I hear this over and over and over and over __ exmos informing us what we think and believe. It drives me crazy __ because it’s bull.
Whether or not there is a basis for the distinctions being made between so-called *internet* Mormons and *chapel* Mormons, I’m not sure. Sometimes I think the only difference is that the *internet* Mormons are more careful than the *chapel* Mormons to say in public all the things they really do believe. In other words, the *internet* Mormons are just more prudent when it comes to acknowledging the fact that they believe in miracles and other more traditional interpretations like a global flood, etc.
I think I’m a 100% orthodox chapel Mormon in almost every way I can imagine. And the folks I have known in the various wards and stakes I’ve lived in are, with some exceptions, pretty much just like me. And noen of us would agree with this statement:
This whole concept of fallible prophets is a fairly new, and internet only phenomenon. If you were to walk up to your average church going LDS and say that prophets can and do make mistakes and not to trust what they say, that would be tantamount to blasphemy in their eyes.
Believe me, I've had this conversation multiple times with chapel Mormons and they most certainly do not believe that prophets are fallible. They honestly believe that God speaks to them, and they are led in everything they say.
It totally flies in the face of the often emphasized principal that it is not meet that I should command in all things …
I realize that there is absolutly nothing I can say to convince the folks here on this board that this is just bull, but I know it is. I don’t believe it and I don’t know anyone who does believe it. I don’t doubt that there a few people in any ward or stake that think like that, but they are a miniscule minority. Most people recognize that prophets, apostles, and the like are just ordinary men doing their best to be sensitive to the prompting of the spirit as they attempt to conduct the affairs of the church. they arent commanded in all things. They aren’t *led in everything they say.* They don’t have weekly meetings with God and discuss the affairs of the church with Him face to face. they just try to do their best by living in such a way that the Holy Ghost can effectively inspire them to dothe will of God. And from time to time __ maybe only once or twice every generation __ one or more of them is the recipient of a major revelation on something relevant to the times. I consider the Proclamation on the Family to be of that nature. To me, it is scripture. It is the word of God. It was inspired of God.
the only people I know who think the way scottie talks about above are people who have long-since left the church. Or at least they claim that’s the way they used to think when they were still in the church.