Needless to say, Nightingale, we disagree. But I appreciate the reasonable and charitable tone of your post.
Nightingale wrote:Grosskreutz: “Even BYU professors, who take interest in the personal identity behind the moniker GoodK, don't seem to care why I am not a Mormon. They seem content with knowing I am an "atheist" and commenting accordingly, as if that were good enough of an explanation, in their favor.”
That’s a very interesting point.
It's not an accurate one, though. I've written voluminously on precisely such reasons as GoodK outlined. They interest me very much, and demonstrably so.
Nightingale wrote:Grosskreutz: ”I'm going to share a few reasons with those … whom insist that only sin or contempt contribute to apostasy.”
This is well reflected in Grosskreutz’s dad’s post and I see it frequently. It is dismissive and disrespectful to ex-members in the extreme. It shows that current members think they know better about someone else’s life, experiences, motivations, thoughts and intentions than the person does themselves.
May I respectfully suggest that, since you presumably know neither GoodK nor GoodK's father, you're in no position to know whether or not GoodK's father's view of his son has any merit or not? Surely you don't think that you know better about someone else’s life, experiences, motivations, thoughts, and intentions than does a person who is intimately acquainted with him. GoodK's father may be wrong, of course, but it doesn't seem that you're in a particularly good position to make the argument.
Nightingale wrote:I think Grosskreutz’s list is a good one:
It's an okay starting point for a discussion.
Here, for what it's worth, are some summary responses from me to those questions. I won't be around to discuss them, though. Partly because I leave on Wednesday morning for a speech and a debate in Las Vegas, for which I need to prepare, and then go from Vegas to Oregon for a week, and because I'm busy all day tomorrow and will be busy all day Tuesday with meetings of various kinds. And partly because these are big issues on which I would prefer to publish (or have already published).
Nightingale wrote:"1. Christianity. It can't be true. The Bible, and the existence of God, is easily the biggest reason why I am not a Mormon.
I think the evidence for the central claims of Christianity is reasonably strong, as is the evidence for the existence of God.
Nightingale wrote:2. Joseph Smith Jr is not a saint. …he is not the saint that the church portrays him to be.
Joseph Smith was not perfect, but he seems to have been a pretty good man.
Nightingale wrote:3. The Church omits details and tries to implicate those that bring unflattering information forward as dishonest, vindictive, "anti", or otherwise worthy of contempt. …This sort of roundabout secrecy makes me suspicious of the higher ups in the Church and where their hearts really are.
On the whole, I think this perception is unfounded.
Nightingale wrote:4. The church wants money. Lot's of it. Why? We don't know. They won't disclose their finances.
The Church needs lots of money -- for temples, chapels, missions, humanitarian aid, seminaries, institutes, universities, welfare, etc. -- but money is plainly not its driving force, nor anywhere near.
Nightingale wrote:5.The Book of Mormon is not a translation of an ancient text. Neither is the Book of Abraham.
The Book of Mormon is a translation of an ancient text. So is the Book of Abraham.
Nightingale wrote:6. The prophet of the church seems more interested in meeting with politicians than communicating with the lowly members of his church. …he is out of reach to the average member of the church who would like nothing more than to shake hands with the prophet.
In my experience with the leaders of the Church -- I know all of the members of the First Presidency and the Council of the Twelve, and many of the Seventy -- they are very down-to-earth and approachable.
Nightingale wrote:Politicians and lucky career-Mormons get the chance, but faithful members like my parents (who have likely given an obscene amount of money to the church through tithing) would never get the chance to meet their leader.
President Monson was just down here for the opening of the new library at Utah Valley University (until Tuesday, Utah Valley State College). Some of my ward members got to meet him and shake his hand. They're neither politicians nor "lucky career-Mormons." They're just college students who work at Wal-Mart.
Nightingale wrote:Ex-members aren't hopeless apostate sinners just because they have questions like those that Grosskreutz poses.
Nor does the fact that they might have questions mean that they aren't hopeless apostate sinners. The two matters are quite separate.
Nightingale wrote:I can relate to Grosskreutz’s wish that ex-members are not "demonized".
As a pretty continual victim of demonization here and elsewhere, I would prefer to see
nobody demonized.
Nightingale wrote:Grosskreutz: "…the guys at the top, they should know. And that's who I want to talk to. I want them to know why I am not a Mormon."
Of course, they’re "busy" ‘n all that but I can’t see what is more important or enjoyable than getting in amongst the people.
That's what they spend most of their lives doing!
Nightingale wrote:I cannot stand elitism in any arena and at church it seems even more unjust.
The Brethren are constantly traveling around the world meeting with members. And they belong to wards. There is no real "elitism" here.