Mercury wrote:My central point is that deep down most apologists see the problems with Mormonism. They react illogically and sometimes with bile and hate usually reserved for battered women defending their abusive spouse, which in essence is a good analog for the apologists situation.
I've been coming around to a different conclusion. I believe that at least some, if not most apologists actually believe the church to be true.
It's very easy for them to feel like they're on the winning side when confronting those with religious attacks against Mormonism, ie: evangelicals arguing against Mormonism based on their reading of the Bible. It's very easy to deal with those attacks, so they get to feel good, and confident.
I think the good feeling, and the confidence, go out the door when dealing with critics who have not a religious-based exception to Mormonism, but rather claim that Mormonism is purely manmade on the basis of historical evidence and doctrinal contradiction with science and whatnot. Some of this evidence is so egregious, and so damning, that it must be exceedingly frustrating for an apologist, because it's not immediately apparent how those inconvenient truths mesh with the truth claims of the church. Yet they still accept the truth claims, so there
has to be some way that it all works out.
This is where all the "scribes did it", and "that's not official", and "presentism!" defenses come from. And yes, they are lame, and intellectually unsatisfying. And yet they believe, or wish to believe, and so the rationales and excuses must be found.
Sadly, every single critic of the church is, like Joseph Smith, just a human being, and we all have our weaknesses and our foibles, and this too often gives the apologists an avenue for defense, by turning the tables and attacking the critics.
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