harmony wrote:#1. From what I understand (and I'm sure you will correct me if you think I'm wrong... which is not to say that I actually would be wrong, just that you'd think I was), you don't get to probe past the standard questions if I give the standard answer. You are required to accept my answers at face value
You're wrong.
I can't impose standards of my own devising, but I can probe to find out whether the candidate for a recommend is answering the questions in the sense they were asked.
Two examples:
An applicant might respond "Yes" when asked whether he or she lives the law of chastity, but it may turn out that the person is using a narrowly technical definition of chastity that permits oral sex, coitus interruptus, and the like. If a bishop suspects that the term may be being used in an equivocal or evasive sense, he has not only the right but the obligation to inquire further.
I've encountered one or two cases much like this.
An applicant may respond that, yes, he sustains the president of the Church as a prophet and as the sole person authorized to use all priesthood keys, but may mean by that merely that he recognizes the president of the Church as the genuine president of the Church, viewed by Church members as a prophet -- a proposition that few non-members or unbelievers or even anti-Mormons would question. And that would not be an adequate response.
I know someone, a thorough unbeliever, who managed to obtain a temple recommend (and Church employment) for several years while giving precisely that answer in precisely that sense. His bishop and stake president did not press him further, but they would have been well within their rights and obligations if they had. When I asked him whether, by his sociological standard, Muhammad and Jim Jones were genuine prophets, he responded without hesitation that, yes, they were.
harmony wrote:Which parts of that don't you understand? I'll try to explain a bit better once you clarify what you don't understand.
Condescension duly noted.
I'm actually not interested in discussing this any further.