet is just a mind-control gambit. If someone starts to get an inkling that things aren't as they seem, there's still this pressure to "obey" covenants that were entered into, which can keep at least some of these questioners from taking it to the next step. Witness how long it takes a lot of people who start to see and comprehend that Joseph Smith invented and created this church, and not God, to stop wearing their garments. It's like they can know something with their mind, but still be afraid to act on that knowledge, because a fear of disobeying God or his fraudulent covenants, still has a powerful effect on them.
Let's say that what I discovered isn't illegal, but it is something I strongly disagree with. Can I somehow rework that contract or otherwise disclose that which I promised not to? Now I grant that the company I made the agreement with definitely exists so this is not a perfect analogy. I only intend it to the extent that misjudging the bases which facilitate entering into a contract may not remove one from being obligated to keep it.
As for companies that actually exist, if the company committed fraud in inducing you to enter into a contract under false pretenses, and you can demonstrate that in court, then they could not enforce that contract because, in fact, it would not be valid.
As for the temple covenants, a covenant made upon inducement by someone representing themselves as having authority from a being who in fact does not exist, is no covenant at all.
Let's put it this way. If I told a group of children that I was the duly appointed and empowered representative of Santa Claus, and they believed me, and I placed them under covenant to obey the will of Santa Clause, and give all of their time and talents to the building up of the Kingdom of Santa Clause, as lead by me, do you think they would be morally obligated to continue obeying me, and donating their time and talents to me, on the basis of this covenant? Overlook the fact that they were children here, and just think about this as a parallel situation. I think you'd have to agree that nobody could, or should feel themselves obligated to obey covenants made to Santa Clause, once they learn or realize that Santa isn't actually real, and the person representing themselves as Santa's Helper in fact is a fraud.
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