why me wrote:Sethbag wrote:I've said this before, and I'm going to be saying this again, in various different ways, until the end of time:
The Mormon Church is not only not true, it's obviously not true. The reason this is not obvious to diehard Mormons is the true crux of the matter.
I look forward to seeing your conclusive evidence that Mormonism is false. I am sure that the world will wait for your evidence with bated breath. Now that you claimed that it is not true, can you produce the conclusive evidence, the cruncher that will bring the LDS church to its knees?
You've already seen way more than enough evidence. Rather than accept the obvious conclusion, instead you neutered the evidence, and looked for ways of reinterpreting it such that the conclusion finally reached is the one you already believed to be true. This is what I'm talking about.
If you don't believe me, just go find a diehard Jehovah's Witness and show them just how obviously manmade their church is. Only very rarely will you find one who finally agrees with you - to them it's so obvious that their church really is the organization of Jehovah on Earth it's not even funny. I guarantee you they will come up with a way of addressing and explaining away
any possible evidence you could possibly come up with that cast doubt on the validity of their claims.
Or go do this with a diehard Catholic. Or a diehard Muslim. Or a diehard Scientologist. All of these faiths and/or churches are obviously manmade, but this is far from obvious to the diehard adherents of these faiths.
The $64,000 question to you is: why not?
Why isn't it obvious to Tom Cruise that Scientology is a manmade organization whose teachings bear no resemblance to reality?
This is a very important question, Why Me. I will ask it again:
Why isn't it obvious to Tom Cruise that Scientology is just another manmade, false religion?Why not, Why Me? What is it about Tom Cruise's faith, and the practice of his faith, that has rendered his mind incapable of seeing what is so clear to the rest of us, including (hopefully) you?
And why isn't it obvious to the Jehovah's Witness whom you let in the door and talk with for a while that their church is likewise a manmade, not-true organization?
Why not, Why Me? What is it about the faith, and the practice of that faith, by Jehovah's Witnesses that renders their minds incapable of seeing what is so clear to everyone else, including (hopefully) you?
What is it about Osama bin Laden's faith, and his religious practice, that has rendered his mind incapable of seeing just how manmade and false his religious beliefs are?
There has got to be something that can account for this.And I believe there is. Let's call it the "X Factor", and define it loosely as "those beliefs and practices which render the believer incapable of perceiving the not-literally-true, manmade nature of their chosen belief system, even when these characteristics are so obvious to everyone else".
Why cannot such an X Factor, or a tailored-to-Mormonism version of it, be in operation on
you? It's fairly obvious that those believers operating under their own faith-specific X Factors don't recognize their condition as such - what makes you think you're immune to it, and would recognize if it you weren't?
If you can accept even the possibility of a Mormon X Factor which renders diehard Mormons incapable of viewing the evidence in a way that allows them to recognize the manmade nature of the church, then that is a good start. The rest will come as you start to untangle that X Factor in your mind and start learning what exactly has been going on in your mind, so that you can change it, and start viewing the world unfiltered by it.
If you can manage that, you will someday come back and say "wow, Seth, you were right! The Mormon church isn't just not true, it's
obviously not true!" Because it is.
No, I didn't think so. Now if you repeat what you wrote a hundred times what your said just may be true...if only in your mind.
As Silentkid already said, ironically this is a part of the X Factor. Repetition of an idea actually reprograms your mind in such a way as to strengthen that idea. As Dan Dennet said once in a talk I watched on the web, "every time you say or think an idea, you make another copy of it in your brain." And that's literally true, at the neuronal level. It's why "practice makes perfect", or at least "practice makes permanent". Testimony meeting anyone? Read the Book of Mormon at least once a year for your entire lifetime, anyone? You-must-go-to-church-every-week-almost-no-matter-what for your entire lifetime, anyone?
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