asbestosman wrote:Sethbag wrote: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.
Good luck proving that in court. Anyhow, for my example imagine that the company didn't misrepresent anything to you--you merely had the wrong idea all by yourself.
Pay Lay El. There, I said it, now take me to court.
Good luck getting a court to enforce LDS Church seizure of everything I have, on the grounds that I pledged it and everything else "with which the Lord has blessed me, or which the Lord may bless me".
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH! MAUAHAHAHASHDFASHDHASHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! Joseph Smith was a f*cking prick. There's some loud laughter *and* evil speaking of "the Lord's annointed." Good luck getting a court to sanction me on the grounds that I covenanted not to do that.
This is all so besides the point. We're not talking about a court, where the LDS temple endowment covenants are concerned. If you believe that Elohim exists, and if you believe that Peter, James, and John, through some old guy who worked at your particular temple the day you were endowed, were actually authorized by this real Elohim to put you under all those covenants, then by all means, obey them to your heart's content.
As for me, I'm convinced that Elohim doesn't even exist, and the old man who put me under those covenants did so under an imagined and false authority, under the false pretense of representing God, and with the false promise of obtaining a Kingdom, a Priesthood, and an exaltation as a God in the Celestial Kingdom if I obeyed these covenants. These covenants mean nothing to me now, because they were false and fraudulent right from day 1, and
not because of me. They were fraudulent from day 1 because Joseph Smith was not who he said he was, and the temple ordinances he claimed to be from God were a work of fiction composed of two parts Joseph Smith and one part Freemasonry.
I guess I don't really know what it is you're arguing. Are you arguing that people like me, who no longer regard the farcical LDS temple covenants as something that must be respected and obeyed, as untrustworthy? What is it exactly that you're arguing?
1) You don't really believe in Santa, but the leaders of the church almost certainly believe in God and that they are authorized.
It doesn't matter whether they believe in God and that they are authorized. They're wrong, and there's no substance backing up their claims. There is no Elohim, there is no Celestial Kingdom, and you will not
ever be a God, a King and a Priest to Elohim, creating your own universes with your harem of Celestial wives. It's all fiction, Abman. There's nothing real about it, except the real people who are duped, and work hard to (even unknowingly) dupe others.
2) The only covenant I'm really worried about in this thread is that of non-disclosure. I don't think promises to keep things secret should be broken unless there is a really good reason to do so (I.e. to testify against criminals or warn others about criminal activity). I do not see how disclosing the temple covenants protects others from crime.
It may protect others from being sucked in by the mind virus. If the farce and bogusness of it all can be demonstrated to those who are interested in the church, perhaps they will see it for the manmade religion it is, and avoid being sucked in.
If you could take some prospective Scientologist aside and tell them that, after they've spent $300,000 in training and auditing, they will be told that Xenu, Galactic Overlord of the Galactic Confederation, which had existed for 38 trillion trillion years, sent billions of people to Teegeeack (Earth, as it was called then) to be exploded by hydrogen bombs and have their souls captured, indoctrinated, and then turned loose on the unsuspecting population, don't you think you'd be doing them a service? By the time they learn this, a Scientologist is so mentally conditioned that many of them actually find a way to believe this bullsh*t. Wouldn't you be doing them a service if you could tell them in advance so they can make a reasoned decision to believe this stuff or not
before the brainwashing? You'd be saving them $300,000 or thereabouts, at the very least.
There's NOTHING about the LDS temple ceremony which deserves to be secret. I honestly don't care if exmos tell everything they know, right down to the very last jot and tittle. It's a farce invented by Joseph Smith and foisted upon several generations of unwitting dupes, and it deserves to be exposed as the farce and the scam that it is.
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