John Larsen wrote:I was once set apart as the ward unplanned party planner committee member. It is not a far stretch to say that they have also been set apart.
Now THERE's proof. Astounding what passes for proof and logic here.
John Larsen wrote:I was once set apart as the ward unplanned party planner committee member. It is not a far stretch to say that they have also been set apart.
The Nehor wrote:First their work was overly spiritualized and they were set apart for their work by high spiritual authority and now they're anti-spiritual bigots, cripples with no real spiritual backing.
Will you crackpots make up your mind as to which extreme evil you're going to accuse people of? Are they guilty of priestcraft or apostasy?
Inconceivable wrote:Their work isn't spiritual in nature at all (I don't believe anyone here referred to it as such - except you).
Getting set apart by a priesthood leader is generally about as spiritual as a bowel movement, Nehor. It's how you live within a calling that determines whether your actions are spiritual in nature.
These guys avoid speaking of the more important things - ie. the Good News, their own personal relationship to Christ or the Mormon God, repentance/forgiveness, empathy, charity, love - principles that potentially encourage the development of spirituality. They don't write from their heart, they write from their heads.
Reading a handfull of FARMS reviews told me a great deal about the integrity of today's church leaders that have permitted them to be the authorized Charlotten faith healers of our day.
Every time I read something from guys like DCP etc., I am reminded of a fellow with a black apron saying, "..I have said nothing about Father". - because they never do.
Mister Scratch wrote:Similarly, some have postulated that the top-drawer apologists were set apart by the General Authorities, and that FARMS Chairmanships and the like are actually Church callings. I also believe this is true. I believe that some members of the Maxwell Institute are actually fulfilling callings for the Church, and that, in a very real sense, they believe they are serving the Brethren on a kind of spiritual mission. I believe that hands were laid on the head of DCP and Louis Midgley, and that these brothers were called to be apologists for the Church.
The Nehor wrote:Inconceivable wrote:Reading a handfull of FARMS reviews told me a great deal about the integrity of today's church leaders that have permitted them to be the authorized Charlotten faith healers of our day.
Every time I read something from guys like DCP etc., I am reminded of a fellow with a black apron saying, "..I have said nothing about Father". - because they never do.
You're an idiot.
Rollo Tomasi wrote:Mister Scratch wrote:Similarly, some have postulated that the top-drawer apologists were set apart by the General Authorities, and that FARMS Chairmanships and the like are actually Church callings. I also believe this is true...
..It certainly doesn't seem far-fetched to me. I recall in Bruce Hafen's bio of Neal Maxwell the account of Maxwell and Dallin Oaks encouraging the Smith Institute and FARMS to produce scholarship that would “protect our [i.e., the Brethren's] flanks.”
16 Surely your turning of things upside down shall be esteemed as the potter's clay: for shall the work say of him that made it, He made me not? or shall the thing framed say of him that framed it, He had no understanding?
(Old Testament | Isaiah 29:15 - 16)
Inconceivable wrote:It is clear when the hierarchy intercedes, particularly when their men trained for the ministry go too far (like Palmer and others). This is indicative of their organized efforts in such things. They are very deliberate in their focus and mission to defend the facade.
Mister Scratch wrote:Do the apologists feel that their work is spiritual?
Similarly, some have postulated that the top-drawer apologists were set apart by the General Authorities, and that FARMS Chairmanships and the like are actually Church callings. I also believe this is true. I believe that some members of the Maxwell Institute are actually fulfilling callings for the Church, and that, in a very real sense, they believe they are serving the Brethren on a kind of spiritual mission. I believe that hands were laid on the head of DCP and Louis Midgley, and that these brothers were called to be apologists for the Church.
dblagent007 wrote:Mister Scratch wrote:Do the apologists feel that their work is spiritual?
I think there is a difference between considering your work to be guided spiritually and proclaiming that God has revealed certain things to you. In other words, I think the apologists view their work as spiritual, but they do no set themselves up as an alternate revelatory authority to the church.
The only exception I can think of is Rod Meldrum, and I think the reason he got such a cold reception by apologists is that he claimed his theories were sanctioned by personal revelation.